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
Ep. 171 Rethinking CFCs (Cancer), Parasites, And Healing
Fear thrives on vague labels; clarity starts with biology. We open by replacing the word “cancer” with “chronically fermenting cells,” so the focus shifts from doom to mechanism: cells favoring fermentation rather than oxidative phosphorylation. That reframe lets us explain PET scans and SUVs in plain language, showing how to distinguish metabolic activity from leftover anatomy, and why a smaller, quiet lesion can mean success even if it’s still visible.
From there, we build a full map of health that goes beyond any single protocol. Oral health emerges as a major, overlooked driver of systemic inflammation, making a visit to a true biological dentist a foundational step. We unpack environmental stressors—EMFs, persistent chemicals, ultra-processed food, and chronic sympathetic overdrive—that blunt immunity and confuse test results. On nutrition, we cut through the noise of diet wars and food myths, grounding choices in form-and-function design: eat to nourish and energize while reducing toxic load. Metabolic approaches make sense not as a fad but as measurable physiology, especially when tracked against baseline and follow-up imaging.
We also tackle practical questions listeners ask every week. Parasites aren’t just folklore; eggs, larvae, and adults respond to different agents, and the real goal is restoring balance so the body stops hosting trouble. For severe back pain, we highlight prolotherapy and prolozone as underused options that can stabilize and heal without the losses of fusion surgery. We walk through cases—Hodgkin’s with lingering hot spots, pediatric brain tumors with urgent decisions, skin lesions mislabeled into aggressive plans—and show how to sequence actions, reduce fear, and choose comprehensively rather than experiment piecemeal.
If you value honest guidance that puts mechanisms over buzzwords and meas
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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
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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...
Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
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So welcome to Sunday Night Live, Tanel. That used to be hilarious because it was Saturday Night Live. I'm sure most of you do remember Saturday Night Live. But it's uh is that still on? I don't even know. I can't imagine it having the same level of comedians that it used to have. Um let me see. A lot of questions here. All right, Teresa, you won't make it. Okay. All right, well, good. Okay. So, you know, everyone's got the message. I mean, H2O, fantastic. Fantastic. They added to most drinks, you know. Yeah. Uh it's one of the um ingredients. I don't know if they call it inert ingredients or not, but they might, you know. Um, anyway, as a reminder, the uh the format tonight, um, today if you're in Asia or Australia or New Zealand or Tasmania, which is Australia, um, I mean, or Japan or anyway, if you're in Asia, it's morning, and if you're in the other side of the world, it's evening. But anyway, the format tonight is uh that you send in questions. You have already sent in questions either on uh I think on Facebook and uh Instagram, you can send them in, or you go to the website drloadie.com and you can send them in there. And um then we you know, I go through them and try to answer them all as much as possible. So this is not the same as um our private Zoom meetings that we have on on Mondays and Wednesdays, where if you're a member of the inner circle, we have three different groups in the inner circle. The CFC group, which I always qualify every week for the new people. For the new people, remember just keep in mind that if you hear the word cancer, there's only one thing that it has any meaning for, and that is astrology. Right? Right, look it up. There's no meaning. I mean, they gave it this meaning, they call it a condition that people develop, but that's not that's it had you know, it's not even when they give a description, they name it. For example, I name a glass. Now, if you don't know what a glass is, then name and I tell you the word glass, you don't know what it is. You understand? A name does not at all describe it, it gives you no information except for you know, like a word like round, but the name of something like my name, Thomas Lodi. What does that tell you? Nothing, or the name of Virginia, the name of Johannesburg, it doesn't tell you anything, so understand that names tell you nothing, they give you a name. It's an odd thing, but just think about it, okay? Names are not informative, they're nominative, you know. Uh that's all they do. All right, so anyway, so the name cancer doesn't give you any information, and we do know that it does give you a great deal of fear because it's become synonymous with death due to everything we hear about it. So, in that regard, it's really worse than a useless word. A useless word would be a word like cup, if you didn't know what a cup was. It's useless. If you already don't know what a cup is, and someone says cup to you, you don't know what that means. Like if I say um if I say um hiragana, what does it mean anything? It's the name of something. Hiragana. No, it means nothing, right? Unless you're Japanese and it means a lot, right? Or I could say the word um jungle. You don't know what a jungle is, it doesn't mean anything. So you got the point. So the word cancer, we don't use it, it's it's not a useful word. Okay, it conveys nothing but fear, and fear doesn't help anyone. In fact, it hurts people. Fear cripples your immune system and many other systems. So we don't use the word. We use we what the what we use is we use uh the term chronically fermenting cells because that's what they are. They're cells that are no longer using the standard what is called oxidative phosphorylation, or if you're really cool, you call it oxfoss. If you're looking at other people that know what that means, then you just saw oxfoss. Now people are weird driving school. I'll be in driving school. Good morning. Um, so we don't use the word because it's not useful, and it scares people. You tell people you're gonna you're gonna die is what you're telling them. So we don't use it. We use the word CFC, chronically fermented cell, the phrase that's CFC. Okay, so we have a CFC group, we have a uh parasite group, and we have a health and healing group. Okay, and each group meets either on a Wednesday or a Monday. All right. Parasite groups, people in the parasite group, which is kind of kind of the second level up, have membership in the health and healing group, so they get every Monday. The people in the CFC group have automatic membership in the parasite and the uh health and healing, so they have meetings every Monday and Wednesday. So that's pretty cool. All right. These meetings are what we get on a we get on a um on a zoom, we all have a login, we get on a zoom, and we and I answer questions directly. And what the the the the benefit of that is that I get to like if a question is not quite clear to me, I say, Well, did you already do this or do you know, and we can kind of focus in on me truly understanding the question and the condition that the person's in, and then give a really relevant answer. So you'll see this morning, I'm gonna probably receive questions that are not complete because people don't think uh that way. Why is it so dark? Is it just me? No, that's brighter for me. I don't know. Okay, so anyway, so that's the format for this morning. And we're on live. Uh this is live, is uh on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, Rumble, X, what else? That's it. Uh, I guess that's it. All right. Uh Tinkerbell there. What's Tinkerbell again? Uh oh, TikTok, TikTok. Isn't that cute? So TikTok is such a cute one that they don't like me. They don't like me for some unknown reason because I may be weird, but I'm not I'm not even in the same dimension of weirdness that I see on TikTok, stuff I see. Which is not within a I don't talk within their community standards. So their community standards includes everything from pregnant men to uh okay, so anyway, so so for some reason TikTok uh doesn't like me. And uh if it wasn't such a widely used platform, I wouldn't care, but anyway. Um, but I'm on there now, and I have to say really nice things like today is Joe Smith's birthday. But anyway, so on on X and um um TikTok, it's Dr Thomas Lodi M D. Dr. Thomas Lodi M D. If you want to find it on Facebook or Instagram or any of the other ones, YouTube, it's dr Thomas Lodi, DR, doctor, dr Thomas Lodi. Okay, that's that. And then for those of you who might in