
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
The Dr. Lodi Podcast empowers people to think for themselves and teaches people how to achieve optimal health, free from cancer and all other chronic conditions. Dr. Lodi shares evidence-based information and reveals the truth about cancer, health, and healing. As a medical doctor, clinical psychologist, nutritionist, historian, philosopher, and the pioneer of what has now become the definitive route for those unsatisfied with the modern cancer treatment system, Dr. Lodi will deliver information that you’ve never heard before. Tune in and discover what a True Second Opinion really means, how to Stop Making Cancer, why there is no such thing as “diseases,” and what you are TRULY capable of achieving in your life.
The Dr. Lodi Podcast
Episode 124 - Dr. Lodi Live 11.24.24
This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on November 24th, 2024.
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This episode features answers to health and cancer-related questions from Dr. Lodi’s social media livestream on Jan. 19th, 2025
Join Dr. Lodi’s FREE Q&A livestreams every Sunday on Facebook, Instagram, and Tiktok (@drthomaslodi) and listen to the replays here.
Submit your question for next Sunday’s Q&A Livestream here:
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Join Dr. Lodi's Inner Circle membership and unlock exclusive access to webinars, healthy recipes, e-books, educational videos, live Zoom Q&A sessions with Dr. Lodi, plus fresh content every month. Elevate your healing journey today by visiting drlodi.com and use the coupon code podcast (all lowercase: P-O-D-C-A-S-T) for 30% off your first month on any membership option.
Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast
Welcome to the Learn to Thrive with ADHD Podcast. This is the show for you if you’re...
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Dr. Lodi Live 11.24.24
[00:00:00] I'm already live stream.
Wow. That's pretty amazing. Okay. So anyway, forget that, forget that nonsense. So what do you cop and good morning, everyone? Good evening, everyone. Sunday night live. Welcome. And had a an amazing set of arguments over the last week or so, and I don't know if you, if anyone's ever argued with AI,
But it's actually fun. It's fun because AI doesn't doesn't get emotional, so, and it can only rely on the data that exists, right? And it's all the data that, that, that it has access to, which is everything, right? All the published research and all that. So it's great, it's great, great arguing with him.
I, what I wanted, I would like to do is I think actually just maybe print it out and post it. It could, it's, it's pretty amazing. It's pretty amazing. But you can, because the thing I'm seeing about AI is that it is, it will give you the first, if you ask it a question, it's going to give you the answer that [00:01:00] is the most conventional.
I mean, the most, not, not, not, not, it's what the conventional would like you to believe, then that's what it says. It's fact. So the average person is going to do it. It's going to say oh, wow, I guess that's true. But then you just ask the questions like, well, if this is true, then what about this? Anyway, you can lead it down.
It's fun. It's fun. I'll have to I'm going to share that with you guys. It's really great. It's fantastic. So we got people moving up here. We got a few people coming up. Yeah. So, welcome to Sunday night live in on, on, on one side of the planet. And we're welcome to Monday morning live on this other side of it.
And we, we, excuse me. We need to have air conditioning on this side of the planet.
Yeah, I know it's noisy, but I'll, I'll speak up.
Okay, good. All right here we are and we've got some people on. Okay, good. Let's get right into it. There we go. [00:02:00] So we'll get right into it. Anyway I'd like to Again, i'm going to bring everyone's attention to this. I'd like to go to everyone to start moving to x And romo but x especially x because they've got a platform that you know that we can use and I won't be censored because i'm, you know, i'm trying to get back on We've got TikTok and we've got DR Lodi 2.
0 and we're not really posting anything because anything we post gets flagged and taken down. So, they just won't read it. It looks like, you know, already had one and it was on something that was not, it's being posted on our Oasis website and or on our Oasis TikTok and it's fine. But when I post it, bam, clearly they don't like me.
And there's one of you out there that's I'm not, I sent you a message you had some good input on why I was, I might have been censored on that, but in any case, I'd like to move everything over to X and I'm going to start doing shows that are [00:03:00] exclusively on there. You'll have to be on there to, to be part of it.
And cause it'd be great to just talk and not have to watch what I say. Anyway, anticipate, you know, anticipate what I'm going to say and then not say it or what, sorry. Also, the inner circle is is growing and as you know, we have three groups in there. We have the health and healing group where we're not focused on any specific illness, but we're just on health and healing.
And, you know, that includes everything from, you know, diet to prayer and meditation to movement, exercise to whatever. Anything that relates to human activity and can result in health, a condition we call health. We'll be discussed and is discussed. All right, and then the other one is on parasites And let's stay focused on the parasites in that [00:04:00] group.
And then the other group is CFCs chronically fermenting cells I just did a just did a
Interview, I guess it was an interview of me. Who was it? Anyway, it was it was it was very nice and I explained CFCs and all that to them. So Maybe that'll grow. Maybe the world will start calling it that instead of the absurd they call it. You know, in case you're all, it's your first time, we don't use the word we don't use astrological signs when we're referring to conditions going on in the body.
What we refer to is actually what's going on in the body. So, for example, I wouldn't say that someone has a, this monster called diabetes, because I don't know what that is. But what I would say is that their cells are very resistant to insulin which is a reality, right? So that'd be a better way of speaking of it.
If I say diabetes, it's as if I don't know what that really is. Does it mean insulin resistance? Well, that's part of it, but, you know, hang [00:05:00] on. So, we're going to speak more specifically. And so, chronically fermenting cells is what's going on in a person's body if they're having if they've been
Okay, let me clarify this. We all have chronically fermenting, we all have fermenting cells. We have And the reason cells ferment, the scientific word for that is glycolysis. So, we're talking about energy production. And energy production is something that all organisms do. They extract something from the environment and they use that to extract energy.
And that energy is in the form, actually, of electrons. And those electrons are carried around in molecules, usually, in called ATP, Adenosine Triphosphate. And the, there those Electrons are locked in to the last, the triphosphate means there's three phosphates, the last phosphate, when that's taken off, it releases [00:06:00] all this electrons or energy.
It's called free energy, you know, energy. So energy is electrons, okay? And so a very efficient way of, of, of, of, of doing this process of extracting from the environment and releasing it. I'm out. a very efficient way of making lots of those molecules ATP is through something called oxidative phosphorylation and you need inside the cell you need mitochondria to accomplish that and it happens so there we go
you guys I didn't I will look at these questions Philippe and Kelly don't don't think I'm not but anyway so
All. So what happens is, in, in a variety of situations is that, that the ability to do that becomes stifled. And when that becomes stifled, the cell, the cell has to make [00:07:00] energy, whether it's a single cell organism or a multicellular organism like an elephant. The process of glycolysis, which just means no additional apparatus just gonna ferment or open up the molecule glucose and get some energy from it fermentation.
And in terms of it's, efficacy you get two ATP's instead of 38 that would you get from one molecule going through the mitochondria. So what happens is when that ability to use mitochondria is diminished for whatever reason the cell ferments. So this is happening in our body all the time. It happens when you run and your leg starts to ache, it's aching because you're starting to ferment, right?
It's starting to ferment because it's lost its ability to,
it's lost its ability to To go through oxidative phosphorylation, right? So then you run up the hill and your legs are starting to ache. You slow down. That ache is lactic acid because you're fermenting and producing lactic acid oxide, which [00:08:00] connection again, blows off the you blow off the carbon dioxide, which equalizes the it's no longer producing acid. All that excess acid has been blown off through carbon dioxide. And now you go back into oxidative phosphorylation because you still have mitochondria Okay, and you might in these cells in your legs.
Well, there are certain cells that have lost a 30 percent or more of their mitochondria, so they can't go back to oxidative fossilation. They continue to do fermentation. So they're chronically fermenting cells, chronically. And so they, and they go through, they change all of their structure their, the genes that they're using.
They need to use this gene and that gene and not this gene and that gene. And so they, they go through that. They change and
Those modifications and what we have left is what's called a tumor or chronically for a group chronically for many cells so it's not this bizarre word called cancer which means nothing except the zodiac sign so we don't [00:09:00] use it because it's not useful and it's got some side effects side effects are so we don't want those side effects right uh kind of like sticking your finger into a to a wall socket hearing that word so we don't do that with people.
All right. All right. So, clear that up. And so, here we are. Here we are. So, come on. There we go. Yeah.
Anyway, so last week's on, on our CFC, on our, on our groups, we spoke, we had one meeting in the health and healing zoom, and we talked about all right, I'm ready to eat healthy. How do I do it? And we thought we last week we talked about in the CFC group. Why does estrogen affect breast, ovarian, uterine, stomach, bladder, prostate, lung, and colon CFCs?
Why? How does that happen? You know, a lot of us tune out [00:10:00] when it's, when we're not, when the discussion is not involving something that is of interest to us or relevant to us. And so most people, when they hear the word estrogen are thinking, well, I don't have any CFCs in my breasts or my ovaries, or I don't have ovaries and breasts or whatever we think.
So we kind of tune that out. However, but we, most of us do have Stomachs, bladders brains, prostate, and some of us have prostate, lungs, and colon. And, you know, it's just pancreas as well. It doesn't stop there. So we talked about that. This week in the Parasite group, we're going to talk about, can I use, can I do a juice fast while taking all these medications? We're going to go into that. And in the CF group, CFC group, it's going to be just an open forum question and answers. And we're going to do that for the whole month of December, just questions and answers.
I'm the meeting with any kind of presentation or discussion on a specific subject. I'm just doing that to see if [00:11:00] if everyone prefers that. I think not. I think people will have will say that it's better to at least get some education and you know, while we can't. So,
so you all know that on X though, it's at Dr. Thomas Lodi, MD. X is at Doctor Thomas Lodi, MD. All the rest. Facebook, you name it, rumble, Instagram, it's all DR Thomas Loie, no, md. Okay. And you can always live stream this on on the, on the, on, on the website, Dr. Thomas, dr loie.com. Dr. Load. Do alright. And remember, all of this stuff will be stored and the replay will be available on everything, Netflix.
