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May 25, 2025 71 mins
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Seth Holehouse (00:13):
Welcome to Man in America, a voice of reason in
a world gone mad. I'm your host,Seth Hullhouse. There was a
silver lining to the pandemic,and I think that a silver lining
was a fact that for so manypeople around the world,
especially here in America, theyhad this rude awakening. This
awakening of understanding andrealizing that, wow, the medical

(00:36):
system, which is in bed with thegovernment and the three letter
agencies, this system isn'tactually trying to make us
better. It's actually justtrying to sell us more drugs and
make more money and maybe evendepopulate the earth long term.
Yeah. You know, where's yourtinfoil hat at? So the silver

(00:58):
lining though is that peoplehave realized that this is the
world we live in. And there'sthis huge exciting movement of
people and entrepreneurs thatare saying, how can we build a
medical system that's not run bythis Rockefeller dark octopus
web of evil. And that's great.
And I'm I'm lucky because onthis show, I get to speak to so

(01:19):
many of these people that areforging these new paths, and
they're researching. They'refinding new ways of healing. And
And a lot of times, what's greatis that they're not finding a
new way of healing. They'refinding the old way of healing
that disappeared in the earlynineteen hundreds when
Rockefeller came in, and nowit's coming back again because
we're actually tracing back thehistory and finding out that
these things that were beingdone even hundreds or thousands

(01:42):
of years ago are actuallyrelevant still today. And
they're far better at making ushealthy than these modern
pharmaceuticals.
And so joining us today is mygood friend Jeff Adam, who's the
founder of Micronix Silver. Andwe're gonna be talking about the
healing mechanisms of silver,the agenda behind big pharma,
how, antibiotics came in. So,like, the modern antibiotic

(02:06):
system that was introduced byRockefeller after the, discovery
of penicillin, how that usurpedthe role of silver, and so much
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(03:14):
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(03:35):
that information in thedescription for the show as
well. Jeff, it's great to haveyou back on the show.
Thank you so much for being herewith us today.

Jeff Adam (03:43):
Oh, this is this is great. I love coming on your
show. You know, kinda lay thingsout and then we go in a whole
different direction a lot oftimes just for general
conversation, which I thinkkeeps it organic, but it also
brings a lot of forefront,things to the forefront that you
and I've discussed that I thinka lot of people are interested
in.

Seth Holehouse (04:00):
It's great. It's it's funny because, you know,
when we first kinda got intodoing podcasting, I I had no
idea it was gonna be a career.We just said, okay. We we gotta
start making some videos. It'sinformation war.
But the longer I've done thisand the more I've become, I
guess, you could say, a seasonedpodcaster, I've really come to
appreciate the medium because,like, I've got you here on my
teleprompter. You know, you'renot life size, but it's big

(04:22):
enough that I can sit here andjust have an open conversation
with you and and vice versa, andwe can just talk. There's
nothing. I've got no script infront of me. The only actually,
only paper I have in front of meis, our our raised bed garden
map that I made.
So this is these are my notesfor the show, I guess. But we
get to have a real sincereconversation. People like that

(04:43):
because people are tired ofbeing lied to. They're tired of
everything's spun a certain wayand everything is scripted and
it's just nice just to havethese open conversations. And
and, we we go into some funplaces.
So it's it's good to have youhere.

Jeff Adam (04:57):
Well, it's nice that, you know, people can see there
there's no agenda. You know,that What I found is that more
people are asking me questions,not just about health, but about
views on religion, views onpolitics, on developmental brain
stuff with children. We havethese conversations that just

(05:18):
flow naturally. Because I thinka lot of the products that we
have worked so well and the waythat we've represented them,
people ask us questions and theytrust the information that we
get put out there because theyknow we're not just gonna pick
something out and spew it outthere. We're gonna actually go
in-depth and find out.
And a lot of people's lives areso busy that they really have to

(05:39):
rely on people they trust. Andnow they're realizing they can't
trust the mainstream media.

Seth Holehouse (05:44):
Exactly. Exactly. So, there's a handful
of things I wanna hit on today,but one of the things before we
start recording is we're talkingabout RSV, flu season, all the
different things, but also howantibiotics. I wanna I wanna
hone in on antibiotics becauseit's so important. And looking
at and and you I'll let you walkus through all the history of

(06:06):
this.
But basically, how the overuseof antibiotics can lead us into
this superbug phenomenon. Right?So maybe I'll just I'll I'll
hand it to you. I guess, first,let's just start with where did
what what is the origin of themodern day antibiotics? Like,

(06:26):
you know, if I'm say I'm sick,and I've got some sort of
infection or whatever it is, andsay I go into the doctor's
office, which doesn't happen.

