Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Secretly recorded
from deep inside the bowels of a
decommissioned missile silo.
We bring you the man, onesingle man, who wants to bring
light to the darkness and darkto the lightness.
Although he's not always right,he is always certain.
So now, with security protocolsin place, the protesters have
been forced back behind thebarricades and the blast doors
(00:32):
are now sealed.
Without further delay, let meintroduce you to the host of
HuttCast, mr Tim Huttner.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Thank you,
sergeant-at-arms.
You can now take your post.
The views and opinionsexpressed in this program are
solely those of the individualand participants.
These views and opinionsexpressed do not represent those
of the host or the show.
The opinions in this broadcastare not to replace your legal,
medical or spiritualprofessionals.
(01:07):
Welcome to HUTCAST.
Today is 9-7-2025.
It's been a heck of a year andI got a heck of a guest.
So let's ask a question what ifthe air in your own home was
killing you, and what if thetoxic mold, blue light and
forces that you can't see wereshutting down your body, your
(01:29):
mind and your spirit?
Well, today on HuttCast, wehave a conversation with Dan
Huber, a man who went from neardeath to uncovering miracles,
exorcisms and global movementfor hope.
So buckle up.
This isn't just another story,it's a wake-up call.
The podcast will be right back.
(01:51):
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And this is all brought to youfrom Gareth Fair, okay, welcome
(03:16):
back to HuttCast.
As I said in pre-roll, we haveDan Huber on the line and he's
had.
I'll tell you what one heck ofa story If you do his research,
find out what he's had.
Uh, I'll tell you what one heckof a story if you do his
research.
Uh, find out what he's allabout.
I'm sure you'll give us somelinks to his podcast and his,
his endeavors that he's doing,dan, are you?
Speaker 3 (03:32):
there.
Good evening tim.
Thanks so much for having me on.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
I really appreciate
it how is the weather down in
texas?
Speaker 3 (03:40):
it's finally cooling
off.
We've been really blessed.
We had a really easy summer.
I think we had only a coupledays over 100, where last year,
I think I counted probably 14days close to 110, and another
10 that were over 100.
So it's been a really goodsummer.
I'm hoping we're going to havea mild winter too.
So thank you so much for havingme on.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Well, I appreciate
you taking the time.
Christina puts up a lot ofgreat guests.
We have great conversations.
Have you listened to any of theshows?
Speaker 3 (04:12):
I have just one.
She recently turned me on toyou.
I'm kind of a busy guy but I dodrive a lot and I got to catch
one of them recently.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
yeah, that's some
windshield time.
Copy that, okay, yes, sir, solet's jump into this.
Before I start my questions,let's just start the common
stuff.
Who are you?
What do you do?
Okay, dan huber, you want to gobirth to now well, if you start
at the dinosaurs dying makingoil, we're gonna have to shorten
this a little up, a little bitokay.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
Um ended up in texas
after, uh, my mom remarried and
when I was in high school andmoved down here and I came down
afterwards, I was in thenightclub business for a while,
got married, got out of thenightclub business, was a
mortgage banker, um, and inabout 2008 we were six kids and
(05:05):
one on the way when the mortgagebanking crisis hit.
It took about, I'd say, threeyears to try to fist fight that
thing and then lose everything.
So we went broke, lost thehouses, the cars, spent all the
savings and all that stuff andwe moved into a rental house and
I transitioned into the oil andgas business.
(05:27):
I like to call myself kind of aentrepreneur.
I like to make shit work.
Sometimes it doesn't work andsometimes it gets on you.
So we transitioned into oil andgas business and moved into
this rent house and within ayear I had gained about 50
(05:49):
pounds, was having headaches andbrain fog, fatigue, blurred
vision, high blood pressure,sleep apnea, weird rashes.
The kids always had sinusproblems, red eyes, itchy eyes.
My wife and I we had amiscarriage while we were in
that house Hadn't happenedbefore Went to about seven
(06:11):
different Western allopathicdoctors who said you work too
hard.
You're too stressed out, you'restupid, it's in your head, it's
anxiety.
Your cholesterol is high, bythe way.
So here's a benzo and a Lipitor, and that was it.
And then we went in 2015, fouryears later to the beach on
(06:33):
vacation for 10 days andeverybody's eyes cleared up,
lungs cleared up, and duringthis time before, I was
traveling to West Texas in theoil and gas business and I'd
feel pretty good when I got outthere.
And then I got home and I'dfeel bad again and I just kind
of chalked it up to stress frombusiness travel.
And then we came home from thebeach in the spring of 2015 and
(06:55):
figured out our house had beenflooding underneath the crawl
space and it was littered withblack mold.
So that kind of kicked open awhole new avenue of discovery
that is incredible, becausethat's where I'm leading this.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
So, dan, you went
from a mortgage company owner to
nearly losing your life toblack mold and a blue light.
Walk us through the collapse.
I mean because what's happening?
To your body.
Why?
Why did no doctor connect thedots?