a little while say, is this guy a real doctor? I mean, you know, what is he real? Uh so I that's that's why I put these up. Just these are some of them, and you can just see them, okay. Real doctor, which is not anything to be proud of. It's something you should say, like, you know, like uh just like when I used to travel before the world declared itself insane, after the great hoax of 2020. Uh back back in the day, way back in the day, um, Americans were called the ugly American. There was a book written, The Ugly American. And uh, you know, so so basically when you traveled, you you would say things like, Oh, well, I'm Canadian, because the people don't know the accents, or I'm Australian, they don't know they don't know the accents, and then they like you, you're okay. But if you said you're American, uh, I was in Geneva, Switzerland, and uh there was a situation anyway, they they I had to mention I'm American, it goes, I'm Medica. So same thing with the doctor. You say the word doctor, it's like it's not cool, guys. It's not cool. God doctors are the leading cause of um losing one's uh um rhythm and going flat, flat lined. Uh now I know I'm aware of the the uh journal of the American Medical Association, which uh back in when was it a few years ago now, but they published a study showing that the medical profession was the third leading cause of flat line, of not being alive anymore. But they were looking at a restricted population, they weren't looking at all the outpatient um people and their conditions, they were just looking at the the expected effects. No, they call them side effects, but we all know that side effects are not on the side anywhere, they're right in the middle of your consciousness, such as vomiting, such as low blood pressure, dizziness, such as uh weakness, such as scratching, whatever it is. Uh or uh and I love when they say when they when they're doing that on the TV and they they they they say it as quickly as possible to try to get all the words in, they say kind of soft sleep. And one of the side effects is death. That's it's just anyway. Um anyway, it's it's an effect, it's not a side effect, it's just one of the effects. So one of the effects usually of a drug is that that it it it it it it it eradicates or makes unnoticeable a symptom you had, like a headache. It's no longer a headache, right? Your head no longer hurts. So that's an effect. But the fact that it's ripping up your gut is an effect, also, it's not a side effect, it's an effect. So uh those are the three groups, and I really would love for you all to join them so that we can really have these conversations. The groups are fantastic, and in addition, you get to be on the telegram group. Every one of those groups has a private telegram group with 60, 100, 200 people, whatever the number of people that are on it, on the group. And uh it's fantastic because here's people that are brilliant who've been going through whatever you're going through uh and I'm going through um for a long time, right? And so they've got a lot of resources, so it's a great place for resources and sharing and uh just getting the feeling of a camaraderie that I'm not alone. Wow, there's other people, and what did you do? Wow, and you're still doing good. Wow, that's great. So it's got all that stuff, and part okay, not PhD, no, not a PhD, but let me qualify that. When I was in graduate school, I actually did the most of the work for the PhD, but uh my professor and I could not come to an agreement on several things regarding the dissertation, and so what that never happened. All right, so I left with the masters, practiced psychology for a while and then went on to uh go to medical school. But yeah, got it. So, anyway, that's that. So um the other thing is the part four of the the human diet, which we've been uh we started uh a few months ago now. And the first part was what does nature say? How did nature build us? Because that sort of has something to do with uh eating, because we know that form and function are as intimately connected as front and back, so form or shape or yeah, for example, I have wings. Well, then there's a possibility I can fly now. If I don't have the wings, there's no possibility I can fly, unless there is some other way that we haven't learned yet. Um but anyway, if I have gills, I can breathe in the water. If I have lungs, I can breathe in the air. All right, so form is function. So the form and the shape and uh of our body, of our gastrointestinal tract, uh, our brain, the way it works in connection with digestion, our nose, the smelling of it, our eyesight, the visualizing it, handling it, chewing it, all that stuff has to do with its ability to be digested, and that means broken down into small parts and then absorbed and then utilized. All right, so that's uh kind of the purpose of eating. Um so anyway, our anatomy will define what we were designed to eat. So that was the first part of the uh webinar. Second part was called cooked food is poison. And if you think that's a crazy statement, go watch it. The third part is what does the research say? Because yeah, this guy's got an opinion, that guy's got an opinion, yeah. Well, what's going on? All right. So um, so I went over the research. It's pretty, you know. I mean, what can I say? It's what it is. The fourth part, which is going to be uh exposing the myths, myths. So the myths are um things like oxalates are bad for you, uh, you gotta wash your food or you gotta kick your cook your food, seed oils are bad. Uh, if you want to be strong, you've got to eat dead animals. What are they? I mean, they're myths that you guys would really, you you uh, I'm sure you'll be interested in. Um, oh, were they? Gosh. Anyway, but it's all the myths that we're that we're all familiar with that make us say, wait a minute, I thought that was okay. Or um, oh no, I've been doing that for now. I've been wasting my soy. Soy that's another myth. Soy's terrible. It's gonna cause your breasts to develop CFCs. So none of that's true. And I'm going to expose it by discussing the research. That's all. All right. It's not, it has nothing to do with anybody, any particular person that we're going to name or anything like that. That's not even the point. The point is to let's let's find out what the truth is. Why do we want to know the truth about these subjects? Because a lot of us are really serious about what we should eat, you know. Um, and we're willing to eat, we're willing, we're willing to do what we need to do. We just need to know what it is. And it becomes so confusing because, you know, peanuts are good, peanuts are bad. And the reason that the reason that there that there is controversy is because anybody can make a statement. Everyone's entitled to their opinion. Okay, right. But opinions don't help me at all. I don't need an opinion, all right, especially when it's in regards to something I need to do. I don't want, I just want to know the truth. All right, so um, but that's why you'll hear for everything that is actually gonna promote health. There'll be somebody that found out that they think they found it out, that's really gonna do the opposite. And they're gonna tell you, oh my god, now it's not okay to eat broccoli. Oh my god. All right, Gina. Um, real quickly before we get into starting and answer the questions, let me answer one question that I see up here. Um, because I don't usually do that because it's not fair to the people that sent them in, but I'm gonna just do this one only because I know that it's a question that is um asked and pondered about by by many people. Um, and uh so what so why can't I take natural herbs to rid myself of uh of parasites, right? I mean, Holder Clark came up with it with a brilliant, brilliant woman came up with an amazing protocol. And and her uh and and you know what she utilized in her protocol. It's a you know, you take them sequentially, what she utilized was um based on science, based on what they do. And then you've got to understand the parasites have different uh part that they they exist in different uh parts of their life life cycle, right? Or they can be eggs, they can be larvae, or they can be adults, and so it's not the same the same substance. Oh my gosh, it will not damage an egg that would damage uh uh an adult, or vice versa. My cherished book, it's got wet. Um, so here's the reason. And this is uh my reasoning, all right? My reasoning, and that's this if you go back in time and you look at the the world that that existed in the year 1900 on every continent.
SPEAKER_00:Who's this guy? Okay, now why are you so interested in what I studied? Let me ask you this guy, because uh this guy says you need to know what I studied before you're gonna listen to me.