Jeff Adam (06:33):
You know, they

Seth Holehouse (06:33):
they're gonna say, okay. Hey. You're gonna
here's this powder, amoxicillinor whatever it is. Mix it up and
take it, And it's like, okay.You think nothing of it, then
you're on antibiotics.
But, that's just what we've beentaught, what we've been fed in
in this modern world. But walkus through the the origin of the
modern day antibiotic industry.

Jeff Adam (06:54):
Well, to understand that you have to go back to
where it came from. So, preRockefeller, doctors were
scientists that would get intheir microscope, they would
look at your blood, they woulddetermine what was wrong. And
they were actually compoundpharmacies where they would have
all the ingredients to makewhatever you needed. And it was

(07:16):
all plant derived. So, was allnatural.
The pharmacist were chemists orthe doctors would put it
together and say, Here's yourmedicine. Now, when Rockefeller
came in, and it was about 1923when they discovered penicillin,
they realized that they canmanipulate all natural processes
and make synthetics, and thenthey could patent them. And when

(07:37):
they could patent them, theycontrol the supply. So when you
have outbreaks of things andpeople want it, well, what
happens when the supply is lowand the demand is high? They can
charge whatever they want andthey manipulate the markets that
way.
That's why they got into thestock market is that they could
manipulate the markets with thepharmaceuticals. And so, when

(07:58):
they started making thesesynthetics, they really
undermined natural medicine as aviable alternative for you. I
don't know if you remember when,I think it was a chemist,
Zijian, when the pandemic hit.She came out and she said, This

(08:20):
is not natural. It an SNOM, nota genome.
Genome is natural, SNOM issynthetic. She disappeared off
the face of

Seth Holehouse (08:28):
the earth.

Jeff Adam (08:29):
That's how much they got into making these
synthetics. Now, when you take aplant derived product, you
cannot patent it. So, they makea synthetic so they could patent
it and they can say, Okay, thisis ours. Nobody else can use it.
One of the downsides tosynthetics is they don't
assimilate in the body.
The body doesn't break themdown, they don't absorb. So,

(08:51):
your body views them as aforeign agent. So, your immune
system automatically startsattacking them. That's why they
put mercury in the vaccines.That's why they use these metals
like the super magnetic ironoxide that they started with the
vaccinations.
And then they switched to thegraphene oxide is they have to
suppress your immune system. Soyou don't attack that vaccine or
that medicine. So that way itcan work on that single

(09:14):
formulation of sickness that youhave. So when a virus hits you,
viruses mutate on average onceper hour. When they make a
vaccination for this strand ofvirus, really an hour later,
it's becoming less effectivebecause it's mutating.
The goal of everything in theworld, any living organism is

(09:36):
survival. So, a virus notmutating and being deadly to its
host is not in the virus's bestinterest. So, over time viruses
mutate and adapt to our immunesystem where it can grow
rapidly, become more effectivein what it wants to do, but less
lethal to its host. And that'swhy they rush out with a lot of

(09:56):
these vaccines. Okay, let's getthem out there right away.
As well, they know that thesethings are gonna mutate and
become less effective and bynatural remedy, the pandemic or
the endemic that's happening isslowly gonna fade out, but
they're gonna make their moneyduring the process. And every
single pharmaceutical out thereis plant derived. So, they

(10:19):
isolate the compounds in a plantand say, Well, if we make a
synthetic version of this, wecan patent it. So, when you look
at acetaminophen, it's basicallywhite willow bark. But if you
take six tablets a day for threedays, it could affect your liver
and it could cause someproblems.
But you could eat three, tenfoot tall trees in a week and

(10:42):
nothing would happen to youbecause it's natural. It doesn't
build up in your body. Now, whenyou start entering synthetics in
the body, this is how we got tothe forever chemicals that never
come out of your system. Becausethey don't break down in the
body, they have to go somewhere.If they're not released from the
body, they get stored in yourfat tissue.
Now it's ever present in there.That's why there's so many
autoimmune issues that arehappening. You never heard of

(11:03):
autoimmune in the 20s, the 50s.They were really rare when that
happened. Even diabetes waspretty much non existent in the
30s and 40s.
But with the advent ofsynthetics in your body, now
this stuff is getting storedforever in your fat tissue. And
it actually eventually goes intothe DNA and is transferred from

(11:27):
mother to son or daughter. Andnow your immune system is being
compromised right from birth.And that's why they're doing a
series of 72 shots to an infant.I'm 60 years old, when I was
born, it was seven.
And I thought that was too much.Now they're even putting
vaccinations for sexuallytransmitted diseases into
infants, which I don't knowwhat's going on in those

(11:49):
nurseries, but I don't believethere's a lot of orgies going on
in the nurseries.