Speaker 3 (07:23):
well, I, you know, we
can go with the tinfoil hat
part if your audience wants tohear that I.
I think that they're trained tonot look for causes.
You know, when you have a leftear surgeon and a right ear
surgeon and they don't talk toeach other, you've
compartmentalized this healthcare.
And then you throw in the, theevil overlords of big pharma,
(07:44):
big insurance, big medicine.
They don't treat the bodyholistically and what was super
frustrating were I went to thisreally great, highly recommended
integrative specialist guy whowas super recommended.
We did all these tests, did allthe heart stuff, the brain
(08:04):
stuff, did the brain scans, andhe was the guy that said oh well
, your cholesterol is high,here's some Lipitor, come see me
in six months.
And I cursed at him and saiddude, I'm going to be dead in
six months.
I literally wake up every daythinking I'm dying.
That's how I feel.
I have no energy.
I can't walk up the stairswithout being out of breath.
I can't pick up my kids.
(08:26):
My brain is troubled.
I can't think of wordssometimes Can't form sentences.
I almost had to get angry inorder to push the adrenaline
through my body to complete asentence.
And I think those poor guys.
They're programmed with thestandard information, but then
(08:48):
also the arrogance and the ego.
And they're not the guys I wentto and I'm not saying this is
everybody, but the guys I wentto in 2011,.
This kind of alternative healthstuff was just very new and it
wasn't as popular as it is now.
So they just they weren,weren't, aren't trying to look
for it, and their egos won't letthem think that something else
(09:09):
is wrong.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
So they just want to
write you a script for something
and that's it wow, now I'veread some of your bio and and
you've described the mold as ablue light, as a silent killer.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
Oh yeah, so let me
shift into that.
So the mold does a whole lot ofcrazy stuff.
One of the other things thatwas kind of additive to this
(09:51):
health crisis was I would sit infront of two computer screens
all day, on my cell phone, nextto my head with a Wi-Fi router,
and the house we moved into hadthese really high power lines
high tension lines right overand a cell tower about four
blocks away.
So there's problems with mold,but then you also have problems
with blue light and non-nativeEMF, which is basically the
electricity and the airwavesthat comes off of your cell
phone, your Wi-Fi router.
High tension lines, even fromthe earth, can be troubling for
(10:16):
people in health crisis, andwhen you get into a moldy
environment you can handle itfor a while, but then your body
gets overloaded and there's athing called the rain barrel
effect.
When the rain barrel gets fullyour body with toxins, it
overflows.
It's kind of like having a bigopening on the top and a little
drain on the bottom.
Your body, your liver, can'tfunction to get rid of the
(10:38):
toxins and then mold likes tocamp out in fatty tissue.
Mold likes to camp out in fattytissue.
So I discovered this guy.
His name is Dr Jack CruzK-R-U-S-E.
He's an arrogant, bombastic,trauma neurosurgeon, brain
surgeon, super genius.
Curses all the time.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
So, Dr House you met
Dr House.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
MD.
Okay, exactly, yeah.
So I was so brain foggy when Ifound him the only thing I could
capture because he's sosciencey and so I was so brain
foggy when I found him the onlything I could capture because
he's so sciencey and so smartwas that blue light equals bad.
So the lizard brain was stillfunctioning and so the caveman
part said blue light is bad.
So we switched out the lightsin the house from compact
(11:21):
fluorescent bulbs and leds toold-timeyy Edison incandescent
bulbs in the yellow, orange andred color spectrum.
And then we started trying towear these blue light glasses
off of Amazon, and I couldn'tget my kids to wear them.
But what blocking the blue lightdid for me was mold keeps your
(11:43):
body in a toxic fight or flightstatus, so you're always dumping
cortisol and your body is sostressed that I would get
completely tired by two in theafternoon and have to take a nap
and then not be able to sleepuntil two in the morning, and so
your circadian rhythm getscompletely spanked.
(12:05):
And so blue light from yourcomputer, your telephone, your
iPad, is the same colortemperature of the sun at noon.
So if you look at your phone atnight without protection on
your eyes or a filter on yourscreen.
You tricked your brain intothinking it's noon and it stops
releasing melatonin.
So when I started this healthrecovery.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
The number one thing
that got me better was blocking
the blue light.
Oddly enough, we've had theseconversations on here.
Dr Ely has a big EMF guy.
I don't know if you listen toany other shows, but we've had
this conversation.
It's incredible that what'sdone for these people Now do you
see this fight as a as a purelymedical one, or is it a
spiritual one as well for you?
Speaker 3 (12:53):
Oh, here we go, yeah,
so, um, I used well, I still
say it.
So I used to say mold from thedevil and then also blue light.
Now is from the devil and Idon't know if it's completely
sinister, but the base of prettymuch every screen out there is
(13:13):
built on a blue light led lightbase.
From my research it's becauseit runs cooler than the red,
it's cheaper to run, it doesn'tdrain the batteries as fast.
But what?