So let's get into it. Oh, let me just look real quickly. Philipp says. Any suggestions for alternatives [00:12:00] for enemas when you have a stoma? You know, it depends on where the stoma is. Yeah, there's, there's ways of flushing it. Just, there would only be, it depends if the stoma is in the colon,
you know, then you can do a slow flush, you know, just slow and then let it come out. You can't get any, you couldn't get any pressure on it. It'd be like an enema. But if the stoma is higher up in the small intestines, like if it's in the ileum or anywhere else, usually. there then you really don't want to do it.
Okay. You don't, you don't, you don't want to push. You don't want a backwards current.
So I wouldn't do it if it's in the ileum or small, anywhere in the small intestines is in the colon. You can do a light one. However, eating correct, eating healthy, eating [00:13:00] healthy. It's going to bring all that stuff down. That's the one thing about eating healthy and eating healthy is stoma left side, lower abdomen.
So that means it's in your colon. So that means you could do Basically, just it's sort of flushing it out, put some more. The problem is the tubing and the stoma, how big they are, right? Because it can be kind of a mess. It can be hard to do. And you know, there might be even some you know, I would call a colon hypertherapy establishment and make sure they've been doing it a long time.
They know what they're doing. They might have some sort of connection that you can put on there though, seal it off so that you can get the water. Water in and out. I, I don't know. There might be something like that. There should be by now. There should be by now. 'cause I think we're doing surgeries that result in stoma for about how long now?
40 years long time. It's got, there's gotta be. So I would talk to an experience, but that's a very good question. I'm gonna ask the colon therapist I worked with [00:14:00] and anyway, so, hey, these are fantastic. That's why you guys gotta come on those groups so we can start, because, you know, we're gonna do just open que, it's just gonna be question and answer.
Some will be on the parasite group, CFC group, and then the health and healing. Of course, you can ask anything on any group that doesn't matter. But the point is, we're going to try to focus it there. Tapeworm. Okay. This question is, can you get rid of tapeworm by albendazole solely? I guess you could, but I wouldn't ever rely on one because you remember if you have those, you've also got others going on. And even if you don't notice that you, even if you don't have tapeworms, you still have the others. So you can't, it's, there's no sense of just partially. Eliminating one, trying to eliminate one.
You'd have to do the whole, I'd do the whole program. Three anti hallucinatics, at least one or two anti protozoals. Let's go into these questions. Ah, already. All right, cool.
So the first [00:15:00] question is from Logan.
I've been having heart palpitations and sometimes I have it with fast heart rate too. No other symptoms, no new medications, but unfortunately I did take the jet. It's not a jab.
A jab is when you jab your friend when you're joking, or a jab is a branch that jabs you. It's mild, benign, and used purposely as the, for linguistic manipulation purposes, which were, in this case, very successful. Because everyone's walking around using those words, that word, benign word, for a non benign word.
injection. So, unfortunately, I did take I was
I did, how do we say that? Well, I'm not on TikTok, but I did take, I was
shot.
Shot the sheriff. That's not right. I haven't been to the doctor yet. [00:16:00] Can I detox? It's too late to detox. How do I detox? Should I have any tests run like an echogram or EKG? Thank you. Okay. So, Logan,
I'm hoping you took just one, but probably not, probably two. Anyway.
Lesson for everybody here's in the future In the future if anybody wants to do anything to you
If someone walked up to you on the street and says hey, I want to do something to you You're gonna you're gonna say whoa. Okay. What what you're gonna check it out. You're gonna talk to that person What do you want to do to me and why and what am I going to get from what's going on here? So same kind of attitude we should have with anybody if they're wearing a white coat or a purple coat You want to do what to me?
What's it going to do? Now, if I tell you I'm going to do something bizarre to [00:17:00] you, you're going to say to me,
how do I know this is going to be of any benefit to me? Can you show me how this is going to be? So you would be that way. You would be that way. But, but for some reason we all get hypnotized with the white coats. And
I don't, I, I don't, I get a lot of people are still hypnotized and believe in all that stuff. So Logan, you know, not better, not too bad. All right. Cause it's coming around the corner. There's a new boogeyman coming around the corner. And I think this boogeyman might be coming out of Brazil. Anyway, so what can you do?
So a couple questions about your, your shock, your, your palpitations. Are they, now you say you get palpitations sometimes with a fast heart rate. Excuse me. So palpitation by definition just means when you're aware of your heart rate.
Usually we become aware when something changes, like it either gets harder or it becomes quicker or [00:18:00] slower. Then we become aware of it. So,
so I'm not sure what's happening in your situation, Logan. However, There are many different
situations that can produce changes in the heart. Usually making it go faster. So, you know, sometimes slower, usually faster. And that can be that it's, it's you get, you start getting irregular beats like, so that's irregularly irregular, regularly irregular would be
it's not.
That's regularly irregular. In other words, it's, it's a predictable irregularity, but the irregularly irregular is something else. I mean, they're, they're both these, we have different names for them, but, and then there's just the [00:19:00] tachycardia really fast, like one 30, one 40, one 50, you feel like you're running a race.
And you know, it's, it, that, that's a very disquieting experience. I mean, not that, but I've, you know, I'm, I've been around people having that. And a lot of times with those kinds of situations, with those kinds of. Tachycardia situations if you do something to turn out, see, the heart actually is the natural rate of the heart is about one 20.
If the heart was just left alone, it would beat around one 20 beats per minute. But we have the vagus nerve that comes out of our brain, and it kind of is the conduit of the parasympathetic nervous system. Parasympathetic is the part of the nervous system that part of the autonomic means unconscious or unaware of nervous system.
that it opens up the blood vessels and directs everything towards our organs for, you know, bathing them in, in, in serum and blood and removing waste. You know, it's that kind of, it's allowing the processes of, [00:20:00] of our organs to function. All right. Now of course, when we run it, if we're in trouble, something's going to harm us, then we switch over to what's called sympathetic, and the sympathetic is going to take the blood, it's going to move it away from all that digestive and healing and loving stuff to our muscles so we can get out of there or fight our way out of there.
All right, so, anyway, we're over. Always going in between both of them. We're mostly a weird world. So, I don't know why this keeps going. It says, you know, welcome back everyone on Facebook, etc. YouTube. I don't know why it keeps going, getting disconnected because the Wi Fi doesn't keep, it's just this. Restream.
So,
as I was saying, the heart's a natural intrinsic beat. It's about 120 beats per minute. Kind of like when a baby's born. So now the, it's the parasympathetic [00:21:00] tone, in other words, which keeps it slower, brings it down to 70, 60, right? 80. So therefore, if someone's having a rapid heart rate, all right, so what do you want to do?
If you can stimulate that parasympathetic to slow it down, it can work. And you can stimulate that by going like this, pulling and bearing down like you're going to have, you're having a constipated bowel movement, you know, doing that. Putting your face in ice water will do that. If you can feel on your carotid, carotid is one of, is the main arteries going up to your brain, head, neck, brain. If you can feel on there, you can feel where the beat is, right about near where your Adam's apple is, just about parallel to that, over to the artery, you just kind of press really firm and, and, and move it you know, just to put some pressure on it.
So, that will, that, that'll stimulate, stimulate the same thing. [00:22:00] process and slow it down. The thing you got to be careful about that is if you're, you know, you're older and you've been eating non human food for a long time, you could have lots of arterial plaques in your arteries. And so you could theoretically dislodge it by pressing there.
So, if you're younger, it doesn't matter, but consider that. Anyway, there's ways of dealing with that kind of tech. I don't think that's what you have, Logan. It sounds like you're just becoming aware of it. So of your heartbeat. So. So, what you can do is when that's happening in the heartbeat, you think that your heartbeats going fast, you know, find your, use your, oh, never use your, your thumb, use these two fingers, use your thumb as a pulse use these three fingers and try to feel right over here, right, right next to, it's right here and you'll feel it, you'll feel your artery and just feel it and count it, put on a, put on a stopwatch, count the beats for 15 seconds and then [00:23:00] multiply by four and you've got how many you do in a minute and see what you're doing.
All right, see if it really is fast or if you just have the sensation of being okay That's so let's get down to the fact that if it was caused by an injection that you received in 2021 and then what we we know there's a lot of people that are working in this area like dr. McCulloch others who are finding that you see the
the there's a protein on this supposed be the supposed to be there's a protein that we're talking about. The Kobe. There's but I like an attachment. It's called the spike protein, right? And that attaches to the ACE2 receptor on a cell and you know, that's how it has its action but it also in and of itself will just can cause [00:24:00] inflammation.
Inflammation means it can disturb like in an artery. It will disturb the wall and cause an inflammatory process and a blood clot and stuff like that. But if you remember, so When we've looked at the people that have been affected by it, it's been, I mean, by the most of just falling over you know, like athletes that are like at the top of their game and they're, you know, they're, they're like their heart, you know, their heart, their heart beats very fast because they're, they're usually more like tennis players or or, or people that are playing rugby or, or any other kind of sport where it was continuous high intensity their hearts being fast, which means there's a lot of spike protein going to the heart and they have problems.
So anyway,
they also, these spike proteins like to get to the brain and they like the reproductive organs. They kind of just like that. What's very interesting is
I don't see, we got to go to X you guys, come on, just whatever the habits are, let's go, let's break it. If you got [00:25:00] a Facebook habit, an Instagram habit, whatever habit, let's go X so I can speak. I can't know if I get what I can say or not. You know, I wanted to talk about this paper that was released in, January of 2020, January of 2020.
By the Indian Institute of technology, which is kind of like in, in, in the U S there's a the counterpart in the U S would be the MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology or CIT, California Institute of Technology, right? Where you have really extremely bright people working on technology and research anyway, very reputable group in India, and they produced a paper
Should I read you? I'll just read you the title. I'll just read you the title of the let me see if I can find it here.