Seth Holehouse (11:53):
It's it's just it's crazy. It's wild. And even
like for me, I was born in,eighty six, nineteen eighty six.
And I'm not sure what vaccines Igot. You know, maybe I I got,
you you know, whatever the thechildhood schedule was at that
time.
And and now, like, my mom, youknow, she would never have
gotten the vaccine. You know,the she didn't get the COVID

(12:13):
vaccine, and and she would nevervaccinate me now if she just had
me. They should she's learned.But back in the eighties, I
mean, let alone, you know, tenyears ago, but especially back
in the eighties, no onequestioned these things. You
just go to your local doctor,and and the doctor says, okay.
Here's what what you do, and,the kid's sick. Okay. Here's an
antibiotic. You need to fixthis, and and that's really

(12:36):
that's what it is. And so with,with antibiotics, as an example
so now okay.
So when you look at themechanism of taking something
from nature, making a syntheticversion of it, then being able
to sell that synthetic versionof it to patent it, But that
always goes hand in hand withthe demonization of that thing

(12:59):
in its raw form. Because if,say, like, you know, the
producers of of aspirin, right,or or say, semenafen, they they
come out and say, hey. Look.We've got this great new
synthetic version. It's the samething as what you're gonna find
in nature in this particulartree in the bark, but, you know,
we've made it in this littlepill form.
They're not gonna tell you that.They don't tell you that they're

(13:19):
actually just copying nature,but then adding their own little
things to make it synthetic. Sowhen penicillin was discovered,
and it was, you know, they wereable to then cultivate this and
grow it and synthesize it. Whatwas happening with antibiotics
at that time? Like, were therewere they nonexistent?
Were there other older ways ofof, you know, kind of were there

(13:40):
older versions of antibiotics atthat time that, end up becoming
demonized and kind ofdisappeared from the shelves? Or
what was that process like?Because for them to bring in the
new, they have to get rid of theold.

Jeff Adam (13:51):
Well, their evolution of medicine. Now when they first
come out and they firstdiscovered penicillin, it was
from mold, mold spores. So, itwas a kind of natural form of
it, but then it transferred toamoxicillin, emyosin,
erythemycin, Zithromax. It Wemanipulated this natural thing

(14:15):
to have better absorption intocell or to reach the blood brain
barrier to get infections in thebrain. And they've done all this
unnatural stuff to it.
So, what we have today isnowhere near what even
penicillin was on. So, what theywanted to do is they wanted to
lock up the technology then. Andit's really interesting. It's
gotten to the point now where Iwas talking to somebody who used

(14:37):
to work for big pharma and I wastalking about cancer cures and
how the big pharma would comeafter you, the government would
come after you. And he goes, Oh,they don't care if you cure it.
What they don't want you to dois have the insurance companies
pay for the medicines. So,they've gone from, Let's cure it
to, no, let's just make ourmoney through the insurance

(14:59):
companies, Medicare, Medicaid,all this stuff. So that's what
they care about now. So theydon't really care about the
cure. It's about the money.
I mean, at least a little bitmore transparent that we just
want the money is what they'redoing. Much like a virus, I
don't think that their goal isto kill you. It's to keep you
alive long enough to take everypenny you will ever make.

Seth Holehouse (15:19):
Exactly.

Jeff Adam (15:21):
And that's what we're seeing them. The evolution of
big pharmas, same as theevolution of a virus, really.

Seth Holehouse (15:28):
That's that's an interesting perspective to think
about that is that it is thevirus. Right? It is the or I
mean, what my my wife and I intalking about these things,
we've oftentimes referred to toparasites, and saying that, you
know, communism is a parasite.Right? These these modern
systems are parasitic.
They will attach to its host.They will extract as much blood

(15:50):
as they can, but it's in theirinterest to keep the host alive.
Because if if the parasiteattacks you and it kills you in
three days, it it needs to finda new host. So if if if they can
keep you alive and milk you andmilk you and milk you until it's
it's gotten every last drop ofyour blood or every last drop of
your money, well, there you go.