That spike of the blue light atbetween 440 nanometers and 460
nanometers for the nerds in theaudience they'll know what that
(13:35):
means.
But it's basically if you lookat the sunlight under a light
meter.
It's full spectrum.
You see all the colors fullypresent and blue light from the
sun is balanced all the timewith about 40 percent red light.
Blue light by itself does what Itold you.
It.
It screws with your body and itmesses with the whole a bunch
(14:02):
of different science pathwaysand causes a big health
dysfunction.
So it depletes dopamine,serotonin and melatonin, which
makes you anxious, depressed andnot able to sleep.
So I couldn't get my kids towear the blue light glasses off
of Amazon.
So my 16-year-old daughter,lizzie, at the time, said why
don't you just start a business.
You're an entrepreneur.
(14:22):
So I did.
She helped design the website,pick out the colors and the
frames, and so now we haveluciaeyescom and we sell the
best blue light blocking glasseson the planet.
And if you want to shift intothe spiritual, I can get kind of
knee-deep into that part, ifyou want.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
Well, you had also
said in one of your bios, your
turning point came to you, well,helped come to you when a
convent full of nuns dealingwith mold sickness.
And how did that experiencechange your perspective?
Because you know, and what wasthat like to step into the world
of what exorcism and miracles?
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Yeah, okay, that's a.
So I'm Catholic, grew upCatholic, went away during
college, chased girls and funand booze and left the church.
But then, when I got married, Idid a deep dive into a lot of
religious studies and made thechoice to come return and be
Catholic.
My grandmother at that time,when we had a couple kids she
(15:20):
lived behind us in an apartmentcomplex behind our house she
would always be saying offer itup, offer it up, offer it up.
And finally I'd looked up whatthat meant.
And the Catholics believe thatif you offer up some of your
sufferings, you can do it foreither the souls of purgatory or
for somebody else specificallyLike.
So Tim has an illness he'sgoing through.
(15:42):
I've got some suffering.
I'll offer up my sufferings inexchange for relief of Tim's
suffering.
So when I every day would wakeup, I sleep on my side.
I would lift my right arm andsee how long I could hold it up,
and if I could hold it uplonger than 30, 45 seconds, I
felt like I was getting better.
But most of the days I couldn't.
So my prayer was.
So my prayer was God, make thisgo away, but don't let it go to
(16:05):
waste.
So in 2023, I was having somebusiness issues, some family
issues and I was pretty stressedout.
Went to an event at our churchand a fundraising event.
One of my friends came up andsaid hey, did you make any New
Year's resolutions?
I said yeah, I'm saying no thisyear's.
(16:30):
No, don't ask me to volunteer,Don't ask me for a check, don't
ask me to borrow my truck.
Hell don't even ask me to stackthese chairs after this event.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
Don't even ask to ask
me right.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
I said I literally
said 2023, it's all about me.
And then they called an orderto the event and this really
sweet nun steps up to startgiving a presentation and she
says oh, before I start mypresentation, please pray for us
.
We found mold in our conventand several of our nuns are sick
.
I failed to mention that duringthis whole recovery process in
(17:00):
2020, I ended up with a grouppurchasing the medical clinic
from the 80-year-old doctor whohelped save my life.
His name is Dr Charles Hamill.
He just recently retired lastyear in October and we closed
that clinic, but he's the guy inaddition to Dr Cruz and
blocking blue light.
He helped me get better reallyfast.
(17:25):
So at that point I thought wasthe answer to the prayer?
It was the aha of God helped meget better, but don't let it go
to waste, because here's thisgroup of really beautiful, sweet
nuns dedicated their lives toserving humanity and I'm like,
oh, this is awesome.
I've got a clinic, I've got anAirbnb house that's really clean
(17:45):
, they can stay in, and I knowhow to leapfrog this.
So two days later, I had ninenuns living in one of our houses
and at our clinic, and then thestory took kind of a wild turn.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Is this the part
where Sister Wilamina
lancaster's body being foundincompatible or incorruptible,
had become?
Speaker 3 (18:09):
a global story.
Okay, so you were close to thatdiscovery right yeah, so it's
crazy.
So, uh, about two weeks in,several of these nuns were
having these weird kind of uh,some catatonic type seizures and
then other physical typeseizures, and I had this
(18:31):
Priscilla who works withChristina.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
I had Priscilla was a
nurse, priscilla Romans.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
Yeah, she's a badass.
Love that woman, kill or diefor that girl.
She's doing a great job helpingpeople yes, she does.
So she came over becauseseveral of the nuns couldn't eat
they could barely drink waterand we were trying to get her to
help us figure out how to getorders written for TPN, for the
IV nutrition.
(18:57):
One of these nuns had a seizurethat lasted quite a long time.
Poor Priscilla grabs me by theshirt and she's like these
aren't seizures, these aren'tseizures.
And I said, yeah, I kind ofthought that.
So I called my priest.
He said, okay, we need to bringin an exorcist.
And then I called MotherSuperior and she's like, oh my
(19:17):
gosh, how did we not see this?