Alright, so this was, as I said, here's the paper. See, if I had, if we were on Zoom right now, I could show it, share it with you. But anyway, [00:26:00] here's the paper. It was published in,
well, first posted January 31st, 2020. Indian Institute of Technology. Title of the paper, Uncanny Similarity of Unique Inserts in the 2019 N CoV Spike Protein to the HIV GP120 and the GAG.
So it turns out those spike protein was the same as those other two I just mentioned. And what does that mean? Well, they, they, they show on that paper how this, that spike protein could not have been It couldn't have happened naturally. It's not like a natural occurrence. The way it, because of it's, the way it's made up.
So it's not natural. It didn't happen naturally. [00:27:00] But what's interesting is that is the aspect of this big V that makes it a problem. Because that's how it gets into where it wants to get to. Am I being nondescript enough? I hope so. Because it's really hard. It's hard to talk and not talk at the same time.
I mean, I've tried sometimes. So anyway. Yeah. But wow, what are the odds that it happened on 25 years ago, 30 years ago, when, when, when did we get visited by that invisible monster called HIV was that 70, big 79. We started to see the 79 early eighties for sure. Yeah. When I was doing my residency in New York, you know, as an intern, you can have 20 patients, right.
And then you're on call and you're getting new ones and you should have discharged some by then.
So you can have 20 and then if you know the resident that overseas can have two or three interns and each intern has 20. So that's a lot of people that you have to be [00:28:00] 100 percent responsible for. Well, I remember during, cause I was in the mid eighties, my, in my residency, I had I was in New York. I had anywhere from 13 to 15 out of 20 had HIV or whatever that was.
Okay. So we won't get into that now because we can't, because we're on censorable platforms here. All right. So anyway. It just turns out one of the odds that the same spike protein is on both of those. There's the what are the odds? Anyway, that paper unfortunately that I was talking about they forced them to Take it down.
I got it though, but it may be out there but it's probably got all red x's and skull and crossbones and But you know, nevertheless it was look at it. It's incredible science. They did a fantastic job. Can't argue can't argue with it Take it down. Yeah. Okay, so they did or they at least At least it retracted something[00:29:00]
So if that's what's going on in inside of your body with regards to your heart, if that's it, the spike protein, so what these Injections did is they they send in a message. So the story goes They send in a message to the DNA of your cells to start making spike protein. So now your cells are making it By the trillions
and they're they're being released and they're going out and they're causing inflammation. They're causing blood clots and all that sort of thing.
But anyway, if that's the case, and then others researchers are saying we're not seeing any of that. We're just seeing synthetic biological entities that the only thing that slows it down is a Faraday cage. You know what a Faraday cage is, right? It's blocks EMF. So [00:30:00] the only conclusion one can have is if you're talking to two reputable groups.
Then you realize that there was more than one. We're talking about more than one thing, right? It's not just one. So the multiple ones, but what can you do? Well, you know, not to kind of, so you may know and if anyone has CFCs, even if you don't take it anyway, but not to kind of, it's just the the enzyme produced by the fermenting soybeans. And it turns out interesting the way it all happened was the Japanese were making not though, you know, back, probably back in the Edo period, you know, which I think is probably one of the, you know, it's not spectacular like Rome and it's not spectacular like, you know, maybe even Sumer, Sumeria, incredible
buildings and statues and roads and not like that. But the thing about the Edo period in Japan is that it was probably the most[00:31:00]
congenial for human, for simple, healthy human existence. It was like, it was, it was beautiful. It was beautiful. They ate simply they they everything they did they did perfection and they just did everything they did and they didn't there was no Opposing it. I mean everybody just Everything just flowed.
Everyone just accepted life as it was and it just flowed Anyway, what they did was they used hemp to make their clothing and so clothing was never discarded. It was just reused recycled We saw them so something made differently everything they used was recyclable and They went to bed early. They had a a they had a philosophical
position of called Bushido and we had the samurai. It was just a, you know, it's not what you think. If you're thinking of samurai out there, just [00:32:00] killing it. It's a way, it was a way of life anyway. So it was very beautiful. And they had, they made up they fermented soybean. And it's interesting. The, the, what I think was bam, you see the bamboo or some kind of wood that they had available in case it is on that will happen to be a bacteria called basilis subtilis.
So that is how, and that, and that's how you reproduce not to kinase. So basilis subtilis is so now, so nowadays we, we add it in or we put it in a, I think in Japan, they put it in something will still already have that so produces not to kinase and not to kinase is stimulates something called pepsinogen in our blood and pepsinogen is the is beginning the cascade of That eating blood clots and
yeah, welcome back. I was we were kicked off again.
Wow now that doesn't happen when i'm zooming with people it doesn't happen any other time [00:33:00] except when i'm on this restream
We got to get away from this everyone and get over to X. Okay. So, how are we going to do that? You know, I'd like to get some suggestions because I don't like talking. I don't like using. I don't like having my lips tried, right? That's crazy.
Anyway we are the research they're using. Exactly. Well, it was a great global, fantastic global clinical trial. And there was multiple arms in the study and they've got the data somewhere. So NATO kinase, it turned out the Japanese published some papers in last two years that it actually dissolves spike protein. So that's excellent. So I'd be taking, I'd get, I'd order, I'd order ni NATO kinase and take maybe three on an empty stomach three times a day. And if I didn't have that sort of problem, I just [00:34:00] wanted to keep my blood nice and thin.
Because, believe me, if you ever notice, if you go for a blood test and if you ever, if you ever seen that your blood comes out, it's really dark, and it should be bright red. So, our, we're, we're, anyway, we're all, we're all dehydrated, we're not, and our breathing is, you know. So, we're not really living in harmony with our our environment.
So, as a result, and the blood is
well,
it's pretty magical, magical stuff there. But anyway, it pumps, by the way, the blood pumps the heart, the heart doesn't pump the blood. And I know cardiologists must hate that when they hear that they must get angry. And I don't know why. It doesn't matter what's pumping and it's pumping. You've still got your job, buddy.
I mean, you know, so why are you all upset over it? Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh. So that's the one thing I would do for the spike protein in terms of if what they say really happened and a DNA NA has been changed and all that, then there's nothing [00:35:00] you can do about that unless you were to get another Mr.
And i a to go in there and to undo specifically what was done. And that would be the only way to do that. But I'm not sure what happened where no one's really sure what they've done, whatever it is. The other thing you can do is just really live healthy, do everything that you would do if you wanted to be healthy.
And what would that be? That would be cleansing. How do you cleanse? You do a juice cleanse. For how long? For as long as you can. Six weeks, eight weeks, 12 weeks. Drink tons of juice. You can switch it up a bit so they're different so you don't get bored. And make sure you've got a lot of green because a lot of green is going to give you the nutrients that we need, the nutrients that we need to replace the parts that get worn out, right?
And also, they contain these other helpful things called phytonutrients and vitamins that we call them that, but they're just chemicals that we need to survive, that we need. So, [00:36:00] drinking all that and do that for a long time, I would clean out.
And and start taking, you know, and the, the, the You know what's really I, I think if you listen, if we, if you're in, in, on these shows for long enough, whatever we call 'em long enough, you're gonna see that really there's, it's like only one answer to everything. There's only one answer to everything.
And the reason that there's only one answer to everything is because there's only one road to health. There's only one way to get there. There's not enough. There's not two ways. You can't arrive at health.
In any other way than by living healthy, no other way. You can't purchase it, negotiate it, demand it, beg for it. You've gotta earn it, and you earn it by living healthy health is the consequence of living healthy, [00:37:00] period. So therefore then the question becomes, well what is living healthy? Ah, there's the real question.
What is living healthy? And living healthy is, well, first of all, you gotta understand what are we right? Because what is living healthy for a, an aunt? And then there are all kinds of species of ants, but whatever, let's just take an ant in general. I know that's I know i'm being what's the word
phobic, right? Ant phobic. I'm ant phobic because I'm not acknowledging all the varieties of ants. However, I am acknowledging them. I'm just kidding We couldn't talk about each one. But so at the risk of being ant phobic i'm going to say that you know, but the ant so anyway, so we're going to talk about how does the ant live healthy? Well How do we determine that? We determine, we firstly look at its anatomy and physiology. You say, well, what is it capable of doing? Okay. And how would it [00:38:00] eat out of what then you can see.
So anything, a fish, a bird, a tree, and then you, and by looking at all that stuff, you can figure out what it is that we were made to do and not made. We weren't made, we
were not, we weren't made in the sense of a, you know, a carpenter making a desk. It's not like that. And we won't get into that. But anyway, what do we have that, how could, where would we be where, where would we be, where would our body be able to live out its, you know, its lifetime?
So, if you look at us, you'd see, you'd see that we're not really very, like, we're not, you know, of all the creatures on this planet, we're like, you know, not really strong, we're not fast we have no senses that are like, you know, extraordinary, [00:39:00] right? Like, you know, dogs who hear things that we don't, cats that hear things, you know, and see things, you know, we're, we're in this small spectrum of electromagnetic.
We're at small spectrum of auditory. We're, we're like in this really narrow range of perception. And then in terms of our physical progress, you know, yeah. What other creatures could we, are we stronger than? Not many.
I'm not even saying bigger because I mean, Would you wanna be dealing with a a, a wild bo bobcat or a wild even I'm telling you, a wild squirrel raccoon
dog. So, I mean, we're just, okay. So physically, you know, so, and we don't even have any fur. I mean, some of us do, but a little bit, but we don't have, you know, we're not, we're not equipped for, so we'd have to be in a place that was pretty warm. We'd have to be in a place that's pretty warm, but would mean that we would put us around the [00:40:00] equator.
