Right, but they're just going to come back and say "science doesn't know everything" or something like that. The fact that there is no credible, scientific evidence that this machine, or any other that claims to "restructure" water, actually produces "different" water doesn't deter some people from believing it works. What we have here is a case of the placebo effect; it's a shame that people are willing to pay hundreds of dollars to achieve it, though. . .