Of course we were being blinded.
So for about the next two and ahalf weeks there was a whole
bunch of exorcisms going on atmy house with this great priest
from Father Chad Ripperger'sgroup, and that's their whole
order is dedicated to fightingthe devil, and so I got to be a
(19:40):
witness to this extraordinarilyscary and beautiful event.
You don't hear that every day.
Yeah, I don't want to go throughit again.
I didn't want to go through itthen, but I'm glad I did A
couple of crazy lessons.
I'll give you a couple of crazylessons and I'll give you the
(20:03):
birthday cake blowing out thecandles wish surprise came at
the end.
So, one, the demons are reallybig bullies.
They love to pick on weakpeople and desperate people and
people who are in a crisis.
If you're running around doinga bunch of bad stuff, they tend
to leave you alone, but ifthere's good people, they start
(20:25):
banging on your door pretty hard.
And these nuns are just themost wonderful people I've ever
met in my life.
And two, they're verylegalistic.
They have to follow legitimateauthority.
And three, they really flee atthe name of Jesus, st Michael
(20:48):
and St Benedict.
Really big, really afraid ofthose guys.
So it took a lot of work.
I don't claim to know a lotabout this.
I'm just a dumb layman, okay.
But I got to be there and Iexperienced pretty much
everything you would see inthose Exorcist-type movies
without the vomit and the headturning all the way around Okay,
(21:08):
movies without the vomit andthe head turning all the way
around.
And after about two and a halfthree weeks of going through all
this.
A lot of it was expiated, theywere gone and Mother Superior
said, okay, we're going back,went back to Missouri and that
was Easter week of 23.
I was pretty overwhelmed andkind of let down at the same
(21:30):
time to have those girls leave.
But it was a really good threemonths of trying to help them
out and they're very goodfriends.
And about a week, 10 days afterEaster, mother Superior calls me
to tell me that one of the nunswho had been having these
seizures or kind of catatonicepisodes would get visions of
(21:52):
either Jesus or Mary, and shesaid that in one of her visions.
Recently she had a vision ofthe Virgin Mary standing on a
hill, her arm extended, pointingto a hill, and the hill was
where Sister Wilhelmina wasburied and said to this nun,
it's time to dig up yourtreasure.
That coincided with thecompletion of a side altar where
(22:15):
they were going to move herinto a new coffin and put her
body inside the church.
Well, they dug her up and shewas incorruptible.
And so there's only a couplehundred saints in the Catholic
Church who have beenincorruptible, where their
bodies don't decay.
So she was not embalmed, she wasburied in the wet Missouri dirt
(22:37):
in a pine coffin and everythingwas decayed.
All the linen fabric on theinside was decayed, part of the
wood was decayed, but her habit,her veil and her body were
incorruptible.
They didn't decay.
Wow.
And so for me, the big giantaha and gratitude was that five
(23:02):
years of suffering and beingjust dumb enough not to quit and
saying that prayer don't let itgo to waste culminated with the
giant miracle of this wonderfulwoman who started her own nun
order, and they've helped Idon't know lots and lots and
lots of people, and it's reallya humbling privilege to have
(23:23):
been a tiny part of it.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
So I got one more
question before we got to take a
break here.
Yeah, excellent information, bythe way, and I can imagine a
lot of people are going toresonate with that.
Yeah, thank you you prayedevery morning God make this go
away, but don't let it go towaste.
Don't let it go to waste.
Yeah, looking back, do youthink that the suffering was
necessary to prepare you forthis mission?
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Oh gosh, yes, Totally
, Completely.
Mission oh gosh, yes, totally,completely.
Yeah, that was.
If there was one thing to pointto of the necessity of it was
to be prepared for that.
So you know, when you beingkind of a type A I don't want to
just say type A asshole youdon't like to ask for help, and
(24:09):
so, being sick, I couldn't doeverything I was used to doing,
so I had to humble myself andreach out, uncomfortably.
Reach out, Sure.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
Now in your sisters
and brothers.
Do you have sisters andbrothers?
I do.
Are you the middle child?
Speaker 3 (24:25):
I'm the oldest.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
Okay, usually the
middle child's the overachiever,
okay.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
Copy.
It's just what it is.
I'm the middle child's theoverachiever.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Okay, copy.
It's just what it is.
I'm a middle child.
I was in a meeting once and theattorney looks at me and goes
well, we know who theoverachiever is in the room.
Okay, yeah copy that Loud andclear.
I went okay, gotcha Okay, soI've got to take a break.
It was an excellent answer onthat one, because I mean you've
(24:52):
got to suffer to understand andit sounds like you had plenty of
it, so let me do this.
Let me take a break.
We'll come back with the numbersix question on my list and
we'll just kind of go from there.
Can you hang tight?
Speaker 3 (25:06):
Yes, sir will do.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Okay, all right,
stand by, Hot, we'll be right
back and we'll have some wordsfrom our sponsors and then we'll
come back and we'll finish thisoutstanding story.