Around the equator, equatorial zone, right? It would put us, I'd say between 15. degrees north and south latitude above the around the equator would probably be where we could hang out and live. And what would be available to us would be what, what's what's what, what, when you go to visit that part of the world, what do you see, you see lots of vegetation, lots of plants, rivers and lakes and oceans, so lots of water and lots of life, all kinds of birds and all kinds of reptiles and mammals, fish.
Just teeming with life. Fantastic. Beautiful. Forests and jungles and, you know, and that's where we would, that's where we, that's where we would be able to live easily, all right? Now,
without any tools, what I, what I, what [00:41:00] I want, I'd like everyone to have the understanding and the perspective that
all the creatures on the planet, none of them use tools. I mean, yeah, I mean, monkeys, yeah, monkeys, some primates use some tools and ants, you know. There may be some tools, but it's not like they're maimed. The main way of them manipulating the environment for their survival. Most all creatures are designed to eat what they can eat with just the way they are and the way it is sleep, all the things necessary for survival are, are the, the, the, the accomplished without having to augment anything because they are, they arose out of this environment.
So everything they need is there. They are part of it. And that's the same for us. We're part of this environment. See ya. Equatorial environment and everything we need is here and we don't have to do anything. It's already there. I mean, it's producing You know morning glory spinach. [00:42:00] It's producing, mangoes.
It's producing coconuts it's producing What is what is the mangosteen? Yeah, thank you. It's producing all these things That's this food that we are naturally attracted to right?
naturally attracted to. A baby would be attracted to. A young baby, a one year old would be attracted to these round things that are sweet. That's what they'd be attracted to. I think it would have to be a rare, rare baby. Maybe, what was that movie, Damien? You remember that movie, Damien 666? Okay, so that movie, now that baby, who knows?
Who knows? That baby might have looked at a rabbit and said, I want to eat that. Or most of us don't as babies. We don't look at animals and think we want to eat them, right? Not me. I was born. Oh, okay. All right. I got it. Yeah. Some people are real. I'm a real [00:43:00] man.
But anyway, for those of us that are not real men or real women, we probably never looked at an animal and said, eat that. No, I don't think we ever did. So we usually probably would eat plants that we could pick and stuff like that. That's how we would eat. So how do I live a healthy life? I live by, I live according to my biological requirements.
Requirements are. Easy, easy, easy to obtain here in this world. Easy to obtain right where you don't need a lot of clothing where you can be getting exposed. You will be exposed to sunlight, making what we now call vitamin D. And your feet will be on the ground because it's not freezing. You'll be on the ground all year round.
You'll be connected to your real mother, the earth. And
and by the way, When we're getting that food that's growing out of the earth, it's come. What do we get in the end? Electrons. If you're standing on the earth, you're gonna get those electrons anyway, right? So we call it mother's [00:44:00] milk. But you know, so we're breastfeeding. We're, we're, we're electron feeding.
We're energy feeding. It's a wonderful, it's a wonderful thing. So if you go near moving water, you go near ocean, you go near a river, you go near anything that's moving water, you're gonna get lots of those electrons. You're gonna get those electrons from other living things, dogs, cats, humans, trees. So petting people.
Petting, hugging, touching good stuff necessary and yeah,
why does one keep getting pneumonia?
Well, if you're talking about a real, it's a real pneumonia, lobular pneumonia, it's verified that it's, it's in one of the lobes, there's a collection of pus consolidation, they call it
that would be pneumonia. Pneumonia must be distinguished from bronchitis, which is just another, basically, again, it always comes down to location. Pneumonia means that, It's the, the problem is in the lung parenchyma, the the part of the lung that does the work [00:45:00] of, of exchanging air oxygen and carbon dioxide, and those are called alveoli.
So if it's in there, that's called pneumonia. If it's in the tubes that bring the air back and forth, it's called bronch. Those are the bronchial tubes. And that's inflamed. It's called bronchitis. So this is, well, if you had just inflammation in the. Lung pneumonitis.
Did we go off again? You guys probably.
Alright. So, anyway, so living healthy, I only, so living okay. I don't know what's going on with pneumonia, if it's really pneumonia or not, but I, my, I'm telling you, it never went away. And if it never went away, it's time to cleanse and fortified. Clean out. Clean out, clean out. Okay. Clean out and get [00:46:00] lots of sleep.
So, you know, nothing more healing than sleep. Nothing.
Is that it? There, there, there. And. There I can do that. Okay, cool. Anyway, there's that. That's it. So should you okay, should you check, you know, with your heart getting back to Logan here? I, yeah, the tests that you should get are, you know, to see if your heart's damaged. There's something called the troponin.
It's, it's a, it's a blood test that looks at, you know, troponin is part of the muscle. When there's damage, the levels are up and look for your troponin and that'll help with what's called myocarditis. Myocarditis is an inflammation of the myocardium and the myocardium is. muscle of the heart. So, you check troponin levels.
That's what we check when someone's, you think someone's having a heart attack. We'll check that. All right. It's up. That means the heart's being damaged. If the heart's being damaged and you're not, you haven't done anything to cause that, then we have to surmise what [00:47:00] happened. I would also get a CRP. C reactive protein HS high sensitivity and I would get a D dimer.
Okay, so
The D dimer is elevated. Of course, then you're going to want to do the noctokinase for that reason, right? Because the D dimer means you're going to have blood clots And so the noctokinase of course is going to stimulate the breakdown of those corporeal unlike what they give in hospitals Which is heparin whether it's the regular heparin or low molecular weight heparin doesn't matter
It's blocking the other side of the coagulation Story which is the Producing cloths, fibrinogen, fibrin, indothrombin, and making cloths. So it blocks that. This is just making sure that the breaking [00:48:00] down is happening at a fast enough rate, which I think is much better because if you block it from what's happening, it's one of the, and then of course what they do with in the hospitals when you leave is they can't give you any more intravenous or you could be doing your own shots of heparin at home subcutaneously.
And a lot of people do and it's called it's a it's the low molecular weight heparin they use. Give yourself a shot twice a day. And they many times put people on an oral medication called Coumadin or warfarin. And same thing. It blocks prevents blood clotting. But of course, if you overdose on it, then you start bleeding because you're not clotting when you should.
And in fact, the Coumadin or warfarin is what is rat poison. You know, people leave this out for the rats, but they have rats. They, They put the coumadin in the warfarin to color it with something else. They put it in the food, they eat the food, and then they go and they have a hemorrhage.
Anyway, instead of doing that, noptokinase and lumbrokinase, which is the made from earthworms. [00:49:00] It's another enzyme that does the same thing, stimulates the pepsimogen cascade. Yeah, I like doing that side of things better. So, now, by the way, when you check your de Look, for example, anybody who's checking D dimer should also do it when you Just, if you have CFCs, you want to check your D dimer anyway.
So a D dimer is a breakdown product of a blood clot. So when a clot, blood clots being broken down, it'll break down. It's one of the things that's broken down to, you know, fibrin solute products, D dimer. Anyway, if that's elevated on a random blood test, then that means you're breaking down a lot more clots than normal, which means you have to have a lot more clots than normal.
That's the inference. So now if you take natokinase or lumbrokinase, that's going to increase the breakdown of those clots. So you can no longer. Use D dimer as a as a, as a tool to evaluate because you expect it to go up now that you're taking those things because when it's going to [00:50:00] increase the breakdown of blood vessels, right?
So now you check fibrinogen, which is on the other side. Is it, are you making more fibrinogen, which is going to stimulate? So you want to, now that's how you'll measure it because you can no longer use D dimer. You can measure the fibrinogen. All right. So
now remember that ivermectin and suramin and all these things. So, this has worked really good with preventing these whatever that whatever that is that's going on in the, in the bar bodies. The other things you can take and gosh, everyone should take everywhere anyway is NAC and acetyl cysteine because that up regulates your ability to produce glutathione in your body, in your cells.
And then you can get the catechins from green tea and the curcumin. These are all fantastic. The last, that's the, that's the, that's the bad thing. All these. Antioxidants,[00:51:00]
but you've got it logan. You just got to don't worry. I wouldn't don't get hung up on their scenarios stories just take care of your heart and Now you can do an ekg, but that's not going to help us on. I mean, that's it's going to just show you You know ekgs will show you if you have an if you have an abnormal rhythm They will show you if you've had a heart attack if you're having a heart attack, but they're not predictive they'll show you if you have a large enlarged heart. That's all they don't show Much other, so they're not gonna tell you why anything happened. They'll just show you if there's an example.
Next question, but Chris, is it, is it true that a prostate biopsy could actually cause CFCs to spread needle tracing? I heard that, but our doctor denies it. Your doctor denies it. [00:52:00] Which I is not surprising, but it is. Why does that still surprise me? Why does that still surprise me? Because it's shockingly untrue.
So there's lots of evidence showing the prostate biopsies release. Okay. When a tumor is growing, wherever it is, breast, prostate, anywhere, there are multiple little other tumors that are microscopic that are growing. The main one, which kind of emerges as the main one, stimulates its own growth. So it produces substances that stimulate blood vessel growth because in order for anything to grow, it needs a blood supply.
So for a tumor to grow one millimeter, it needs to do more blood. So it produces a vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF, and other similar. But at the same time, it [00:53:00] sends out inhibitory signals to all those other microscopic potential, potentially secondary, preventing them from blood blood from, from, from developing blood vessels.
It's blocks angiogenesis for all of them.
Now, when you do a biopsy, disturb that and you, it is no longer sending out inhibitory signals to all those satellites. Now they have the green light grow and they do. So the metastases were already there, but they were being blocked. That's one way. And so
they grow and the other thing that happens is when you disturb the tumor micro environment, it releases growth factors that are in there. I just, that's just common sense. It's kind of like, well, here's the thing. If you wanted some honey and you're in the forest and you see a [00:54:00] beehive up in the tree, are you going to just start poking that beehive?