Jeff Adam (16:10):
Yeah, it's really evil at its core when you think
about it. What they're willingto sacrifice, human lives, you
know, infants and children,there's no reason for a child to
even have cancer these days. Ifthey would get back to getting a
lot of the poisons out of oursociety that we have. Think
about this, it's reallyinteresting. All the companies

(16:31):
that are chemical companies arepharmaceutical companies.
The companies that makefertilizer and drugs make paint,
they make the chemicals there.So, they're really working
against us all the way around.They're poisoning us and saying,
Hey, we've got the stuff that'llhelp treat you with the poison.
This is like an arsonist settingthe fire and calling the fire

(16:52):
company and saying, Hey, I'vegot a better product than water
to spray on it. And you can buyit from us, But it'll make the
fire burn three times longer,but it'll eventually go out.

Seth Holehouse (17:05):
Exactly. And so, I want you to explain the whole
idea of like a superbug. Right?Because with the handful of
antibiotics that we've been I'vebeen given since, you know,
being a young kid and andgetting sick, what happens over
time? Because if you know, weknow that with a lot of these

(17:28):
drugs, if you take them, youknow, too much over time, they
start destroying your organs.
Right? Your liver goes out,etcetera, because you have all
these synthetic toxins and stuffthat the body can't deal with.
And so they build up, and theycause, you know, damage and
cancers, etcetera. But what isthe long term effect of
antibiotics? Because no one's asfar as I know, no one's taking

(17:48):
them daily or even weekly.
Like, I know some people thattake Aleve every day, or they
take aspirin every day. It'sjust part of their normal as if
it's a multivitamin. But withantibiotics, though, it's not
the case. But if if you ifeveryone's scared of the RSV or
the flu, and they get a littlebit of the symptoms, they're

(18:09):
rushing off to get theantibiotics to kill the virus,
kill the you know, whatever itis. So what happens though over
time is, I guess, is there isthere a a point when these
antibiotics start turningnegative or something bad
happens because of that?

Jeff Adam (18:25):
Well, that's where you get your MRSA and the stuff
like that. So you get the, youknow, basically methicillin
resistant Staphylococcus rilis.It means that the immune system
no longer responds to it. So,these superbugs are changing the
way that our body processesthings. And that's because we're

(18:46):
being medicated all the time.
And when you have these calledsuperbugs, they've morphed
because of the medicinesthemselves that are being put
out there for us. They don'twork with our system, they work
against our system. Theysuppress the immune system. Your
immune system builds like anonion from the time you're born.

(19:07):
You've got this little bit ofimmunity and then it just keeps
putting layer after layer afterexposure.
My parents used to say, go outand play in the dirt. You get
those microbes in there and yourbody says, Hey, this isn't good.
Giving a two year old childlocally grown honey, you know,
chances are they won't haveallergies because it works
naturally with the immune systemand it builds it. Every single

(19:27):
drug out there requires thestripping of that and the
tearing down of that. So they'rereally destroying our immune
system from the time we'relittle kids, instead of having
this robust immune system thatwe're supposed to have as adults
where, sure we get a cold, butit lasts a day or two, not two
or three weeks and going intorespiratory infections.
And these superbugs that comeout there are a direct result of

(19:50):
big pharmas manipulating thedrugs that they're making and
trying to get them to work sospecific on one little thing
that they can create all thesesub chapters of diseases, you
know, so that it'll create thisone thing. Well, okay, well you
have this. I have a perfectexample. I had a gentleman that
called me about our product andhe said that he's got shingles.

(20:12):
And I said, Okay, here's whatyou want to do.
You want to take our productthis and our product that. And I
sent it to him. And a couple ofdays later he goes, It's not
working. And I said, Then youdon't have shingles. And he's
like, No, no, the doctor said itwas shingles.
I was like, Send me a picture ofwhat you have because we take
the approach of we're attackingthe sicknesses that are in the

(20:34):
body by understanding how theywork. And when you look at
shingles, it's a virus that wascaused by chickenpox. So, it's a
bacterial interlaid virus that'sin there, but this will destroy
it. So, if it's not doing that,I know that that's not what it
is. So he sent me the pictureand literally from his hip down
to his foot was swollen abouttwice the size and just almost

