Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Roosters, and I was thinking, so we are back and
we are with the Avenue Wellness Center. Look it up
while we are on the air right now, Avenue is
spelled Ave. And you why, Rebecca, because the focus is
on you. So there's no E on the end Avenue
Wellness Center. While we were a commercial break, I looked up,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the
(00:21):
number one leading concern in America for your health is
what heart disease? Heart disease, and they said an estimated
seven hundred two, eight hundred eighty deaths happened every single year.
And in my opinion, what I've just noticed here lately
the last few years, people are starting to have more
health issues, even younger in their thirties, forties, fifties. Has
(00:45):
that changed?
Speaker 2 (00:46):
Oh yeah, why is that COVID for one thing?
Speaker 3 (00:50):
The covid? Yeah, the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
I mean, there's all kinds of statistics now showing that
it does impact It can impact the heart. Not in everyone,
but there are a number of incidences and events where
people after having been vaccinated have found that they've had
heart problems.
Speaker 4 (01:08):
Our youngest was it a high state. We're freaking out
she said, I'll get this shot if Boots does. And
I got the shot in what six months? I had?
Speaker 1 (01:17):
You had? It was a scare for you.
Speaker 4 (01:21):
And I went to my doctor and he goes, did
you get the shot? And he went oh, And I
went why, he goes, can't talk about that. He walked out.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
But things are still happening. So how long does that
vaccine stay in a body and in a system? Take,
for instance, the COVID vaccine. Let's say people got it
back in twenty twenty five years ago. Can they still
feel the effects of heart complications even today?
Speaker 5 (01:43):
Well you've got I'm sorry, John, you please please, Well
you're the.
Speaker 6 (01:47):
Nurse practitioner, Johnyan and mRNA vaccine that is kind of
a piece of us forever, right And I had to
get Oh that's scary going through the clinical pieces of
training at the time. Yeah, so it is.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Why do people get boosters? Because I thought that was
supposed to boost it in case the effects go away?
Speaker 4 (02:05):
First of all, where did it go?
Speaker 1 (02:06):
But I'm so glad I didn't get vaccinated because of COVID?
Speaker 2 (02:09):
Who I am?
Speaker 1 (02:10):
I glad? You hear all these different things coming out,
and I'm just glad that I didn't, you know, I
trusted my own body and I trusted God and whatever.
Speaker 6 (02:17):
But well, yeah, so so just I got violently sick
as well. I remember too, when I was asking about
getting a booster. My doctor looked at me. It's like,
just wait on that for now.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
Oh what you got sick right after being vaccinated?
Speaker 4 (02:29):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (02:30):
Within three hours?
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:32):
I mean part of it too is the stress of
you know, they have you signed that waiver and look
at you and say, yeah, this isn't approved.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
So anything happens, yeah, they can't be soon.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
If anything happens to you, that should have been a
big red flag. So I think in America should ever
make you get a vaccine for anything. I think a
lot of people don't know.
Speaker 4 (02:51):
That should never be.
Speaker 5 (02:51):
That should not a free country. So the thing about RNA.
RNA is ribo nucleic acid. We say DNA a lot,
but we don't understand what that is. That's deoxy ribo
claic acid. So when ribonucleic acid RNA comes into your body,
that is a part of you. Now it is fusing
it as binding to your data.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
What is it?
Speaker 4 (03:08):
What is it? I know we never explained what it was.
It's a bunch of aluminium or something.
Speaker 6 (03:12):
It's a blueprint for how we create proteins. So if
you look at how proteins are made, the mRNA carries
the instructions for how proteins are made. So the goal
with the vaccine was, Okay, we're going to give the
blueprint to the body that then the body can become
a manufacturer for identifying that protein. So it makes the
COVID spike protein. Right, depending on which COVID vaccine you got,
(03:35):
either the tip of the spike or the whole spike,
and your body can then identify it. But we don't
know if that doesn't stop, and that's what further health
concerns can be tied to.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
And the answer is no one knows because it was
never tested, right. You know, when you run a test
that's on people for three months or six months, and
you don't go two years out, years out, four years
out seeing what long term implication there is to it,
you don't know what's going to happen.