Probably not. Okay. Don't poke any beehives. Anyway so anyway, you know what the research shows if you're a doctor who doesn't breathe, you can find out that prostate biopsies, in particular we're talking about prostate, but this is true for breasts, it doesn't matter where, can lead to changes in the tumor microenvironment that promote growth of secondary tumors.
For example, one study found that prostate biopsies can lead to an increase in the expression of growth factors that promote tumor growth. Another study found that prostate biopsies can disrupt the balance of the immune cells. in the tumor microenvironment, leading to an increase in tumor growth.
See, they don't really like this, so they say, well, in conclusion, prostate biopsies may release the inhibitory, inhibition by the primary tumor on the secondary tumor, which is causing their growth. [00:55:00] But further research is needed to fully understand the mechano
Alright, well, anyway. There are lots, we see this with breasts, it doesn't matter where. When you go in and you disturb it, you not only have the risk of just mechanically disrupted mechanically allowing them to escape and get into the blood vessels and spread around. Not only that, which does happen, and yeah, like you said, needle tracking, you push the needle in and you pull it out.
And why? How do we know that? Because we see growth on the track of the needle, where the track where it came out of, we see growth there. That, you know, but, but, but the main one is releasing the inhibition. Leave it alone. But if I don't biopsy it, I can't get a diagnosis. Well, is that what you really want to say?
Can you see I can see that as a quote picture of a guy like [00:56:00] this saying man in search of a diagnosis We don't need a diagnosis. What the hell is the diagram a name? I want to put a name on my prostate. I got an idea call it frank is a great name for prostate. Really? I'm, sorry, if there's any franks out there, I don't mean to offend you but I think call it what you are ralph But anyway, yeah, don't go at anything else.
All right, and by the way, and I was asking ai I was great. I asked ai I said Can you tell me what else would be if I suppose I had a large mass in my breast, what else could it be? I mean, he or it came up with, well, fibroadenome. Well, what percentage of biopsies of breasts are fibroadenome? I got all this stuff.
I had to finally get the guy down, get the machine and the robot down to [00:57:00] you know, acknowledging that you know, not much. And then I said, okay, so now suppose you find out it is a malignant process, what are you going to do? Well, we're gonna do surgery. Is that effective? Does that work? Well, whatever. Oh, yeah. Okay. Well, you just said doesn't but I just want to know Can you show me that it works?
At the end what I like about AI is at the other thing. You're right. I love it. You bring up some good points It's great. I love it. Good. I'm gonna continue my arguments with AI much more fun than arguing with me Then it gets emotional name calling. This AI has never called me a name
Anyway, absolutely, Chris, it will cause spread and you don't need it. Why do you need to do biopsy? You want to do a biopsy because why? Because then they can send it to the pathologist, the pathologist can put all this stuff on, names give it all these names and give it a score. And now, now with the name and the [00:58:00] score, it fits perfectly into their sales algorithm, which is going to tell them which are the products and services they can offer you next.
Well, like, will this work? Don't ask that question. Well, we've had this to be more and more.
You're not sure, huh? What do you mean? I might not be around, huh?
If you knew what they were really up to, then you wouldn't even be asking me this question, okay? You start, if you want to start the process of the downhill spiral, get a biopsy. Know it's not very popular. I'm probably going to get knocked off all channels. Except X and Rumble. So you may, if you don't see me, I no longer have a tiktok profile except for DR Lodi 2.
0, but we can't do anything by the way. Anybody know there's, this has got to be, isn't, how are they the [00:59:00] top of the hierarchy? Isn't there like, somebody that governs these guys and gives them licenses that we can go through like the FCC, federal communications. Is there somebody you can go to that say, Hey, one of your licensees is not being like, well, we, we didn't have that look with Facebook. They knocked us off for seven months. You know, I don't really say anything. Am I saying anything bad? I mean, I'm just saying,
I don't think it's, I don't think I'm not inciting violence. I'm not. Anyway, but the truth is, is that you don't need a name on it. You look at it. If you've got something to be a love centric prostate. Okay. So, all right. So It could be some chronically permeating cells. So let's just act as if it is and do everything we would do as if you had it.
Just, let's do that. What's that mean? That means thorough cleansing. Go to your, go to a real biological dentist. [01:00:00] Get that taken care of. It's
prostate health. You know, be eating healthy, right? Don't eat animals. Eat, eat lots of pumpkin seeds raw pumpkin seeds. So, just eat, eat healthy the way we, we talk about all the time. And Ejaculation, make sure you're ejaculating 21 times a month at least.
Balance your hormones, all that stuff.
If you go and get a biopsy, you will begin the
death march. It's a death march, it's a death march, it's a death march. I can't think of another term.
And just like the, the beginning of the, of any race starts with whatever. Shouting, or gentlemen start your engines, or whatever it is, whatever it is. [01:01:00] whatever it is that starts the game shooting the air. You start that death march when you do the biopsy. So if you had a biopsy, say, okay, done, done, done. I'm going to get out of this road.
I'm going to jump ship now. Right. Get out. And if you're going even further, you've had surgery, whatever it is, as soon as you wake up, say, well, out, out, out, there's no way, but I got to go to them for, no, you know, I haven't done it for anything. Nothing for nothing. Nothing for nothing. Nothing, but they know nothing.
There's nothing they can offer you except fear and loathing, right? And you you know,
you know, I you know, I wish it was different and I also wish that I also wish you know while we're wishing I wished I had the Benjamin button thing going on. I wish I was like getting getting younger Not that I don't want to know the baby, but I can't I don't know. [01:02:00] So, anyway, yeah So just keep in mind you please keep in mind That they offer that's they they they don't offer you anything. I I you you're there out of you're there out of fear Because you think that it's the only place in the world you can go to to get help and they're not there to help you.
Can you believe that they're not there to help you? In fact, they might even think they are they might even think they might even think they might even think by cutting you up Poisoning you and irradiating you is helping you. They might even think that let's say they think that you still run. Yeah You They are purveyors of fear and loathing.
That's what they do. You know, we already have, listen, we have Hunter Thompson gave us the book fear and loathing in Las Vegas, right? So we don't need anything else. Fear and loathing at the oncologist's office, fear and loathing at, oh, I won't say any of their names because, oh God, I would be, I mean, I think that'd be worse than I would, that'd be worse than talking about [01:03:00] genotypes and phenotypes probably, or at least it's bad.
Don't talk about genotypes. So Chris What I want you to do is go to your
let me give you an article. Let me give you an article and get you started. Okay. Cause you gotta, I don't want you to believe me. Don't believe any doctor. Let me find one of my articles. Where do I keep? Okay. So, so where's the study? Here we go. Okay. There's one journal of orthopedic research dynamics of microvascular remodeling during tumor growth and bone. Here we go.
This is. Primary tumor dependent inhibition of tumor growth, angiogenesis, and perfusion of secondary. Okay, you realize what the reason they talk like this is so that they don't even know what they're talking about. Okay, by the time you finish the sentence, you gotta say, what? You gotta go back and read it again.
Do they, you know, I, unfortunately, I know these people and I, what? They even talk that way, like, in public, around each [01:04:00] other. Imagine talking to someone like that. To me, that would be, like, the greatest insult, to talk to me that way. Right? It would kind of be like well, it's, it's pedanticism. Was that the word? Pedanticism? Pedantic. Pedanticism. Pedant. Are you a pedant if you do that? Pedanticism. Anyway, it's pedantic. You know, pedantic is when you're using words that people don't know, and you know they don't know, but you're using them so that you can appear to be intelligent.
That's what they do. They do that with each other. They, they, they and, and, and but they realized that the most extremely bizarre and a convoluted way that they can express something. The guy already, he gets it. And then oh, they're there's a high five on that one. These guys are they're together, right.
Because they're both just messed up. And then you know why they're in this field, you know what they're doing. They're doing, it is called, excuse my [01:05:00] English. But they're doing intellectual masturbation. Right, that's what they're doing with each other all over the place, right. Bye. And unfortunately, when you go through medical school, you gotta, you get you gotta go take a shower after you have a meeting with these guys.
So, it's insane.
, you know, that's just, to me, that's, that's just, it's as bad as when I'm with people who are trying to eliminate words, you know, like, Okay, there's slang, there's slang in the vernacular that, I understand evolving languages and all that, it's the living language, but, but, I mean, now we're reducing the English language down to ridiculous things like For you, instead of, and you realize that soon the generation might already exist will not know how to spell those words.
Cause they won't have to, but all they have to do is start to type it in and the computer will fix it. So we, we're, we're, we're on our way to illiteracy. Come on, let's go for it. [01:06:00] Stop spelling. Stop reading, stop talking, but don't go like these guys. These guys are on the other end. They're like The primary tumor dependent inhibition of tumor growth angiogenesis procures a secondary antigen of growth.
All right, what the hell did you just say? Now, the systemic balance of angiogenic and anti angiogenic has been proposed to play a key role in primary tumor growth and growth suppression of secondary tumors. Okay, despite the above. Anyway, they're just, I hate it, but I have to read it.
So that's one you can read. Okay, that's one you can read. The other one is I have
you know, I should submit. I, I, I, somewhere I'll post some more references. Actually, I've done a I'm going to put on the website. They're putting it together now. I, I put together descriptions of
like, for example, Kirkman, what Kirkman does. And I, you know, kind of description with regards to CFCs, but a really good thorough summary. Several. [01:07:00] Paragraphs and I'm going to make a smaller one for the person who doesn't want to read a lot Just wants to get some bullet points and then we'll have a more thorough one And then I'm going to have list all the references that's going to be there So i'm going to call this part of the website like the library So I want every but everything that I want you to realize that everything I say Is absolutely one hundred percent nine thousand percent backed up with research Otherwise, I wouldn't say it and if it isn't i'll say it i'll say there's not much research on this But whatever but I don't I don't remember saying anything like that, but i'm just saying that's so, so, that vitamin C, biopsy, surgery high dose chemo, standard, you know, maximum tolerated chemo, metronomic, anything that we're talking about, I'm going to make, I've already written up.