(20:56):
like a blood red color.
And I was like, You need to goto the hospital right now. I
said, You got cellulitis, whichis blood poisoning. Oh no, my
doctor said it was shingles. No,shingles follows the styration
of the muscles around the body,usually on the face, around the
eye, around the rib cage, but itfollows the muscle structure. I
says, Your whole leg isinflamed.
That's a blood infection. Hewent to the hospital. He ended

(21:16):
up being there for two a halfmonths. They said another five
or six hours and he probablywould have died. All because of
a doctor who didn't know whatthey were doing that basically
looked at the book and going,Oh, well, this is what big
pharma says it is.
So this is what we shouldprescribe or what we should do.
And we've seen that right nowwhere a lot of the doctors, all

(21:39):
their grants and stuff that theyget for colleges are all given
by big pharma. So, you don'thave true scientific doctors
that sit back and assess thingsand go, Okay, well, it could be
this. It could be this. Let'snarrow it down.
And it's that reason that thesedrugs become ineffective. So,
they start off giving thesedrugs and say, This is the first
one you give. So, this covers awhole broad spectrum. Well, all

(22:02):
they're doing is making thesickness more resistant to the
next layer of drug they're gonnagive you. And they run you from
drug to drug to drug.
So, think about, I know youhaven't gone to a doctor in a
long time, but when you did, Imean, I would have a cabinet
full of just medicines that I'dgotten from doctors that I would
take for four or five days and Ifelt better. And then I'd say,
okay, well I'm gonna keep thisin here. And if I get sick

(22:23):
again, I'll take it again. So,part of it was my fault because
I didn't take it as prescribed.But the other one is that they
really want to tear down ourimmune system to get us to rely
on medicines.
There's not one pharmaceuticaldrug out there or product out
there that gives you an alkalineenvironment in your body. Now,
we know that diseases cannotlive in alkaline states, oxygen

(22:46):
states, or hydrogen peroxidestates in the body. So to me,
those are the things that youneed to have in your body to
fight diseases because whensomething's truly antiseptic, it
cannot morph and become immuneto it. That's why a lot of
drugs, you never hear them say adrug is antiseptic. You say
antibiotic.
So, it's supposed to destroy thefunction of that disease or

(23:07):
sickness, not actually eradicateit.

Seth Holehouse (23:11):
So, gosh, there's so many layers to this.
So a good point too, because Iremember, you know, growing up
or even a young adult thatthat's the case. Right? You you
you get your medicine. You takewhatever amount of it.
You have some extra. You go,save it. Right? So you end up
with this medicine cabinet justfull of all these old half used

(23:34):
medicines. And and, you know,now our medicine cabinet is
like, it's got spirulina, andall kinds of, you know, you
know, that kind of health stuff,and it's it's more like a mad
scientist laboratory than like apharmacy.
Right? But one question for youthough, with this guy that says
he has shingles. He sends you apicture, and you got that blood

(23:54):
poisoning. I mean, you don'thave your MD, you know, you're
not medically indoctrinated, youknow, through the medical
indoctrination schooling system.So how is it that you know this?
You know, you're just you'rethis guy that, you know, you
came with a constructionbackground. Now you're smart as
a whip. I can tell, you know,through talking to you, but you
you didn't go through, you know,eight years of medical school

(24:14):
and residency to be able todiagnose this. So how is it
you're you're seeing thisinformation, you're seeing it,
and you're giving an accurate, Iguess, assessment, whereas even
this guy's doctor was getting itwrong, which would have led to
his death.

Jeff Adam (24:30):
You know, I think a lot of it's just exposure. You
know, I don't think I'm highlyintelligent. I just think I'm I
tell everybody I'm a parrot.That I remember things and I
repeat it. You know?
So, God blessed me with a verygood memory. So, I've really
learned through memorization,not by assessment of a lot of
things. It was just exposurethat I've, Oh, I've seen this.