SPEAKER_01:What did you study in college? I see you have a doctor in the end. What did I study? Well, my major, my undergraduate major was psychology. Yeah, but you know, I studied other stuff too, like history and stuff like that. Anyway, um, yeah, my master's degree is also in psychology, clinical psychology. And my MD is in MD stuff, right? Medical doctor. And then I specialized in internal medicine, did my uh in residency internal medicine in New York City. That's my training. Now, what have I read? I've read everything that you can imagine, but that's that. So, anyway, so the person that was in 1900 um was a very well-read person, um, because the education in those days was uh a classical education, and a classical education is where they teach Greek, Latin, rhetoric, literature, history. You know, they taught, you know, because the goal was to graduate people who were uh thinking. Well, thinking and um and especially especially of inductive thinking, right? You all know what deductive thinking. If you're good at deductive thinking, you'll be good at a video game. Deductive thinking is okay, you get all the facts, and and and and and there's and and and therefore the facts point this in this direction. You deduce what the the consequence the consequence of the facts are. Whereas inductive reasoning might be likened uh to imagination. It's like you got you know all this stuff and you go, you take it to a higher level, but that could mean this could all be related to so it's it it's the it's the other way, and it requires a really different, you know, even even in our brain, the brain, the the neurochemistry is different, but um it's a different, it's uh it's the ability to if I don't you ever use the word create, but it's creative in that sense, you know. And for example, when I was a kid, there were no lot, there weren't a lot of toys you could buy. I mean, there were rocking horses and stuff, but uh, but if you wanted to have a horse, then you were gonna be in the cavalry and you're gonna you got a broomstick, or you this is my wand, or this is my whatever. So we would pick up unknown, you know, just odd things and use them as props, and we'd have to okay, that's that. Well, remember that's so we it it it it it allowed us to induce and and to imagine, and which is good, it's very important, it's like one of the most important uh aspects of intellect, because as you know, chat GPT can deduce anything within a second, but uh the word is deductive that leads to art, which leads to music, which leads to and art and music are not even thinking, they're just inspiration, becoming a vehicle of the divine, but um but inductive thinking, you know, and all the um uh what we consider great inventions throughout history have been by people who went were not deducting it. The oh mmm, therefore. No, it was like, uh, what if mmm? Right? That's that kind of thing. So anyway, so we had a good classical education back in the 1900s. Um, and uh most people did took care of themselves, they knew how to take care of themselves, they knew how uh how to make their clothing, how to uh grow food, prepare it. Um they could identify uh things in nature that they needed. There was no people didn't go shopping, there were no malls or anything like that. And uh, you know, we weren't consumer oriented, we were um practical and survival-oriented, and so we knew how to do things. So, not of course, not everybody made their own clothes and everybody uh made their own furniture and all that. There were carpenters and there were uh seamstress and um tailors, but um you knew how, and your grandmother did, and everyone, you know, everyone you made things we we knew how, and especially if you were not living in an urban environment, if you were living and most of the the the world in those days was non-urban, it's the opposite now. Most of the world is urban, so it was not urban, and people were in nature and they lived in nature, and they were and nature wasn't that over there, it was what they had, it's where they were, it was the context of their lives. As a matter of fact, if we look back on all the great incredible composers, you know, um, you know, all of the Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, Franz Schubert, you know, they're fantastic composers. So they composed the music that we could not compose today. And it's not because we don't have the ability or the skills, it's that music comes from it, it's it's it's it's not it, you you, it's not a it's not part of language, it's not part of knowledge, it's it's it's it's it's it's it's in its own dimension of reality. I mean it usually utilizes uh you know rhythm and melody, and it can directly communicate to a one person to another, directly communicate without having to learn a language. It's a universal language, it bypasses intellect. So, anyway, we could not in today compose that kind of music because the context in which we live is no longer pure, it's no longer nature. We we in those days we thought of analogies, metaphors that were related to nature. You know, now our metaphors are related to you know computers or automobiles or you know fabricated artificial things. So our world has become artificial, and so the music that would be that would come from us cannot come from that pure place of uh where it used to come from, which was uh pristine and beautiful. And when I'm listening to that music, which we call classical music, when I'm listening to it, I am it puts me in a state of being that you know, of course you can't define these things, as I said, they're not they're not intellectual. Um but it puts me in a state of being that I don't get from modern modern music. That's a very special when I listen to the Brandenburg concerto. Well, you there's not much to say. Anyway, anyway, that was a human being in 1900. We were capable of doing things, we were self-confident, self-reliant, uh intelligent, and um he couldn't fool us easily, um, as easily as now. Anyway, that's also prior to the installation worldwide of a of different types of electromagnetic devices, right? Those were the days when Thomas Edison came along, wound up with a light bulb, and um, you know, all the stuff that we got all the electrical, you know, Nikola Tesla figured out that we're not gonna get real far with direct current, we better come up with some something else. He calls it in alternating current, AC, and that's why we have all the electricity that we have. All right. Now, um, in the world of of the physics of electricity is that whatever direction the electrical current is going, you know, there is a 90-degree perpendicular dimension of magnetism that is not because of electricity, it's just that they don't exist without each other. It's that that's why it's called the electromagnetic field. They don't exist without each other. Like you cannot have a front without a back, they don't exist without each other. You cannot have an up without a down. They are part of the definition of that they're they're they're they're they're they're they're two different aspects or dimensions or uh understandings of the same phenomenon. Anyway, so these uh with these devices, because we were using electricity to to do work for us to make machines and stuff, uh started going up. So the first ones were the telegraph. The telegraphs went up, and that was in the early uh tens and teens of the early uh 20th century. Uh and that changed everything. Our exposure to EMF modified directly and significantly our immune systems. And we just went out from there. We went from there to telephone poles to radio towers and signals and uh telephone lines, and and now you'll see places where there's you know massive amounts of electrical wiring, and it's not healthy to live there. We know that people that live that live around those areas develop CFCs inordinately, more you know, more than than the population of people two blocks away. So, I mean, that's an obvious direct quake effect, but they have other very, very uh unknown effects. And some people, just as some people are allergic to uh uh a pollen or something, there is an intolerance for this electromagnetic frequencies. And the reason that's so important and impactful in our lives is because we are electromagnetic beings, all right? We've got electric, we've got electricity running all over the place, all right. Your nerves, it's electric. So your nervous system, which is how your things uh, you know, it's how you move, walk, think, you know, it's just it's that movement. Um and then uh you know, that's electrical, and then in our blood is electrical. You you've heard of the term electrolytes when they do a blood test, and they look so you know, sodium, potassium, fluoride, bicarb, uh, and then there's magnesium, there's calcium, there's other electrolytes, and meaning that these are substances that allow for the that allow the passage of electricity. And if you want to know how your heart's doing, you do an EKG and you look at the EKG, and you can tell the cardiologists will look at it and say, uh-huh, because this uh you have that, you have this, you have this, you have bigemini, you have aphib, you have