We're going to have a library section or I don't know what we're going to call it. It should be up soon. I've already done the work. It exists. I just have to put it in the format. But, so if you've got any questions, you want to know the [01:08:00] research, you know. Go there if you're, my uncle's, my uncle's a urologist or my daughter's a pediatrician, whatever, okay.
So they, she wants to know what you're doing is really great, fantastic, because I want her, since you trust her, I want her to read all this stuff in a minute. So we get two, we have accomplished two things. One is she's going to have to say, wow, mom, go for it. And she's going to say, wait a minute, I need to rethink what I'm doing.
That would be ideal, right? But it won't happen. But anyway, that would be ideal. It's going to be out there. I'm going to get that out there for you guys. Okay, so let's look at here. This is Carol. I had stage 2 breast CFCs. I had a mastectomy, the central node removal, biopsy revealed CFCs in one lymph node.
Now, I have CTCs, circulating tumor cells. What is your recommended treatment? Okay, good. So Carol, first of all, don't ask that question in the way you asked it. [01:09:00] because then you're still in their game. What's your recommended treatment? In other words, mine, what am I going to do to you? Or what should I, what would I recommend that somebody else do to you to fix you?
You have to understand, what, that, what is being asked there. Okay, what's being asked is an impossibility to happen.
Okay,
from now, okay, so, you have,
and they had grown a little bit, stage two, so that means they're starting to disrupt the architecture of the breast. But, they didn't go anywhere else. That's stage 2. That's what that means. But you had the mastectomy. In other words, they took out everything with a sentinel lymph node. A sentinel node is, they use the word, they use the, they use the word sentinel.
You know, it's really a literary, it's a word [01:10:00] that has literary
value. And they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they stole it. Anyway and the biopsy revealed, in other words, they did a biopsy and it revealed that you, in one of your lymph nodes, so you didn't just have sentinel nodes. You have multiple. That in one of the nodes, there were CFCs. Well, you know what?
If you had no CFCs in any nodes, then it, you weren't, it wasn't, it had, it just hadn't gotten there. That's what the lymph, that's why we have lymph nodes. We have lymph nodes to evaluate the stuff that's going on in our tissues and determine, and that's where the lymph node is where they determine what is the appropriate immunological response.
That's, okay, that's why we have lymph nodes. And so now that you had all that disruption, you're, you're getting circulating tumors. So [01:11:00] I just, as long as you realize, Carol, that it's it's because of what they did to you. So don't let them or anyone ever do anything else to you again. Okay. You guys have to, what if someone walked up to you on the streets?
Hey, excuse me. I want to do something to you. Think about it. What are you going to say? First of all, you're going to say, get out of here. I don't know you. Even if you knew them, what if some of your cousin came up to do something to you. Anyway, don't let people do things to you. Unless you want to I mean, but that's that but so now you have CTCs I love those acronyms circulating tumor cells because there's more apparently there's more of them around. Okay. So now, Carol, you've got to go back to basics. Everybody always goes back to basics. And also remember, you've been, you think you did everything right. And now it's like you either hit a dead end or it's starting to grow.
You go back to basics. Wait a minute. Okay. Back to basics. Why basics? Because basically that's what [01:12:00] happened. The basics are the foundation of the fundamentals of how this ever occurred in the first place. So you got to go back to the basics and say, okay, okay. I got to do what? I got to get rid of all toxins.
But I went to my biological dentist. Yeah, when was it? Six months ago? Okay. So, it might have been, because this is not uncommon, that the cavitation surgery you had or the root canal surgery you had, to remove it wasn't, didn't, it's still causing a problem. It wasn't complete and that happens. So you got to go back and check. It's, I mean, it happens. And I think one just, I was talking to Dr. Emma. She said, I think she and a colleague had gone around to other, other biological dentists and evaluated all their cases over the last year or five years or whatever it was and found out that up to 40 percent of these cavitation surgeries or whatever come back [01:13:00] recur because they didn't get it all.
And they finally figured out why it had to do with technique.
And so, you know, that's the thing. You don't know. So you got to go back. Even if you think you had it done, you got to go back. You've never done it, Carol, I'm assuming, because if you went the route of them with them, they would never recommend you taking a look at your, at your dental. You got to go get a you've got to go get a cone beam, three a 3D cone beam, a CT of your mouth.
And you've got to get that with a biological dentist. And I think we have some listed on our website. Anybody know if we have that on our website? I'll here you go. Cayenne is a natural blood thinner and it's also good to take immediately. Yeah, and Cayenne is good for dilating arteries to open them up. Which is why you all remember the, you remember the master cleanse? Think the easiest cleanse to do. The easiest. It just satisfies everything.
Easiest, you get lemons, lemon [01:14:00] juice, you make lemon aid, lemon and water. Cayenne pepper and a little bit of grade B maple syrup. Grade B because it still has all the It hasn't been filtered so you're not just getting pure syrup. You're getting the the other,
anyway, you mix it up so that it tastes, and you drink it all day long and you can, believe me, you can yield it to 15 20 days easy. It's got cayenne pepper in there which makes, opens your arteries and gets things to dilate. Yeah. What were we?
So, anyway, okay, so, you've gotta go back, you, Carol, you've you've gotta do your biological, you've gotta do your juice, you've gotta do cleanse, colon cleanse, lymphatics, you've gotta do the whole, Like, you gotta cleanse out, remove the reason why this happened, balance your hormones that they if they, you know, they, I don't know if they have you on hormone blockers or what, but, you know, whatever they're doing, I'm just, it just doesn't work in the end.
If and when I say it doesn't work, what I'm, [01:15:00] what I mean by that is that you and I, everybody, you know, wants you to have a healthy, long life. And so when I say they're, what they do doesn't work. That means it doesn't allow what we all want. It just doesn't. Okay. It doesn't matter what the arguments are.
It's like when it was, you know, you have said you're not listening to what I said. Okay. Yeah No, i'm not because i'm watching what you do Okay, so what I say and what I do are not in are not congruent. They're incongruous then what i'm gonna put all my I I I I I have less value in the words. I value the words less when they are not congruent with time. So So our goal is to make you healthy happy and live as long as possible I mean, being healthy and happy. So we're not going to get there. If we go on [01:16:00] that there, those, those, those, those, those house of horrors and what I call in the house of horrors, because where did they end?
You know what the back door of the house of horrors is the morgue at the morgue, they have a morgue in there. You didn't see a morgue anywhere else. Are there morgues anywhere else? Maybe I'm pretty sure a morgue only come out or only in hospital. Hi, welcome to the hospital. Yeah. Oh, let's just sit this down.
Sit down here. The doctor will be with you in a moment. Says, how is it, you know, and Belwyrs, Bela Lugosi, and all these guys, you know. Oh, Bela Lugosi, he'll be right in here to draw your blood. Okay, so it's a madness, madness, madness, these guys are. Now, you broke your leg, go there. Okay, they're good at fixing legs, you're not gonna wind up in the morgue with them fixing legs.
If you're having a heart attack, you've, you've gotta go to those guys. I'm not saying we don't go to allopaths. But we go to them when we need them. We don't need them for this kind of stuff. Why? Because they will kill us. Did he say that? Did he really say that? Think [01:17:00] we should ban him from everything. I think we should ban him from
sitting on chairs. No more sitting on chairs for you, Lodi. Anyway. Now, here's Lisa. She said, I had a lumpectomy and had a tumor. aggressive CFCs in my lymph node. I have stated I do not want chemo, but I will do radiation. What do I need to take? Iron, magnesium, benzene, CBD oil, and the correct dosage just we took it.
Lisa, okay, we gotta, whoa, we gotta pull the stops there on you, okay? You're like on this wild horse going to the wrong, into the wrong cage, or what, the wrong, what do they have? Where the horses? Anyway, you're going in the wrong direction. Okay, you had a lumpectomy. Now, they say you, you had, in your lymph node that you had an aggressive CFC.
What does aggressive mean? Aggressive usually mean, to them, they call it that, is that you've got a it's poorly differentiated. In other words, it doesn't look like the cell from which it arose. It's got a Ki67 that's really high, which is the proliferation index, or [01:18:00] whatever. It's got, you know, that's what they're calling aggressive.
But their implication in that word is, therefore, you've got to be aggressively aggressive. and quick.
Another, they're saying it's aggressive except that apart from the non aggressive. If it was not aggressive, well, they would still do the same thing. Yeah, they just use these words. Okay, so now you're going to do you will, you will not do chemo, but you will do radiation and you will do radiation. Can I please ask you why you said you will,
why will you do radiation?
Anyway, when, you know, the aggressive, I don't know why they told you it was aggressive.
Let's say it is aggressive, whatever that means. All right. Is there any, that's not aggressive? Anybody out there have a CFC that's not aggressive? They're all aggressive. They're a bummer. You don't want them there. Just by them existing, they're aggressive. All right. All right. [01:19:00] So radiation therapy. So let me tell you, Lisa, you don't want radiation and you don't want one.
No, you don't. No, you did not because they don't work. If they work, okay, let's deal with them. Let's take the side effects and let's get it over with the surgery work, right? If surgery work, you wouldn't be here talking, asking this question, but it didn't work. They told you it would work. Okay. And if they told you it wouldn't work, then why would you have done it in the first place You did it 'cause you thought it would work.
What I mean by work, it'd be gone. You'd be done overly. What about radiation therapy? Well, first of all, first of all, how does radiation therapy kill tumors? It destroys them. It just fries them, wipes out their DNA, and it generates what are called reactive oxygen species free radicals, which just kill them.