So everybody just kind of hangtight, we'll be right back.
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Speaker 2 (25:53):
Welcome back to
HuttCast.
We'd listen to our guys whohelped sponsor the show for us,
but we have this amazing,amazing story on our hands.
Did you make it back with us?
I'm here, yes, sir.
Okay, I've got some otherquestions here, because after
the exorcist thing, I've got awhole lot of questions.
I've never, you know, you seethem on tv, like you said, but
(26:14):
nothing, like you don't see it,you just can't write this.
Yeah, so from struggling, youlaunch lucia eyes to combat the
blue light exposure?
Yes, how big of a threat ismodern technology to our health
and if and what are we ignoringthat we should be paying
attention to?
I think he answered a lot of it, but but what's the nuts and
bolts of that?
Speaker 3 (26:36):
So a couple other
things.
So we, being a father of sevenand trying to keep compliance
with my kids wearing theirbecause these kids are all on
devices and we homeschool, sothey have to be on a computer or
an iPad and then in this dayand age, the way they
communicate and socialize is ona telephone or a screen of some
(26:59):
sort, and I don't know the exactnumber, but the kids
prepubescent children's pupilsare larger by almost double than
the adults pupils are larger byalmost double than the adults'
pupils are, so they are moresusceptible to damage from the
blue light.
So we have a lot of kids'frames I think more than any
(27:21):
other blue blocking glassescompany out there, and so the
dangers from blue light and then, like you said, the non-native
emf are huge, because I Ihesitate to call them the evil
overlords.
They might just be corporategreedy guys but there could be
something sinister behind it.
(27:41):
But now that all this data isout and thankfully with rfk, you
know, trying to do this mahathing in amer I think that
there's some good changes comingand it's no longer fringe
science and weird, whatever youcall them biohackers, it's more
(28:02):
mainstream.
So the way I kind of comparethe number one thing blue light.
For me, that's the number onething that got me healthy the
fastest.
Now, I did a hundred otherthings to combat the mold, but
it's the one thing I continuallydo every day is block blue
light.
So, um, if you've ever gonecamping and you hike all day,
(28:26):
you don't have a phone with you,you make a fire, you roast some
hot dogs and do somemarshmallows and s'mores, and
then it's dark and you'resitting telling stories around
the campfire and suddenly startyawning and you're like, oh my
gosh, I'm tired, I need to getto bed.
It must be midnight.
You look at your watch it's8.20.
You're like what in the hell?
(28:46):
Why am I so tired?
Well, you're outside.
You probably got up with thesun.
You got sun in your eyes and onyour skin and sunshine in your
eyes that are not blocked withglasses or sunglasses or
contacts.
Your eyes have these melanoptinreceptors which accept the
light from the sun and then setbasically the circadian clocks
(29:09):
in every cell of your body andwhat blue light does is it
knocks that system out of whack.
So if you're out camping, youget up in the morning, you go
out in the sun, you're outsideall day.
You're getting sun on your skinand under your eyes, and then
firelight or candlelight is thesame closest color temperature
to the sun.
So it's natural, okay.
(29:31):
Your body gets back into anatural rhythm, back on the
circadian rhythm, and you fallasleep earlier.
So if you block blue light,whether from wearing our glasses
or somebody else reputable, oryou use a filter on your screens
, your body is going to startgetting back into that kind of
rhythm and then you'll getdeeper sleep, better sleep, and
(29:52):
your body will drop into thecellular recovery.
So that's how I got thehealthiest, the fastest.
The other thing I telleverybody not to do is don't
leave your phone plugged in onnext to your bed.
Put it in airplane mode.
Leave it in the bathroom so youcan still hear the alarm, and
turn your Wi-Fi router off atnight.
Put it on a Christmas timer soit goes off at 11 and comes back
(30:15):
on at 7 or 8 in the morning.
Wow, those things arecompletely disruptive to your
cellular health.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
That's a whole lot of
asking there, isn't it?
Speaker 3 (30:29):
Yeah, yeah.
Well, if you look at everyiteration of 1G, 2G, 3g, 4g and
5G, all of these kind ofdiseases heart disease, diabetes
, all of these autoimmune-typediseases have risen along with
(30:50):
these implementations of thesenew systems.
And the more people are onscreens and using this
non-native EMF devices, the moreyou have to do other stuff to
protect yourself and recover.
Sure, so my system is I get upevery morning, go outside
barefoot, stand barefoot for 10minutes and watch the sunrise,
(31:13):
and then I jump in a cold tuband then I get my day going.
You ground out, Blocking,blocking, blocking blue light
all day long and movement.
Speaker 2 (31:21):
Yeah, well, you, you
ground out.
Dr Ely is a big person likethat as well.
Yeah, now you're.
You're not you.
Yeah, now you're a nonprofit.
Let's shift some gears, hope.
Chain is focused on teen mentalhealth, suicide prevention.
How do mold, blue light andthese hidden toxins tie into the
mental health of the youngcrisis people face today?
