Seriously before all doubts read the John Hopkins or Pubmed.gov - type in Moringa in the search bar there and look at the 200 articles about it. The are peer reviewed and that means EVERYTHING in science.
Peer review is a minimum baseline to even begin to be taken seriously. What matters is the quality of the peers doing the reviews. For example, a guy publishing a journal of UFOlogy from his basement could have three of his buddies review his articles and POOF! it's now peer reviewed. In fact, it's probably safe to say that the number one red flag for scamming is the touting of peer review.

If the number of papers on pubmed means anything, I suggest we all light up a doobie because when I typed in "marijuana" I got 15,000+ articles. That's 750 times better than moringa.


Pubmed is top teir
Pubmed is just a fancy search engine. Finding a paper in pubmed is just slightly more meaningful than finding a webpage in google.

Read or glance through these
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17089328
(National Library of Medicine, NIH (National Institute of Health) peer reviewed))

http://www.oneteamworldwide.com/pdf/...leifera-p1.pdf
(further verification by John Hopkins School of Medicine)
Neither of those papers are much more than a list of other papers. They are not clinical trials. They are not laboratary tests. The peer review on them - even at top notch journals - would be nothing more than verifying that the cited papers exist.

The first article is out of Pakistan. Which makes sense because the plant is a common crop on the subcontinent. But Pakistan isn't known for the high quality of their universities either.

The second article - the one "verified by John Hopkins School of Medicine" was written by the same guy who is chief editor of the journal - Jed Fahey.
Trees for Life Journal - Editorial Board

The journal itself has nothing to do with the JH school of medicine - the only connection is that the editor of the magazine is a research associate there - not a professor, not tenure track. His job is almost certainly funded from outside JHU to run his brocolli lab.
Johns Hopkins Facult List > Jed Fahey (Faculty Research Associate)
Academic Rank in the USA - Wikipedia

Take a look at that website serving up the second article:
One Team Worldwide

With all the rah-rah and sell-sell motivational zija stuff there, it's hard to imagine a more scamalicious website.

This whole idea of a "superfood" is really bunk although the MLM industry would certainly have you believe otherwise. Hell, outside of a couple of specific cases like folic acid for pregnant women, there is little scientific evidence that vitamin supplements will do you any good. Eat healthy - stay away from fast food, including most prepared frozen foods due to the high sodium content, and most people will be fine. Eating like that is the way we evolved, even if such a thing existed, we don't need a superfood to be healthy, just good regular food.

Also, in addition to D3 I would stop drinking tap water ...

The newest soon to be addition in all tap water is lithium.
Really? You've gone from a couple of people talking about the results of a couple of studies to assuming that wholesale tinkering with our water supply is a done deal - with no public comment or anything else.