Destroy them, and the cells around 'em, the neighbors around them[01:20:00]
now. But what the literature shows, the radiological literature shows, the radiation oncological literature shows, is that the use of ionizing radiation, which is what this is, paradoxically promotes metastasis and invasion. Not making this up, their literature shows that it paradoxically promotes metastasis
with linked to rates of, increased rates of morbidity and mortality. What does that mean? These words just sound like words you're using in some conference. Morbidity means sick. How sick does it make you? And mortality means dead.
Okay, because what they're saying in their articles is metastasis is a major obstacle to successful [01:21:00] CFC therapy. Major obstacle to CFC. I'm going to use their word cancer therapy. And it's closely linked to the rates of morbidity and mortality of pain. It's closely. The way they say this, you know, they're not going to say it.
Metastasis is closely linked to the rates of mortality and what it, you know what that means. What they're not saying and saying at the same time is that metastasis are why we, people get so sick and die. Okay, okay, just say it. So, now, reactive oxygen species, which are the ionizing, which are the free radicals produced by radiotherapy, radiotherapy.
They have been implicated in the inducement of EMT. You know, you might all recall in one time or another when I make use of that term. I use the their acronym for the process called epithelial to mesenchymal transition. Epithelial [01:22:00] is a cell that is mature of, you know, an epithelial cell. It's an epithelial cell and most all carcinomas are epithelial.
And
it
turns it, it turns it into a mesenchymal cell, which is a stem cell so that it can metastasize. So it takes a mature cell and turns it into a stem cell so it can metastasize. That's what radiation therapy does. You're not going to do it, are you? Are you really going to do it? No, you're going to read the research first.
Then you're going to decide. You're not listening. You're going to read the research. You're going to go in there and you put radio radiation therapy. Go to, go to PubMed. Radiation therapy causes metastasis.
Do it again. Radiation therapy causes EMT, epithelium mesenchymal transition. Okay, that's one thing it does, right? So, it activates all the EMT pathways. Okay, much accumulated evidence has shown that metabolic alterations in CFCs [01:23:00] are closely associated with CFCs. EMT epithelial me and stem cell phenotypes. Oh my gosh. See, they're not gonna say it right away. They're not gonna say it. Here's how they say it much.
Accumulated evidence has shown that metabolic alterations in cancer cells are closely associated with the epithelial do meson transition and cancer stem cell phenotypes. So that co completely removed it from anything personal. I mean, oh, that's really true. Oh, how interesting. What, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Let's go back. Right. What did we say? The evidence shows basically that what accumulated evidence shows that that the epithelial and mesenchymal transition Results in stem cell. That's all you're saying. What's all CSC phenotypes? They love the word phenotype remember phenotype versus genotype genotype is what your your genetics, but you're not gonna change You're not gonna change unless [01:24:00] you get it unless you get at least 30, 000 mRNA injection.
You're not gonna change it So what do you? So,
so, so, so, so you get surgery, breast surgery. Let's say you want to have large breasts or you get a nose change or what else would people do? Some people get chins. Whatever you do, you're changing your phenotype. You're, you're not changing it. You're still like if you, for example, for example, you get, you get your chin enlarged because you think your chin is too short and you get your nose changed.
Then you have a baby. Your baby is not going, your baby is going to have. The gene, your gene is going to express your genotype, not yours. So your baby, if you had a, if big noses were in your family, baby would have a big nose. If small noses were in the family, it's not, the baby will not take on your changes that [01:25:00] you made surgically.
Okay. Those are called phenotypes, right? Did I make that clear? Is that clear? So ionizing radiation can also elicit various changes in the tumor microbiome that may affect invasion and metastasis. So EMT. epithelial mesenchymal transition, cancer stem cells, and oncogenic metabolism are involved in radio resistance.
Targeting them may improve the efficacy of radiotherapy.
, I can't even, I, I have, I, excuse me, I'm gonna go vomit. I have to go vomit after reading this stuff. So listen, Carol, just do the research and you do not want to do that. What do you want to do? What do you want to do? I mean, Lisa, what do you want to do? You want to do what Carol's doing and what Logan, everybody's going to do, and that is to You're going to clean up your body.
You're going to go to biological dentist. A good one, a real one. You're going to do that. You're going to get to clean up your [01:26:00] body, and you're going to start eating human food, and you're going to live like you would live if it was 7, 000 years ago. I mean, not completely. You'll still live in your house and stuff, and you're going to wear shoes, and blah, blah, blah.
But, you can take your shoes off as much as possible. You're going to stand on the ground. You're going to go to bed early, 8 o'clock. You're going to go to bed early, 8 o'clock. I didn't make up the rules, you know. You got to go to another planet. Maybe another planet might have different situations going on, but we as we got here, you know, we got this revolving.
Sorry. I know I offended the equal rights to the flat earthers. Okay. Equal rights. There's a raw this disc, the disc slap. This is rotating at it makes one complete rotation every 23 hours and point 56 minutes. And then you've got the sun, which is not going, I know it's not rounded anyway, whatever, however you want to look at [01:27:00] it as a rotation.
And the sun and our relationship to both of them establishes what's called the circadian rhythm. And the circadian rhythm is what we're tuned into, right? We've got pineal gland, which pretty much executes that. It produces epi thon, which is kind of the the boss of melatonin. And they work with this little place in our brains called the suprachiasmic nucleus, which deals with light and all that stuff.
And anyway, our whole body is based on that thing. So, that's why you go to sleep early. You go to sleep early, not early, you go to sleep on time, at the right time. So that you can get all your appropriate 90 minute cycles of restorative sleep. So that you can take care of the wear and tear that took place. That happened today because if you don't, it'll be repaired and it will accumulate.
And after 10 years, 20 years, 30 years. Yeah. So if you want to age really quickly, go to bed late and remember you want to make, you want to just put the little extra, [01:28:00] make sure a hundred percent that you're going to age quickly eat within an hour before you eat, go to bed late. Weren't it? Okay. So these are the things we have to do.
Lisa, Carol, Chris, Logan, all these things we have to do. Who you guys and who everybody you've ever met everybody. We all have to do the same thing It's just that when you get told you have cfc's you're like on a it's showtime, you know, no more rehearsals curtains are open Showtime it's time to do it.
Okay, that's all that's happening, right? That's what's happening That's what showtime is all about now.
I'm not on youtube.
Am I on facebook? Yeah, i'm on facebook. Hey How can I not be on youtube? Can anybody is that true? Isn't that great that we get disrupted? You know Why would I not [01:29:00] be at, what, is it possible for YouTube to take me down? What did I say? That was so egregious.
Huh? Oh, I don't know how to work it, I don't know, is the Zam not on?
Yeah, where is, we were saying, where is he? Oh, listen, you guys, I am,
what?[01:30:00]
Anyway he is not on YouTube today.
Incredible. I, I don't know what to say, you know. I don't know what to say, I just have to get.
Let's go to S, you guys, X. Forget, please. Unbelievable. Anyway, where was I? Thank you for telling me. That's crazy. Okay. Basal cells. This is Cindy. What are your thoughts on basal cells? Should they be surgically removed or use cryotherapy or should they be left alone? All right. So Cindy, it depends on what you're talking about.
Basal cell carcinoma. You know, it's the most common of the skin CFCs. So, and encourage, you know, in sun exposed areas, you know, so one of the factors that, that contributes to it happening is the by the light, sunlight, [01:31:00] UV light and not repairing it. You know, and it's interesting though, people that depending on your diet, the diet will the healthier your diet, the less likely you are to get these things happening.
All right. But anyway, with basal cell and squamous cell, this, the removals are they, you know, you can do surgery, you can do cryo cryotherapy, freezing it, you can do topical
you can use topical substances. And the reason basal cell is considered you know, the, the biggest problem with basal cell carcinoma is that it's you know, if it's left to grow and it can be disfiguring, but it's rate of metastasis is, excuse me, it's like 0. 58 or something. It's very like, it's hardly at all.
And they have this one surgery called, I don't know what the, how you pronounce it, but M O H S, M O H S surgery for both basal and squamous cell. And [01:32:00] that's where they just They pick off the tumor and then they very meticulously pick off one layer at a time. They look under a microscope and they want to make sure that they're and so once they do that and they get all of these CFCs gone,
then they're done and
You know, they use the cure word here. They have a chi cure rate of 90, 90, 99 percent very high with that surgery. Now the topical agents they use are usually drugs like 5 FU which is a chemotherapy drug, but You can use what, what I've used with people is first of all, I paint, we paint it daily, once or twice a day, all around it iodine, Lugol's, and we use ozone, ozonated olive oil, ozone, and you can bag it, bag it. If you go to [01:33:00] a doctor that uses ozone, they'll show you how to, they'll know what you're talking about. Hydrogen peroxide, like, 8%, 6%, 9 percent hydrogen peroxide.
So you can use those things, and then if you, aren't happy with results, then you can then go get surgery either way. But
I've had many of both basal and squamous cell disappear by using a combination of iodine and ozone or iodine and peroxide. But you've got to be very diligent about it and do it a lot. Maybe do it several times a day. And then of course you've got to clean up your body so that your body is going to be having a healthy immune system and you know, [01:34:00] healthy replacement.
You know, lots of The Carotinoids, 'cause we're talking about skin, so the carotinoids, which come from carrots, but, and other plants too, of course. But the carotinoids are a lot, you know, there's it's not just betacarotene, that's only one of them. It's astaxanthin, it's lutein, it's lycopene.
It's, you know, there's many different molecules. But they're all really good for, for skin instead of that. And, you know, the cryotherapy is good. Excuse me, there's a, a. There is a rate of possibility of recurrence, but if you did radio, if you did, let's say the cryotherapy and then you added in and you did the topical on top of it, you know, you could do that or you try to keep it from coming back right there in those things and living healthy.
And it's not that it came, but again, remember the reason this occurred was because of the [01:35:00] toxicity in this case was the UV radiation.
excessive UV radiation, excessive changing your body. Your body will be able to deal with UV radiation much better. So,
kicked off here again too. So, it's ridiculous. We're going to have to stop live stream. I mean, I mean, stop restream. Okay, it's insane.