uh, oh, it looks like that you might have had a heart attack at some point uh in your life, uh this part of your heart, or it looks like you're right now your heart's straining. So there's a lot of stuff we can tell. We can, oh, the heart's enlarged, we can tell that so many things we can tell by the shape of those of those electrical um patterns from your heart. So on EKG, we can do the same within the EEG, electroencephalogram, and with muscles, electromyogram. So we can do that. Look at the electric, the electrical output, and and be able to um understand the health and functioning of that organ. All right, and then when the line is flat and there's no longer any activity, then there's no longer any life. So that we are electromagnetic beings, period. It's not a thing other than a fact. That being the case, we have electromagnetic circuits that are that exist within us. And when they're it when they're harmonically resonating with each other, we're in a state called health. And so our heart, with its pumping action, is generating a large magnetic field, electromagnetic field. So is our brain, and they intersect. The heart's actually stronger than the brain. So, with all of these things going up, and our exposure becoming to the point it is now where it's we we literally, if we could put on a pair of glasses that would allow us to uh see the electromagnetic frequencies, we would not be able to see each other. They completely envelop us. We are swimming in them. So that degree of influence on our immune system has made has rendered us um no longer uh having the same immunological capabilities. We just don't. And and the that That's not the only reason. The other reasons are the drugs we're taking since we're children, jugs, we're getting inject injections, we're getting drugs, or uh and we're eating food that's no longer food, really. It's been processed so much. So all these things have affect. And then we've got the most um, we're we're in a usually, usually in a near near total state of uh anxiety because we're late for this, and I gotta be there. And I'm not then I didn't shoot. What are you gonna do with your life? Well from there at every age, every it's just it's just all this stuff. It's uh we call it pressure, don't pressure me, uh psychological pressure, but um it is, but basically that all sets your sympathetic nervous system, um turns it on, which turns off your immune system. So there are many reasons and ways by which our immune system is adversely affected, so we're no longer capable immunologically of dealing with um what we were then, and then you consider that most of the things we're talking about that are that we are being exposed to that are causing problems are not are not even natural, they're no longer natural because we were designed to deal with the electromagnetic frequencies that come from the sun and and all that, but we're not from 5G, 6G, 4G. No, anyway, that's the reason that I recommend when it comes to parasites that everybody has, that you don't have to, it's just it's just what this is the way I think. All right, this is not there there's there's actually been no studies to prove this because you couldn't prove it. Because, first of all, we already know that most people that have actually have parasites will most of the time go into a hospital to an infectious disease department and be told they have none. We're not real good at really that good at finding them, which is why they're successful, they've been around for a while, and they're why they're successful, they successfully avoid being detected and eliminated. That's why they're called parasites, all right. So we're not gonna find them necessarily. And I talk to people who it's amazing to me that they they actually have some sort of organism, uh, they can feel it, see it coming out of their bodies, and uh the doctors they see somehow dismiss that, or I don't they dismiss it or they don't investigate it any further, and uh they even go so far as to offer them antidepressants, and so there'd be no way to test it because how are you gonna test the natural substances versus the pharmaceutical substances and then see what the outcomes were when you couldn't have discovered them in the first place? You could only do it with a something that you could specifically see, anyway. But that's you know, so and as everyone probably realizes, fundamentally there are three basic relationships we can have with all these microorganisms on the planet, and that is we can benefit by them being in or on us, and they can benefit by being in or on us, and that's called mutualism, or commensalism is where uh they're benefiting from being on or in us, and we're not being harmed, so that's commensalism, and then there's parasitism where they're benefiting and we're being harmed. So I think that what was probably at uh one point a commensal organism that means uh it was benefiting and we were not being harmed in the 1900s, may now be at the at the point where it would be classified as a parasite because it is causing harm. It's causing harm because we're no longer able to deal with it. Hi, everybody from Australia and Kathy Lynn and Nicholas, you guys, thank you for coming again. And Amron Nazari, right? So the ivermectin. So you if you guys joined uh the groups you could find this out, there's a lot more to it. You know, but here's the question uh ivermectin, besides ivermectin and fembendazole, uh what should I be taking for the exposure? Mold mold are um part of the uh fungus family, uh, and there are antifungals like diflucan and nastatin and yetrochonazole, and uh there are other ketoconazol, there are other stronger ones, but uh that's that. But again, though the whole idea of dealing with parasites everyone is not just to kill the parasite. That's not your goal, is to kill the parasite. Your goal is to restore balance in your body of health, and when and in order to establish that balance, there must be no parasites. So it's part of it, but there's many other things to it. That's what what happens when we get one thing in our mind, like I, you know, like if it's CFCs or uh high blood pressure, we've one thing in our mind, we sort of focus on that as if it's an entity in and of itself. Well, it doesn't exist in and of itself, it's a process that's going on, and there are other processes that are going on in your body that are also adjusting to some situation. So, anyway, all right, let's find some questions. So on November 23rd is part four of the um food, human food series.
SPEAKER_00:Where was it put? It was in the anybody know where the questions are. Hello? I got an idea, it'll probably be in Phoenix.
SPEAKER_01:Here it is, yay! All right, questions. Yes, we got uh three name. We're gonna call that questions, and today's date is of course the uh uh somebody else. Ah, there we go. I'm sorry, Sunday the second, and it's the 11th month of the year 25.
SPEAKER_00:In the year 25. Oh, Zegar and Evans. Wonder what he said. I gotta go back and listen to that song.
SPEAKER_01:All right, here's the question. It's good. You remember Zegger and Evans, right? In the year 25. But they started out with what? I forget when they made it, but it's a good song. Anyway, so Sunday Night Live stream. Here we go. We did all the stuff. Episode four will be uh exposing the myths. That will be the 20th, oh November 20th, not 23rd. Okay, I was wrong. And uh yeah, and then after that, we're gonna we're gonna redo a nature's design because I don't think I feel feel that it was incomplete. So here we go. This is from Rebecca. Um, and she says, My son is 12 years, uh 12 with stage 4b Hodgkin's lymphoma with lesions on his trachea, esophagus, stomach, aortic artery, and pancreas, as well as being in his bone marrow. He has finished his chemo treatment, and we just got a PET scan which appeared to show most all of the CFCs were gone, yet he had four spots in his lymph nodes in his gut randomly show activity. I have always felt it was caused by parasites due to the fact that he was scratched by a feral kitten that I suspect to have have had walked all in in poop in small room and was born in and that was that it was born in and it scratched my son and it got into his blood. That said, we are redoing pet again on November 14th in hopes the spots aren't active, and maybe the chemo just didn't have time to get out of the system. And I didn't push my thoughts on the doctor's hard about the parasite thing because the results of chemo for Hodgkins show great outcomes mostly. But if the spots are active on the next pet, they want to biopsy, and then I feel I need to say something and don't know what to say. Please, any advice on this would be great. I have done so much research and could sit here and type for hours, but honestly, I have done that with a lot of people on social media, and none have actually cared to respond. Yeah, that's that's with social media. It's uh kind of like a uh people respond if it's going to give them a uh reason to respond again. It's uh strange thing. All right, so let's talk about uh your son having had lymphoma. So Hodgkin's lymphoma is one uh one of the uh few CFCs that um in which the