Speaker 5 (04:08):
So it is currently being tested in real time, but
we're in phase two trial now.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
But the Avenue Wellness Center, sorry Boots, the Avenue Wellness
Center can help with long COVID it can help with
absolutely any kind of ailment that you're going through right now,
right Rebecca.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
Well, no, I don't want to say any kind of ailment.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
But what can't you help with?
Speaker 3 (04:27):
Well, we don't.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
No one should advertise that they do anything with cancer.
That's just I mean, the FDA is just going to
come right down on you, and you know you are
not allowed to say anything about But you can help
with long COVID, we can help.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Can you help with a sprained angletely? Can you help
with memory loss?
Speaker 3 (04:44):
Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Can you help with just agism in general?
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Yes? Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (04:48):
Like I said, what can't they do?
Speaker 3 (04:50):
Boots are genetic?
Speaker 2 (04:52):
There are genetic diseases we really sure at this point
in time we cannot help with. Although we have some
things that are on the horizon. We've seen some things
now that are coming out that some of our equipment
is being modified to treat certain genetic defects. There are
things that are in the works. They're not things that
(05:12):
we can say we have right now, but but no,
we don't treat there. There are some genetic genetic diseases
that we can assist with that we can reduce symptoms,
but we don't do gene therapy. You know, we're not
going to correct your genes or your chromosomes or things
like that at this point. So there are things that
(05:32):
we're not going to be able to help with. We're not,
you know, not saying we can do everything, but we
can do a lot and what.
Speaker 5 (05:40):
We call it, we can help to modulate all eleven
major systems. We can help to modulate them. We help
to balance them out so that everything is working in
a more amious stase of so more balanced state, which
if you get rid of inflammation, I'm telling you it
is the precursor tomus diseases.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
What about It's okay, where did COVID go?
Speaker 3 (06:01):
Where did covid go?
Speaker 4 (06:02):
You're you're the smart You guys are the smartest people
in the room. I want to know what you think.
Where it went? It just disappeared.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
So it's still here. I know people who had it
within the last two but.
Speaker 4 (06:11):
They're not dying, they're not in the hospital. There's not
body bags all around New York. So what's going on?
Speaker 6 (06:16):
So the smartest virus is right, that's a living organism.
The virus it wants to live, So if it kills
its host, it's a bad virus, it cannot spread, So
what you see is mortality drops, but virulency increases, so
typically it becomes a much mild, more mild like strain
in the tree.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Flu.
Speaker 6 (06:34):
Yeah, another flu, another cold, And that's why the vaccines.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
It's kind of like, well what happened?
Speaker 6 (06:39):
Because these things are mutating so quick. You know, the vaccine,
it's supposed to create this protein that's a certain antigen
for our immune system recognize and stop early before you
get really sick. But now these antigens are changing so
quickly that it's it's like the common.
Speaker 4 (06:54):
That human nature. Isn't that just nature? There's I mean,
I think it was my personal opinion that you guys
it was from China, It was in a lab, and
it was a it was some sort of chemical disease
that they put out there. But but I've seen different
Dapolio's pretty much gone now. I think, isn't human nature
or natural going to change over the time? And I'm
a car guy, not a doctor.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
By no, there was a successful vaccine, right, but it.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
Was open, it wasn't privatized.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
It was open.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
That wasn't around when they did it.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
But when when the polio vaccine came out in nineteen
sixty two or whatever. I was around, and we all
went to in my town. We went to a gymnasium, right,
and they had these tables lined up and whole everybody went.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
It was like on a Sunday afternoon.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
Maybe that big quarter scar on your shoulder, right, No,
that's small pots. Okay, okay, gez.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
So polio was a little cup.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
It was in a little paper cup, and you went
in and everybody drank your little paper cup. And a
month later or two months later, whatever it was, that
you had to do a second one. So the whole
family went, you know, and you just and yeah. But
he went over for their Sabin salt polio vaccine.
Speaker 5 (08:03):
But it wasn't privatized.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
It was public.
Speaker 4 (08:05):
It wasn't money. So more of these fine folks. When
we get back, I go to break.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
So we have vans too.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
We got vans outdoors coming up. So this is this
raw Midian boots always protected by the indefeated American made
Tattletale from the Heartlet Bank Studios on News Radio six
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