Alright, let's do some more. What time is it? What time is it? Okay. Okay. Alright, here. I didn't get, you know, I'm going to, I'm remember, I'm[01:36:00]
hey, Michael. Thank you. Yeah. Fantastic. Yeah, Michael on the ivermectin and the pembentazole. Okay. So, yeah, you know, the ivermectin, the dosages that, that recommended that I recommend when I have, when I'm working with someone would be ivermectin 12 milligrams three times a day. And I would recommend pembentazole 222 milligrams three times a day, 222 milligrams three times a day.
And, or I might use mebendazole either way. Sometimes albendazole, they're all good. These benzimidazoles, And then I would also add in my close to my 500 milligrams three times a day. That's what I would add in because it does, because you want, you remember these, their parasites are not it's not the numbers of them.
It's a biomass. Their reproductive capacity is shocking. They can lay up to 70, 000 eggs a day. And each of those eggs can become 70, 000. Ridiculous. The average is much lower. The average is probably about, [01:37:00] I don't know. 5 to 10, 000 eggs a day, just that. But yeah, they keep, you know, and they're in you know, so you've got layers upon layers upon layers.
So, so, so you take it three weeks on, one week off, three weeks on, one week off, three weeks on, one week off for eight months, 10 months, whatever. And then you're also going to be taking milk thistle 500 milligrams three times a day. You're also going to be taking, or you would be wanting to be taking alpha lipoic acid 300 milligrams three times a day and a big juicy fat.
the complex once a day. To protect your liver. You're going to check you. You would want to check your enzymes before you live around that before if they're high, then you have to adjust all that. And you know, but that's what that that that that's what we do with that. Okay. But I definitely use three and the helmet and one at the cortisol at least the Nitroxin 5003 times a day.
Nitroxin 5003 also known as a vitamin E or you get that tinnitizol. Again, it's like it comes in [01:38:00] depends on what country I think 150 milligrams is 500 whatever they have do it three times a day
now
All right. So here's Renee and she did her question. Can you please suggest a protocol for healing leaky gut and chronic constipation? Yeah, so first of all, I would start with a really good a juice cleanse and I would drink celery cucumber kale Spinach and then whatever else you want lemon and apples You can make them red apples, make it delicious.
Whatever you need to do to make it delicious. You can put carrots instead of apples. But whatever, make it delicious. Make it so you look forward to it. And you drink 3 liters a day or more. Keep drinking and drinking and drinking. You're going to get extremely well hydrated. You're going to be peeing all the time.
And eventually your constipation will go away. And you should go get a colon, [01:39:00] colonic, colon hydrotherapy. You need one, especially if you're constipated. Go get, find a good colon therapist Colon therapist, colon hydrotherapist, make sure they've been doing what they've been, they've been doing it for a minimum of five to eight years.
Okay? And you know, and maybe on your third, fourth, or fifth day of a juice cleanse, go to the colon therapist. Then you're gonna start to now leaky gut. Everyone's got leaky gut. So then when you start, also during this period, you can be doing, doing a juice lens. You can still be doing. Taking some biocidin, which you can find online, B I O C I D I N, excuse me, to break down the biofilms
that microorganisms use to protect themselves. And then you would take glutamine, and they have it with a combination of aloe, I think it's called, where [01:40:00] they have aloe, the plant aloe vera, and glutamine. Very, very important. And take that several times a day, because that's fuel for the healthy cells in your body.
And then you want to take there's one probiotic called Akkermansia, A K K E R M A N S I A. Akkermansia, and its job is to heal thigh junctions. Wow. That's its job. And guess what it likes to eat, because you've got to feed it. It likes cranberries and pomegranates. Actually, it likes polyphenols, but it won't tell you that.
It keeps, you know, a little hushed about that. They're not going to say they like polyphenols, but they're going to say I like it. So anyway, but they do. So you can eat anything with polyphenols. Grapes, you gotta be careful. Grapes can be too sweet. But polyphenols are just a [01:41:00] term for a specific kind of chemical that's found in many, most plants. I mean, I don't think there's any plants without polyphenols. And they like them. Actually, all the healthy bacteria for us love uncooked plants. We just love it.
So that's what you do. And then when you resume eating after your six week period. You do decide to do is fine after you finish, you resume eating. You're going to eat within a six hour window. You're going to stop eating four hours before bed. And you're going to put a minimum of eight hours 18, I'm sorry.
A minute of a minimum of 18 hours within the last meal and your first meal, the next day, 18 hours. That means it'd be 18 hours a day that you're not eating, which is going to be doing incredible stuff. Your body is going to be like. [01:42:00] In charge your body's in charge instead of you like Forcing it to do whatever to assimilate the madness that you're putting in your mouth down your throat So if you do that And you're eating plants because guess what?
We're humans. I know we wish we were dogs, but we're not So maybe well, wait a minute. I heard you're you're in luck because i've heard that now If you identify as a dog Then you can actually have someone Go with you to work or school and with a leash and they can bring you to them. Oh at school I guess it would be hard to pull off at work But at school they do that and if you identify as a cat, they'll even put litter boxes in the boys I mean they're looking out for us, you know, they're really looking out for us.
So anyway, but eating dog food Where are we eating dog food? [01:43:00] Why are we eating dog food? I don't know why we're eating dog food. I, I don't particularly like dog but we do. Why are you calling it dog food? Well, we're talking about dead corpses. Corpses are
well, not just dogs, okay? Vultures, insects, microorganisms. What else eats corpses? Ghouls. G H O U L. Ghouls. So on Halloween when you see goblins and ghouls you'll find them all at Sizzler, right? It's, it, you know, it's dog food. So no more dog food. I promise you. Eat plants. Eat plants, do what I said, the cleansing and all that stuff, take those things, and you'll be, it'll be over, it'll be over, and go to your biological dentist, take care of all that, and it'll be gone, I promise you it'll be gone, guaranteed, it cannot not be gone, okay, ah, thank you Gina, thank you so much, where you can watch that, what, what's what, [01:44:00] oh, the Cure documentary film, what is it,
what is the Cure documentary film, anyway, You know, I feel like you know, I think, I think we need a language lesson here. I maybe I'm going to devote a whole thing to language because we've got to watch your language, watch your language. A little, we've got to watch our language because it gets us in trouble because we actually start believing what we're saying.
Right. Or, or, or we believe because we believe that we're saying it, but either way, it doesn't matter, you got to watch out what comes out of your mouth. Who was it? That guy with that guy, I remember that guy kind of barefoot a lot. He wore sandals. Beard hair, long hair.
What I'm talking about. Anyway, he said something. It's not what goes in the man's mouth that defiles him, but it's what comes out of him.
Yeah, you got it. It was in that long book that has two parts to it. It's got the Old Testament and the New Testament. [01:45:00] Remember that book? The New Testament. That's where it said that. And who's the guy? You got it. So, but that doesn't mean, well, I can eat anything I want because that's not what was meant by that statement.
Okay, because you go back to by the way, we got to do this. We got to do this. There's another thing coming out By the way, I gotta tell you i'm gonna i'm gonna the food thing. I'm gonna show you We're gonna have that seminar and I guess I better put it together. I put it together at the end of this month I don't know when they Made it but what day it was look for that date on our website But i'm gonna we're gonna do I want to do the food We're gonna get I want to get rid of the controversy.
There's no controversy If you know the truth, there's no controversy. If you don't know the truth, there's all kinds of controversy. If you don't know the truth, right? And if you don't know the truth, you can have an opinion about it. But if you know the truth, it's not an opinion.
Right? Do I have an opinion on regarding addition and subtraction? Can I have an opinion about it? [01:46:00] Everybody's got an opinion. Okay. So I can have an opinion about 2 plus 2 equals Can I have an opinion about that or
That which is true, you either know it or you don't. If you know it, you know it. If you don't, you can have an opinion about it, a theory about it controversy about it. You understand what I'm saying? So what we're going to do is talk about the truth. The truth is the truth. And and I want to make sure that you don't have any of those people that, you don't want to have guys that think that kale is no longer superfood.
Watch it. So there's going to be two parts. I'm going to talk about first one is just going to be the overall. What is the human diet? The second part is going to be. Let's put an end to the controversies. What are the controversies? Should we eat animals? Is that part of our natural diet? Number two.
Oxalates. Beware of the oxalates. Really? Okay. [01:47:00] Let's see what the evidence shows. And lignans and what else? Anti, anti anti nutrients. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What are the other controversies?
Cooks. Well, now that's confusing. Is that a controversy?
Soy
is a controversy.
Anyway, with all the controversies, we're going to talk about them. We're going to reveal the truth about them, okay? And then by the way, they'll all have research.
Oops, the connection was lost. Oh, oops, oops. How do you spell oops? Is that F U, [01:48:00] how do you spell oops? F U what? I know it's four letters. I can't remember how you spell it, but what's the word again? That's what oops means, right? Oops. . Oh, you just saying you know how many oops we've had during this time. I never had Oops before, and I don't have oops ever again.
Only on this. Oops. You know what? It's over. The time is over you guys. Thank you for being here even though your numbers have dwindled. Thank you for being here. Still enough of you to make it worthwhile for me to be here. Thank you. I don't have sweaty gut. Have a fantastic week and remember be the words, words, words. I know. And listen, if you that just reminded me, if any of you have ever heard of a musical called my fair lady, based on a play called big mailing, there's a song in there, it's words, words, words, words. I'm so sick of words.
Anyway. Great. It reminded me it has nothing to do with what I'm talking about, but it's a, it's a great song. [01:49:00] I like that musical anyway. So, so I got Aloha and Stay healthy. Go to sleep early. Okay, if you do nothing else, go to sleep early and that will begin the journey.