the world does have a pretty good reputation for the ability to uh bring it under control. Not so much with the non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, however, they they have I don't know that not really, but but anyway, but their approach is drugs, as you've you've noticed, right? And they've got formulas for drugs, they've got different uh protocols that they use, and that's all they use. So, regardless of where you went, whatever hospital you went to, whatever hospital that specialized in CFCs or even uh uh and and you went to that hospital, you went to that that department in oncology that specialized in lymphomas, and then you'll probably find someone who specializes only in Hodgkin's lymphomas, and then you'll find someone who specializes in Hodgkin's lymphomas and people 12 and under or whatever. So you can yeah, get all that, but their answer is drugs, and the so you know, and the argument is saying, well, well, they have good results, so sure, what what why why not? They have good real and then true, the results are good, so why not? You know, I'm not saying why not, I would tell you, I would never say that to anything, but what I I'm just identifying that that's the approach. Because I'm gonna I'm gonna clarify this for you. I'm gonna help, I'm gonna help you answer the question that you asked. Okay, so um when we talk about a lymphoma, what we're talking about is chronically fermenting cells that are in that are manifesting in the lymphatic system, you know, and you know, it's a lot of you know controversy if it actually began in the um bone marrow or the lymph, they're supposed to have begun in the lymph if they're gonna be called lymphoma and all that, but but it doesn't matter, okay? We're still dealing with the same cells that are in the lymphatic system. And the reason I said bone marrow is because all uh white blood cells or immune cells are uh initially made or born in the bone marrow, and then they travel around to different parts of the body, like the lymph nodes, spleen, or your skin or liver, anywhere. And um, so when you say he he has he's got he's got lesions on his trachea and his esophagus, stomach, aortic artery, and pancreas, it just means that there are those lymph nodes around those areas, is what that means, right? That's what I mean. It's not those actual organs, it's the lymph nodes around them. So um, so you did the PET scan, and uh, and for everyone's edification, you know, pet PET scan, the positron elect uh emission uh tomology is um, you know, looking in tomographs. What it is is um it's an indirect way of imaging, like x-rays are an indirect way of imaging. But you see the shadow, they call it a shadow. But the difference between a PET scan and a CT scan or a MRI or ultrasound or any other kind of imaging is most imaging um is um looking for the anatomy of something. In other words, is there something there and what are its dimensions? It's two by it's 2.3 centimeters by four by six centimeters by you know, it's got multiple dimensions, right? So that that's these those kinds of imaging will tell you. So the PET scan is the only one where it tells you the actual activity level of the fermenting cells. Okay, so we know that cells, the fermenting cells, for the most part, prefer uh and use glucose as their primary fuel. And so as a result of the biology of it, all they need 19 times more glucose than a non-CFC cell. And so you're gonna see a lot of activity of it picking up glucose, and that's what the whole PET scan is about. The PET scan is where they inject fluorodeoxyglucose, which is a um radioactive glucose, and then they have you wait about an hour, and then they scan you. And what they're looking for is all the areas where that glucose that's radioactive had been picked up the most rapidly. And they call the marker of that the SUV standard uptake value. There's the standard uptake value. And every organ has its own background noise, they call it. The brain is using it, uses a lot of glucose, usually like 20 to 20 percent of all the glucose in our body is used by the brain, even though the brain weighs about one percent of our body, and the muscles do, the hearts do, no, you know, uh our heart our heart our heart our our hearts do as well. Our lungs, our liver, every cell in our body is using glucose for fuel at a specific level, or you know, and that's the standard uptake for that particular organ. So let's say the standard uptake for the liver was one, anything above one is gonna be an increased uptake. That means it's got a good chance it's gonna be chronically fermenting cells. What else could it be? It could also be inflammation. Inflammation is gonna require more energy to be picked up, more glucose to be picked up. Um, what we call infections are gonna be the same kind of thing. So um, and in fact, um often you there will be what's because they do the pets again, they do a pet CT. It's a combination at the same time in the same same device, basically. Um it's just that the pet the the app the computer for the pet has a completely different program than the computer for the CT, so they're getting different bits of information. So when you get a pet CT, you're getting both anatomy and uh activity level, so it's very helpful. So you can tell where it is, what it is, how big it is, and how rapidly it's eating glucose to stay alive. And the more rapidly it's eating it, the more activity it has, and and it's associated with aggressiveness. So the reason I like them in working with people is if we have a baseline when someone first starts of what it is, uh both the PET CT, and then after some period of time when we've gone through the program, we do a second one to see if we've changed it, because you need something to compare with, and and and and the reason I would prefer that it's a PET scan in those days, but you know, if some people are opposed to getting any kind of imaging, and I'm fine with that, we can work around that. We don't have to get it, but you know, it's useful. So, for example, let's say that a person had a lesion. A lesion is just a word that means uh something is there that is not part of the normal anatomy in physiology, it hasn't a function, it's it's uh it's aberrant. So someone has a lesion in their liver that is three by two point six by five, and it's got an SUV of 10. So that's pretty active. Now, after a period of time, we repeat the scan, and the person's gone through the program, and now the lesion is 1.5 by 1.6 by 1.2. So it's smaller, but it's not gone, so we're kind of disappointed. But we look and we see that the pet the SUV is one, it's come back to its baseline, whatever the baseline is for that organ. So that means there's no extra activity, that means there's no more malignant growth. So you see how useful that information is. I have some, I've got information that there's a thing there and it's 1.5, 1.2 centimeters, it's that size, it's um it's still there, but it's not active. What does that mean? Well, if we think what a tumor is, a tumor is a combination of the nest, the home in which it is sitting and having its life, the blood supply to it, the blood vessels that keep it alive and and keep it uh drained, and then the malignant cells themselves. So all three of those have to be have to come together in a scenario that will allow the growth of this tumor. So if you have a scan and the original lesion, the abnormal part, was larger, now it's smaller, but it's still there, but there's no activity, that means what? Well, the malignant cells are not there anymore. So what we're left with is stroma, which is the uh leftover um nest, leftover part of the of the body that is of this of that area that's kind of the home to it, and perhaps some blood vessels, old blood vessels. So we're seeing a remnant, we're seeing a scar. And that's real important because the question is should I go on and continue to to treat with chemotherapy? Right, because that would that would be that that would be one of the questions. Um so that would be very useful. You say no, don't need to. So I don't know with your son what the SUVs were initially and what they are now, but you said they were not so apparently they're not they're not they're not significant to the point where the oncologists are recommending going further. And so you mentioned that they're gonna do a by they're gonna do a biopsy. And again, it's just that is unjustifiable. What are you gonna what it could be? A biopsy is a diagnostic tool, it's an investigation to find out what something is. You already know what it is, and you know that the SUV is low, so there's not a lot of activity. So what else are you gonna know? Nothing. Well, I'm sure I'm turning and you're they've got a lot of reasons, and none of them are uh of any relevance to anybody except them, because it's in their algorithm. Now, what's important for Rebecca, what's important for you to understand is that these conditions that got have names, like Hodgkin's, non-Hodgkins, leukemia, breast CFCs, pancreatics, they have names, and these names are really just basically a description of where they are. Lymphoma. Oh, it's in the lymph.
unknown:Okay.