Speaker 3 (31:45):
So you know, I guess
we can drop into mold.
You know I guess we can dropinto mold Mold I don't want to
scare everybody about, but mostof the half the buildings in the
United States have some sort ofwater damage and mold.
You don't ever want to leave itthere or clean it.
You want to tear it out, evenif it's on the studs, you just
throw it away.
It's just gross, it's bad.
(32:06):
It'll sit there and lie dormantand the mycotoxins the survival
, replicating mechanism of themold can live dormant for years
and then, once they get theright substrate water, darkness
they start growing again.
And the mycotoxins are what arehorrible.
They can cross the blood-brainbarrier and camp out in fatty
(32:27):
tissue, which your brain is, andthat's why I was having all the
neurological dysfunctions.
So mold is kind of a rough one.
It can be rough on kids.
Kids tend to recover fasterthan old people like me.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
But the thing for
Wait, you ain't that old you
were.
What February of 66 was yourbirthday?
Speaker 3 (32:47):
Yeah, I'm almost 60.
So the thing with the kids,though, I kind of already
mentioned they're attached tothese devices and they they do
cause hormonal disruption.
Blue light does it.
So does the non-native emf.
It can cause neurologicalproblems.
It it can cause depression andanxiety and then it can become
(33:15):
addicting.
There are several patents outthere about the design of the
blue light spectrum on thesedevices that makes them
addicting.
And then that's even before youget to the content.
So the children are reallyunder attack from technology and
content, and just a couplesimple things that parents and
(33:36):
kids can do alike can protectthem from this.
Because in 2022, we shifted thenonprofit For Lucia Eyes from
just outfitting kids inunderserved areas to suicide,
because there was a huge spikein suicides after the pandemic,
wow.
So that's part of our bigmission.
(33:56):
So most of our profits fromLucia Eyes go to Hope King,
which we support.
These things that are inschools called Hope Squads, and
Hope Squads are peer-led teamsof trusted advocates.
So the kids in the high schoolsand middle schools vote on kids
who would be a trusted advisor,somebody they could talk to,
(34:17):
somebody that's warm, welcoming,friendly, and the kids then
that either accept to become aHope Squad member and if they do
, they get trained and ifthere's an outcry event where
the kid has actively thought ofa plan, then those kids can go
to another trusted advisor.
And it was started in utah by,I think in 2000 or 2001 by dr
(34:40):
greg hudnall.
He had a huge problem withsuicides in his uh school
district and since he started ituh in 2001 they've had zero
suicides that was a.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
Mormon thing, wasn't
it?
Speaker 3 (34:54):
I don't know.
I think it was a public school.
He might be a Mormon, I don'tknow.
He probably is a Mormon.
I know that there was a lot ofproblems with suicide in the
Mormon community there was.
I don't want to comment toomuch about it, but I know they
were having a huge problem withit.
But he's the guy that startedit and we've got a bunch of them
in schools here in Texas.
(35:15):
But there's 70,000 schools inthe United States and there's
only 1,700 of these programsactive right now.
Wow.
So they need them in moreschools?
Speaker 2 (35:26):
Yeah, it sounds that
way, and with today's kids, they
kind of need all the help theycan get because there's so much,
like you said, attacking them.
Yeah, now you created a shortfilm called Live, don't Die and
now there's a documentaryproduction called Incorruptible.
Is that what I'm seeing?
What role do you do?
Storytelling and media play andfight in these invisible
(35:48):
battles?
Speaker 3 (35:50):
so, um, there's a
couple things we're working on.
I I just got a wild hair oneday and decided I grew up trying
to be an actor.
I went to california aftercollege and failed miserably at
that kind of artistic writer,done a lot of acting and stuff
and so I just decided to writethis short film and, uh, we did.
(36:11):
It was a really good thing.
We used it to launch the, thehope chain uh, non-profit, and I
don't know about theincorruptibles.
Uh, I think that's adocumentary.
There's another guy who two guyshave contacted me to talk about
the different documentariesthey're doing on the Nuns and
Sister Wilhelmina, so I don'tknow which one is which.
(36:33):
Okay, I'm actively investing inanother company called Movie
Night and it is an anti-woke newstreaming platform similar to
Netflix, and so that's going tohave a bunch of stuff that's
going to be really helpful forparents, like all the stuff they
(36:54):
promised us for DVDs, where youcould basically have a filter
and pick out what you want yourkids to see and hear.
We're going to be able to dothat and not make the film.
You know, 27 minutes long afteryou click everything you want
to cut out.
Speaker 2 (37:12):
So yeah, you get the
credits yep now some critics
might hear mold exorcismmiracles in the same sentence
and write it off to his fringe.
What do you say to the skepticsthat may dismiss your story?
Speaker 3 (37:31):
That's a great
question.
I've got a lot of people.
I just came from a meetingwhere I was talking with a guy
and told him part of the storyand he's poo-pooing the whole
thing.
I've been convicted of it.
I used to make fun of my wifeabout mold.