SPEAKER_01:Breast adenocarcinoma of the breast. Uh it's from a gland in the breast. So that's what these names are. But regardless of where the chronically fermenting cells are manifesting in any particular person, the same things must be done in order to resolve this situation. And that is find out because if we do not eliminate that which is causing the problem, and we're somehow able to obscure the problem or take it away from being observed, it's still there and it's still happening, and it we'll see it again. They'll call it a recurrence. When in truth it didn't go away because it's happening at a microscopic level. We don't even have ways of imaging that or anything. So, from the time this was first discovered to now, your son should be doing the same things that we all do under the circumstances, and that is we go to a biological dentist, a real biological dentist, certified by the IAOMT, and we find out if there is anything going on with the oral cavity, because the oral cavity is it's got pretty close to the same biome as our gut. Our oral cavity is the gateway for drinking and accounts for about 40% of our breathing. The oral cavity is also how we speak, one of the things that does distinguish us from other creatures, just one of the things. But so what I'm trying to show you is is the is is the extreme and uh incredible um significance that our the oral cavity plays. It's also the gateway, which because at the back of the mouth, at the back of the mouth, the throat, it goes up into the nose, so it's connected there, and downward, it's connected to both our esophagus, which is our gastrointestinal tract, and to our bronchi, uh trachea bronchi, which are lungs. So it's right there in the middle of it all, and it's how we articulate speech, it's how we communicate, it's how we have what we have going around. It allows language. It is also how we communicate with each other, it's how we express um you know anger and intimacies, and we kiss. So the the oral, the whole oral cavity and structure and all that has an extreme central aspect of our lives. It's got these 32 teeth that are the are basically an organ, each organ in and of themselves, and they're connected to everything. We ignore all that. The point was we ignore all that in medicine. When you're trained as a physician, you don't learn about that, you learn about it in vague ways, like you know, the anatomy, the histology, the physiology, the uh, you know, the vasculature, you know, you the you learn all that, the function, right? But you don't really learn how to deal with the problems and its connection to the rest of the body. And what's happened is it's become a second profession called the dental profession, which is over there, and we don't know about it. They don't know about that. It's ridiculous, uh, it's it and dangerous. And so most doctors, when I say most, 99.9% of them do not realize that not only uh is the condition of our oral cavity, not only does it have an effect on our systemic situation or any illnesses we may have, but is actually causative, causative in at least 80 percent. No doctor knows that, I promise you. And for that reason, they don't they overlook it. So when a doctor says I've examined your son or I've examined you, it's not true. They haven't. And they don't consider the mouth anything other than things that the dentist look at, and you don't need to worry about it. All right, so I'm just telling you that it's it's a very bizarre situation, but um, I hope you do some homework. Uh Rebecca, just join or join the CFC group because it'd be really good for you to be on it and your son as well. Uh, and you'll get to interact with us, me and all the other members, and uh you join the telegram group, you'll get all sorts of resources and all that um from wonderful people. That's one part we've got to look at. The other part is we've got to clean the body out because as I was talking about EMF exposure, we're also exposed to everything chemicals, food, air, clothing, shampoos, it doesn't matter. And extremely toxic levels above acceptable continuously, and our body's adapting to the fact that it's not having its biological needs uh met, and as a result, that we're getting things like CFCs, we're getting all sorts of stuff, and we're getting injected and stuff. So there's so much else going on. So what you're right now at a perfect position, you've down to four little areas that are lighting up, apparently. Um, and um it doesn't sound like they're lighting up tremendously. So now's the time to do what we're talking about, get rid of all toxins and start have them start eating foods that will are are what the purpose of food. The purpose of food is to nourish the body and provide energy. So if there's a nutrient or energy deficit, it sets us, it it results in signals that are sent around the body that result in us engaging in behaviors that are going to allow us to acquire food to satisfy that energy or uh nutrient deficit. That's a hunger, is so that said, we are doing redoing the PET scan again on October 14th in hopes that the spots aren't active. Um, and you were saying you don't have time to get it out of the system. You do, you should have started earlier, but you didn't, so you're gonna start now. You gotta clean. He's 12 years old. Okay, it's he's gotta clean, you gotta get him to biological death, you've got to get it rid of all potential causes that are have have resulted in this. And if you don't, it's gonna happen again. It has to. If if it if I'm smoking cigarettes and I keep getting lung TFCs or whatever, if I don't stop, I can't stop. It won't stop happening. Now we get that when we when I talk about this in particular, that's why I talk about it. But it's true of everything. If you knew, if you knew the research about eating whatever, you'd say, Whoa, I don't know what shots he's at. You got a young boy there, let Rebecca get in the group. Let's go, let's dive into this and help you get through this and get rid of your fear. Now, could parasites be a part of it? Absolutely. So he does need to do a parasite cleanse as well. But we you know, and want to make sure everything's he's ready to do. I mean, physically ready to do it. He's just he's just I don't know how long ago he finished chemo, etc. So we need to look at some blood tests. But yes, he's absolutely that part of it all will require getting um eliminating the parasites. Absolutely. Drloody.com is the inner is my uh website, and you can join the groups that way, the parasite group. Or the see it doesn't matter what group. All right, this is from Landon, and it says, I've been suffering from severe backache for many months. I finally got x-rays to find moderate to severe disc space narrowing at L5S1 with facet lift hypertrophic changes at L45, L5S1, mild multi-level osteophyte formation is noted, and a few scattered shimori nodes are seen. Do you have any suggestions on a way to heal from this? All right, well, sure, absolutely. L5 and S1 um is a particular part of the spine that is uh part of the area where we we get a lot of pressure, a lot of uh well, think about it. If you could see if this was our Zoom meeting, I could share the screen, but I can't share the screen with all these different platforms. But if you could see the spine, right? So you've got the brain, so let's say we're looking at its side from the side, the we're looking at its right side, and so its heads, its eyes are facing that way, and you got the brain, and then this the cervical neck part comes out, and the the bones are called vertebrae vertebrae, and they they kind of go forward a little bit and they make a little bit of a convex, and then when they get down to the part where the ribs are, now it's called the thorax, which is the chest, and it goes this way, and then when it gets into the lumbar, that's where the ribs end, it goes this way, and then it comes back this way with the sacrum, which is where it meets the pelvis, and it goes back that way. So it's this that's the spine from the side, and so you can imagine we are we we depending on how we walk, um, you know, if we have anything wrong with our foot or leg or so the the pressure differentials are are uh throughout our body are very different, but for the most part, the upright position, which is what humans are, upright bipedal, two legs moving around, there's a lot of pressure right at that S right down there, okay, of the weight of the body and movements and stuff like that. So it's a very uh heavily used part of the body, number one. Number two, it is um but we because of our lifestyles, our bones in general are losing calcium long before we get uh what's associated with old age, which is um osteoporosis, right? But we get that actually early on, and we get that because calcium is being leached out of our bones because calcium is a very alkalinizing substance like magnesium, iron. know all all these uh uh cations in our body are what are what are considered they produce alkalinity and so when our blood becomes our tissue beds become acidic because we're not having we're we're not eating the foods we were designed for we're being exposed to toxins we're highly stressed you put it all together and it results in an acidic environment biochemical acidosis so the body has multiple different buffering systems that that that that try to uh that neutralize the uh acid in addition to that if you're eating healthy food you'll be getting a lot of vitamin C what we call vitamin C is scorbate