(37:52):
You know like, oh, she wouldcomplain about it and say it's
dangerous.
And one of our old houses thehouse that we lost when we went
through bankruptcy after beingin the mortgage business had
some mold in the basement and Iwas like, ah, bullshit, it's
fine.
And then here we are, a yearlater I got my butt kicked by it
(38:12):
and so I get the part of beinga skeptic and I believed, you
know air quote about, uh, thedemonic stuff yeah I had an
experience while we were in theuh, moldy house twice, where
they call it nocturnal paralysis.
(38:35):
Some people call it being sat onby a witch, where you're not
really sleeping and you're notawake but you can't move, and
that happened to me twice.
That was pretty scary and likeI couldn't talk, but finally,
when I could talk, the onlything I could say was Jesus.
And like I couldn't talk, butfinally, when I could talk, the
only thing I could say was jesus, and then it all stopped.
So that, yeah, that gave me alittle basis of believing in
(39:00):
this preternatural world.
So I get people being skepticaland that's fine.
I just pray they don't everhave an experience like I did.
But the devil's real and so arehis minions, and they don't
like us.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
I think I'd have my
phone programmed to say Jesus
every 15 minutes.
If that was the case, Jesus why, Help me, Jesus.
Jesus, help me.
Yep, yep Wow.
Speaker 3 (39:28):
I'm with you, that's
incredible man.
Speaker 2 (39:29):
Now you've said and I
think you've said it and it's a
quote this isn't about me, it'sabout giving people the tools
to protect their health, mindsand spirits.
What are the top tools?
The takeaways?
Speaker 3 (39:47):
that you want every
listener of HuttCast to walk
away with today.
I would start with thespiritual tools.
You know I think there's a bigdeficit in our world and you
know we have started our ownlittle podcast, kind of like not
as big as yours and not as bigas Joe Rogan, but we're kind of
(40:09):
gearing.
Speaker 2 (40:10):
Little fish, big pond
, that's me.
Speaker 3 (40:11):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
we're trying to gear it towards
the 13 to 25-year-old kids whoare the most at risk for suicide
.
Okay, and so the tools?
What I like to pick the brainsof people are if you could go
back and tell your 13-year-oldself a couple things to do, what
would you tell them?
And so what I would tell, whatI do tell my kids is no matter
(40:37):
what it is, it's all going to beall right.
Keep offering it up, keepgiving it back to God.
Try to give him your trust.
It sucks, and you know.
Ask for help, don't wait.
And then you know and I'm sureyou have a bunch of listeners
who are Christians, who areJewish and others I'm a
(41:01):
heavy-duty Christian and I knowthat when there's a serious
exorcism problem that somebodyelse can't handle, they call a
heavy-duty Catholic priest.
So that's kind of like okay,you got the Navy SEALs of the
spiritual world here.
So I'm staying Catholic.
I don't want to tell anybodyelse to change, but I'm staying
(41:23):
Catholic.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
Well, I'm Catholic as
well, but I've never heard
anybody on the show that hasbeen a part of an exorcism.
I mean again, you can't writethis stuff.
Speaker 3 (41:32):
Well, tim, I tell you
, dude, I really literally pit
my chance when the whole thingwas going on.
It was just unbelievably crazyand, like I said, I don't want
to do it again.
I'm glad I went through it andI hope nobody else has to go
through it.
On the physical side, I wouldsay get outside every day, get
barefoot, watch the sunrise, getas much sun on your skin and
(41:53):
body as you can.
Keep moving, block blue light,drink good, good, clean water.
Um, you know I I like acarnivore diet.
I don't stick to it.
You know it was labor day.
I had a ton of ice cream, icecream cones and pie well it's,
it's kind of carnivore creamcame from.
Yeah right, it came from a cowwith the sugar cane.
(42:16):
Right, right and then uh, yeah.
The other thing is, you know,the big message of that
anti-suicide video is don't beafraid to reach out for help.
And, on the flip side, if yousee somebody struggling, don't
hide it, Don't like, brush itoff, don't let the devil whisper
in your ear and tell youeverything's all right.
(42:37):
Reach out to somebody if youthink something's wrong.
I reach out a hundred times andhave somebody go.
I'm fine, what's wrong with you, dude?
I had a kid that worked for mein the oil and gas business who
killed himself, and I reachedout to him every day when he had
a weird outcry event for threemonths and then he kept saying
he was fine and then threemonths after that he killed
(42:59):
himself.
So I you know, the stomach acidover that is still kind of
there.
So don't be afraid to reach outand ask for help.
And, on the flip side, if yousee somebody struggling, just go
talk to them.
We need more connection andcommunity in this world.
We're all isolated with thesedamn wonderful devices you and I
are talking on and yourlisteners are hearing you on.
(43:22):
Yes, let's get face-to-face.
Speaker 2 (43:25):
And the computer is
recording us.
It's a thing, you know.
How do you not?
No, no, it's fine.
How do you not be?
Speaker 3 (43:31):
part of it.