scorbate you'll be getting tacopherols tocotrianols which are vitamin E's you'll be getting um betacarotene gamma carotene lutein of the whole variety of carotenoids which is uh the what we call vitamin A and then you'll be getting B and all that stuff and by getting the by by getting those are antioxidants and um and also neutralizers that they will neutralize acids to some degree but we don't you can just accept and realize and understand that most people just simply do not eat anything close to a human diet. When I say human diet a diet that is appropriate for us to um live long and be healthy and happy so that being the result we're not able to neutralize a lot of these areas that could become acidic for the various reasons I discussed so we early on start getting bone loss. Now you didn't say your your your your age but it doesn't matter it's uh you know what it is you've had this for many months part of a disc uh part of the the the the pressure on the L4 the L5 L4 L4 L5 and S1 that whole little complex right there what often happens is that because of the bones in the the vertebra um you know not not having the strength and being strained and all that can actually cause the rupture of the disc and the disc is this fibrous tissue um that surrounds the nerve the nerves inside the spinal column and um and between between the bones there's a disc that serves as a protective barrier. The disc has a many other purposes as well anyway that disc bulges that disc has um as the nerve is coming out of that area the spinal cord the nerve is coming out it's got like a bulb it's got there's like two bulbs that come out and the reason it's a bulb is there there it's because that's kind of like the headquarters of the entire array of nerves that are going to go all over wherever they go all down the leg and where you know wherever underneath to the uh to the rectum to the the vagina or scrotum or testicles so that bulb if the disc is ruptured in other words what's happened is the bones have exerted pressure and and just the fact that the uh the the disc this fibrous disc has bulged out it's it's rubbing on the nerve root and that's extreme pain and so the idea is to take that pressure off the disc and allow it to go back to its normal size. So it's inflamed enlarged and putting pressure on the nerve which is causing pain all along that pathway so the back pain could be all the way down an extremity or it could still be just localized around the back but it's going to be pretty bad. And it can be very it can be debilitating it can be absolutely debilitating. Now in standard medical care surgical care uh your doctor would send you to an orthopedic surgeon and the orthopedic surgeon would uh determine whether or not he or she uh this is appropriate for he or she to operate on which is where they remove the disc and they sometimes put in another bone or they do something to you lose that basically that the function of those nerves coming out it's a spinal fusion it's a it's a it's a it's it's quite a surgery so you you you get all the uh consequences of a of a surgery which is anesthesia is that trauma all right so and it doesn't always work in terms of the pain i mean and you'll lose mobility and stuff like that however there's something called prolotherapy that you might want to look up let me see see if you were on a group I could be um talking with you about how other things so uh let me just read here what they have prolotherapy is an injection based therapy for chronic musculoskeletal pain that involves injecting a mildly irritating solution most commonly a concentration of sugar dextrose into damaged ligaments or tendons to stimulate healing so that's actually what happens but a lot of times in they'll use procaine procaine is similar to lidocaine uh but it's different it's got other properties that make it very very medicinal so it goes on to say that the trigger this triggers a localized inflammatory response that tricks the body you know tricking the body into repairing itself because it's too stupid to do that all right so you've tricked the body into repairing it which can lead to increased stability and reduced pain over a series of treatments anyway um now you could this the substance you can use is oh you can use dextrose you can use um a procaine and you can use ozone you they call it prolozone now I don't know where you are in the US or or in the world but if you are in the U.S. and you can get to Santa Rosa California I would recommend you go see a doctor by the name of Robert Rowan. He is extraordinary you'll be very happily impressed and wherever you are if you can get to him it's worth it because you can get this over with without having to get surgery you'll have to it'll take a few weeks so you may have to go back and forth or stay there for the duration or somehow work it out. Or he may know someone he's trained that is in your area but I would recommend that and then there's regular prolotherapy where they use the the procain so but anyway that's really um it should not be looked at as an alternative to what you're doing. It should actually be the the only thing that you're doing it should be right but it's not because it's not even it's not even referred to in medical books. Can you believe that it's really devastating really devastating come on it's there just people don't know about it. Can you imagine you could you have a herniated disc slip disc whatever and you can get back to full functioning and no pain without any surgery wouldn't that be fantastic and you're stimulating healing you know uh all right so all right so so I can see that you got you you you you're you're all asking very specific questions about situations in your your your help your healing journey and um first of all I have to answer people's questions that I sent them in and your questions are very important too so I hope you're in our groups and you're gonna ask me tomorrow is a group and then Wednesday is a group and then you can go on right after this you can go on telegram and ask it too well so there's a lot of questions that we we of course can't get to all right now but we will oh yeah there's okay not okay okay then I hope you're okay okay not are you okay now with my studying I don't know you never answered me I guess I didn't all right anyway uh all right how do you get in go to drloody.com please dr loady.com and join the groups okay let's get back to the questions if I can find here they are all right now this is from Zayn uh it has to do with brain CFCs we're not gonna use that oh thank you Raj Raj that that's beautiful I love to hear that stuff that's makes me um really happy I'm doing this so thank you all right so Zane a brain uh my name is Zayn and I know my I know a family friend daughter who is 12 years old and is and is diagnosed with brain CFCs the doctor gave her seven eight weeks as estimate time until she passes away I've got to stop there because I I must remind us all that doctors have not achieved it's not taught in medical schools on how to um know the future we we don't learn that we don't learn anything like that all right so they can't give you time it's not theirs to give you can't even define time so that was sorcery you know even if it were true just not true why would you say that anyway I hope we can get in contact and try to help this poor family and daughter it's so painful and is there anything out there that is actually legit or even rubbish it's worth the shot and the family's ready to fly to the moon I really hope this message gets to you yes absolutely Zane um the problem is this my clinic in in Arizona at an Oasis of Healing um we have happily and successfully worked with many people who have the the the the the the the the one brain tumor that has the worst uh reputation of prognosis called uh glio uh you know it's a it's it's a it's a glioma so a glioblastoma multiformi is the name and um it's uh you know rapidly growing you cut it out you radiate it it grows back quickly it's just really quite a thing so yes but in quite you got to get on it now right away and and this is where parasites come in this is where if there's any dental issues you but you got to just move systematically quickly and do all this stuff and yes yes yes yes we can change it now I'm hoping Zane that you know without it being offensive I don't mean the offensive or anything like that just we're dealing with a problem right now and I'm gonna tell you what I think I'm hoping she didn't get any injections by any of the famous the large companies that do that I'm just hoping that I'm hoping and hoping uh she didn't but in any case Zane if you were to contact my clinic and always is a healing now here's the other problem and I don't know if it's changed I think it might have so so uh ask ask ask the people at my clinic because it used to be that I was unable to accept a person as a patient in their clinic under the age of 18 with the parents' consent and uh because we tried it early on and they took um oh there's a big hassle they didn't win i mean ultimately because the the person didn't stay with us but because we all said okay that's not worth it because they were going to take the child away from the parents they were going to take the child away from the parents because they were considering it child abuse take the chat child away from the parents and force them to get standard treatment i i have nowhere in my mind to put that I can't set it down anywhere but that's uh