Yeah, it's great, use it.
But you know, get face-to-facewith people, go hug somebody,
yeah.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
Well, you have an
incredible story, dan.
Yeah, thanks, tim.
I'm going to get this edited up, I'm going to push it out there
.
It'll probably become droppedon Saturday, maybe Sunday, but
I'm going to get you a pre-linkto it so you can kind of hear
what's going on and you knowjust kind of this is a one take
(44:00):
thing.
I love these kinds of showsbecause you can sit back and
have conversation and say, hey,well, you know what do you,
what's your, what are yourstories?
And I am so blessed to havethese conversations with so many
people around the world.
I look at this as I'm I'm thewinner here because I get to
have these conversations.
Speaker 3 (44:17):
It's super fun.
It really is super fun.
And I'll tell you another one.
If you want to put this in thepodcast, send it, go ahead, this
one.
So when we made the movie, Icalled this friend of mine who
was in the nightclub business atthe same time I was.
She shifted out of that intothe film industry and here in
Texas and she produced it.
Her name's Melissaissakirkendall and she called
(44:41):
somebody who is on our crew.
The day she called this person,they were contemplating suicide
that day and she called thisperson and said hey, I really
need you to come work on thisproject.
It's a, it's some volunteersand you've got to take half pay
and all this other stuff.
Well, that day she called, thatguy was ready to kill himself
(45:05):
and he didn't because of it.
So it's really a big blessingto just get a tiny glimpse of
some of the good things that goon, because you never know what
one positive action, one kindword, one hug, one smile to
somebody will do.
It's really amazing to be apart of that.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
Let's plug your stuff
again.
How do we find you?
Speaker 3 (45:30):
LuciaEyescom.
L-u-c-i-a-e-y-e-scom is thebest place.
I'm on Instagram and X andFacebook and all that stuff.
You can find me there.
The best place is Lucia eyescomor hope chaincom.
H O P E C H A I Ncom, and thepodcast is not out yet, but it
(45:55):
will be and it's y'all cast andit's y'allcastcom.
Y-a-l-l-castcom.
Speaker 2 (46:03):
Well, if you need
some input on the podcast stuff,
I know a guy I would love it.
Man, I would love it.
Now, mind you, this is like thesledgehammer for the tack,
because I've got a full-blownproduction studio in which I
work in the underground locationbunker and I use maybe a third
of the gear, but it is crystalclear.
(46:25):
So if you're ever inMinneapolis or not Minneapolis
but close to Minneapolis and youwant to come up and have a show
in session, we should do that.
Speaker 3 (46:34):
I would love it.
I would love it.
Like I said, my best friendlives up there so I need to
scoot up and get face-to-facewith him.
So probably after the first ofthe year I'll do that.
I would love to get out and buyyou a steak, drink a fat bottle
of Cabernet with you and talksome snacks.
Speaker 2 (46:53):
You've got to be
really like a box of Ripple
50-50.
But I do hear you, you and Iappreciate that and you are
always welcome in studio to comeon out and you know I've had a
lot of guests and they soundgreat on the phone, but when you
get them in studio they're putup on thousand dollar mics and
they are crystal, crystal clearcopy that and they, uh, it's
(47:15):
such a it's the Chevette versusthe Corvette thing.
Speaker 3 (47:19):
Yeah, I got you, I
understood, but I can't get any
more bandwidth through a cellphone, through the mixing board.
Speaker 4 (47:25):
It's just the way it
is, but you know hey.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
Yeah, Dan, I'm going
to pull the pin on this.
What are we into our secondsession here?
21, 22 minutes.
Okay, so it's going to be a49-minute show, but I'll add it
up and thank you.
Thank you again for coming on.
Speaker 3 (47:42):
Yeah, thanks for
having me man, I really
appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
And I want it to be
enjoyable.
I mean again, it's aconversation, it's not a
military operation, it's just awhat do you know?
Speaker 3 (47:54):
Yeah, I'll put
together a discount code for
your listeners.
I'll make it HUTCAST20 to getthem 20% off and I'll text you a
link here in like 15 minutes.
Speaker 2 (48:05):
Well, listeners, as
always if we get a link.
Hutcast does not accept anymoney for these shows.
It goes to a charity of Dan'schoosing.
So for that case we don'tcollect, we give back Wonderful
Okay, back, wonderful Okay, danstandby.
I'm going to put this instandby mode For our HuttCast
listeners.
You heard him.
Speaker 4 (48:27):
Get Catholic.
Okay, I'm kidding there.
Speaker 2 (48:29):
But you know, if
you're Catholic and you need a
priest, you know.
I mean hey, but we'll catch younext time.
And thanks everybody for tuningin.
Have a wonderful, safe rest ofyour week, stand by and that's a
wrap for hudcast.
Hudcast is again a pragmaticapproach to seeing things how
(48:52):
some people see them.
If you like our show, give us athumbs up on the facebook site
again for hudcast.
Thank you again.
Have a wonderful evening, thankyou.