beautyful for space that's where we live i i mean you guys live but i think it's changed i i think now if i i think there's some nuances now in this change so please call the center because we'll do that we will and we'll but but you got you and your daughter have to say okay we're gonna do whatever you say you gotta do it just gotta do it okay we can i i'll explain the whys and all that we always do but we kind of know what what you gotta do and we're not gonna do anything unusual but it's essential that you do it all right away now so zane i don't know the phone number it used to be 4808345414 but it changed how could you change why did they change but get in touch with them zane um let me see i wonder if there's anybody from oasis on this call anybody from oasis any of our doctors on this call no all right so here um zane um let me see now anyway it's called an oasis of healing in arizona and um or you can just type in the browser browser stopmaking cancer.com and it'll it'll redirect you to it there we are okay so what's our number now our number is come on i don't know why they have my high school picture i can't i why is this so hard to find the number you guys there we go 480 912 3414 i don't know why they changed the number 480912 3414 i like the old number because i remember it 480 912 3414 tell them you spoke to me today and i said to call and they and tell them they need to let me know if we're still unable to work with children which I hate and if we are we will and and if not we'll go we'll we'll we'll find someone that can but you could there's some definite things you can do and you must do and um because you can't and forget what they said okay don't don't let what they said work we had a fellow who had a glioblastoma in uh you know and um he kept looking at the clock while we were during the interview talk his first time you came in and we was looking at the clock over and over and finally I I said to him what well why and so he his cognition his cognitive ability had changed a little bit because of this thing going on in his brain uh and he said they told me um when I was gonna die but I I can't remember what time it was you realize that's sorcery that's sorcery it it's it's it's heartbreaking anyway but you've got to really really take a look at her dead well now 12 I don't expect much has happened however I don't know um if she could have had what kind of what kind of work she's had but that's a big one with it um if she's had any of the Pfizers or Moderna type stuff injections we need to know that uh she's got to get ready to do a a good cleanse of delicious juice fresh um and and I and I what I need you got to and join the join the CFC group now so I can talk to you tomorrow. I can talk to you tomorrow and your daughter because I need now is she a big 12 year old is she a is she like where is she in her development you know so there's so many things okay you got to jump on this and what they said is not true it's not gonna happen so they don't know listen if the doctor is so smart ask him when he's gonna die listen you're pretty good at this can you tell me when you're gonna die and by the way uh can you also tell me when uh jim jing jung chong of uh north korea is gonna die where the heck is oh there we are okay good good yeah well uh 85 is not good you guys way bad way bad way bad way less than half oh zane you're on tomorrow all right cool great beautiful okay we'll talk tomorrow zane fantastic uh australia yeah and you know i heard that most of or all of the australian members are all in sydney that's weird why would that be where is that there we go there's the question brazil all right carla fantastic all right excellent beautiful brazil well you're in a you know you're right next to kind of the one of the one of the main main nests of life you know the the rainforests and stuff like that and there's a lot of beautiful wonderful indigenous medicine down there and all that so it's fantastic fantastic now all right so next is peter and peter it's about melanoma and my father has been diagnosed with squamo squamous cell carcinoma and the medical team has recommended both radiation and chemo for the past three weeks I've placed them on a strict ketogenic diet combined with intermittent fasting twice a week in addition to taking fembenazole and ivermectin as part of an alternative adjunct protocol. Recently he underwent a PET scan during the procedure the technicians requested that he eat something without any dietary restrictions before taking an additional image as they initially did not observe any notable activity on the first scan. It is under unclear whether this indicates an absence of let me use your word cancerous activity or a technical issue with the imaging process. The infected area involves a lymph node in the neck and the doctors have also indicated the possibility of CFCs in the tongue and tonsil area we are now awaiting the final pet results the primary question is based on this context what would be the next appropriate course of action moving forward particularly regarding whether to proceed with conventional treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation or to continue with an integrative metabolic approach. Thank you. All right well Peter you you you you you have the topic here of melanoma but you mentioned here squamous cell so um that's confusing join the CFC group and I'll talk to you tomorrow but anyway um now they've recommended both radiation and chemo so apparently they've done a biopsy they've got a piece of it they gave it to the pathologist and the pathologist looked under the microscope and did staining and stuff like that and came up with his blah blah per blah blah right and that so now that's that's what your father is your father's no longer the human being you thought he was he's this diagnosis they've transformed him into this diagnosis that's what he is so he underwent a pet procedure and they didn't see anything because you're saying you're saying initially they did not observe any notable activity on the first scan. So apparently he's this is the second PET scan he's had and he had some activity and it's no longer there. So they wanted him to eat something which makes no sense at all because if you eat something and it has glucose in it then it's not radioactive it's not radiolabal it's not fluorodeoxyglucose which is a radioactive substance that will be picked up on the scan so I don't understand what that would have done unless I just don't know what you know but what what what's wrong with him not having whatever was there all right so anyway you're saying we are now waiting the final result okay so the the the answer to this is first of all squamous cell and basal cell CFCs on the skin are very are considered quite mild and and and easily taken care of they're not there you know you don't have to go into all this crazy stuff that they want to do chemo radiation it doesn't work but it does damage and we can take care of this in many ways for example 7% lugal zyodine liquid for example 35% food grade hydrogen peroxide anyway you've got to dilute and stuff there's there are a lot of ways to work with that and I would be happy to discuss them with you but what is notable about the squamous cell and the basal cell on the skin is that they're not like the melanoma in in in in terms of the way that melanoma um usually uh moves quickly to other organs so it doesn't do that so you have a lot more time uh you know to to to work but we've got to do everything for your father and how old he is and all that we've got to get biological dentist all that sort of stuff uh how big was the lesion where is the lesion does he have any more does he have any more uh areas on his face that are or body that are you know are there because of some sort of sun exposure so definitely some but you don't want to just do bits and pieces and every this goes for everybody whatever you're whatever kind of CFC condition you have you don't want to just try well I'm gonna try this and try that and I don't know you or your loved one or friend is not an experiment. This is not the time to experiment this is the time to do everything that we know works and does not harm we want to be comprehensive because we want this to resolve but Peter I mean even the you should go online look we in that's on our resource page that's one of the things we have is seven seven percent glucose iodide but you wouldn't put on an open wound so if you because it'll burn so um anyway i i really need to ask you we need to fine tune this uh and come up with a workable plan all right um what did you study what is this keep coming up what did you study in college your name is okay not i don't understand why the but is this question no it didn't come up again right it's an okay come on guys all right all right all right so listen spike protein yeah yeah yeah yeah all right you guys have to get to sleep i apologize for taking a little longer i just wanted to try to get a few questions in but um uh let's do this again next week starting again at 7 a.m my time 5 p.m arizona 8 p.m i think i don't know if daylight saving time new york figure it out from that i use arizona because arizona does not change it's clocked during daylight saving time but you have these great questions they've got to be answered they're important and you gotta join because as you can see I can't get all the information I need all right so anyway so what i cab namaste and aloha to everyone