(24:53):
I've seen that. I do have aninquisitive mind.
So, a lot of times I have toknow things. And that's part of
my ADHD is if I got something onmy mind, I can't go to sleep.
I've got to find an answer toit. And that's that rabbit hole
that you go down. Some people doit with political stuff.
I do it with medical stuff. It'slike, Oh, well, why is this? Why

(25:14):
is that? And when somebody says,Oh, well, I took this and I
didn't see a great result. Okay,well, let's figure out why it
is.
I have a doctor here in Chicagothat she's a feminine hygiene
specialist and she'd call me allthe time and go, Hey Jeff, will
this work on this? I'm like,Well, it depends. Is it
hormonal? If it's hormonal, it'snot a bacteria, fungus or virus,
no. But if it's a bacteria,fungus or virus that's causing

(25:35):
the hormonal imbalance, yes.
So you have to go layers deepinto stuff. And I guess that's
probably why, again, with a goodmemory, I just remember stuff
and conversations come up andsurrounded by people like
yourself. I mean, I learned alot from Richardson, Judy
Mykovich, Sherri Tenpenny, I'vebeen blessed to really have them

(25:57):
in my life and I can pick up thephone and call them. And I do it
quite a bit. So, when I havepeople that say, Well, I'm
having a problem with this and Idon't have an answer.
I can pick up the phone and Ican call one of those highly
educated people and get theright answers from them. So,
I've got the benefit of havingthose people behind me that can
give me the confidence to say,Well, it's this or that, it's

(26:18):
that, even though I'm not adoctor. But if you have kids,
you're pretty much a doctor. Imean, your kid comes in and
they've got a cold or they comefrom school and go, Mom, dad, I
have an earache. You're like,Okay, you're getting a cold.
Need to So really through life,we gain this knowledge and
information. And I think thatwe're all pretty much doctors on
the inside. It just depends onwhat our passions are. Some

(26:41):
people have it for building,some people have it for sports.
I believe I just have it for myproducts and the stuff we do.
And I really believe that Godput me here as a voice to help
educate. And

Seth Holehouse (26:53):
I don't have

Jeff Adam (26:53):
all the answers. I don't know everything, but I
know enough when I don't knowsomething to tell people. I
don't know, and that's okay.

Seth Holehouse (27:01):
Yeah. And that's a big part of it too, is I think
that there's also, there's ait's actually well known too,
but there's a God complex thatdevelops. Not not just with
doctors, but e e I was listeningto an audiobook recently, about
kind of like military typestuff, and they're talking about
even pilots, that helicopterpilots develop a God complex.
Because they're the ones thatthey're the ones that are in

(27:22):
control, and everyone has totrust their decision making, and
and so that that, you know,there is a guy that was kind of
funny in this audiobook, talkingabout how he found this pilot
that had been killed, right, byby some mercenary. And he was
like, oh, what's the problem?
Is that the pilot was probablytalking too much. Right? Because
he's like, yeah, these guys,they had this god complex. And
think the same thing with withdoctors that they you have this
power. You feel like that youhad this power to to heal.

(27:44):
Right? Almost like like Christ.Right? Right? You know, it's
like, oh, well, I'm like a I'm amodern day Christ.
Right? I can heal people. Andbut what a lot of they don't
they don't realize is that allthey're doing is just rehashing
the pharmaceutical industry runmedical schools, which teach
them how to prescribe theirproducts. Like, it's, you know,

(28:05):
it's like if you walk into asuit shop, say you walk into, I
don't know, like, Jose Bank orsomething like that, right, to
get a suit, they're not gonnatell you, actually, you know
what? The suit maker, there'sthere's a small little Italian
suit maker down in East Village.
He's gonna make a way bettersuit for you. No. Like, they're
gonna say, we're gonna sell youthe absolute best suit. Don't go
anywhere else. Well, that's whatthe doctors have been trained

(28:26):
with big pharma is that they'renot gonna recommend, you know
what, Seth?
I think you should go down toTijuana, Mexico. There's a
treatment resort there that'sbeen doing leotriol for sixty
years, and they're not gonna saythat to you. They're gonna say,
here's the protocol. Here's whatyou gotta do. Here's what we're
trained to give you, and theydon't think outside of it.
And a lot of them aren'tmalicious. Like, they think

(28:47):
they're doing they they theyactually believe they're doing
good and helping people. In manycases, they are, but they also
don't realize that they're justout there as rep reps for big
pharma.

Jeff Adam (28:59):
Yeah, big pharma has done a really good job of
manipulating. When you look atthe natural health market or
industry, you you go to bigpharma, they've got their baby
doctors, they've theirinternalists, their brain
doctor, eye doctor, all thisother stuff. When you talk about
natural medicine, they lumpeverybody altogether. And they
put people that have naturalhealth products in with the

(29:22):
people that believe in blowinghorns and going under crystals
and these copper pyramids and tomake us all seem like we're all
really, you know, BS crazy, soto speak. And they've done a
real good job of fostering that.
Now, their overconfidencehappened during the pandemic
where they all, promoted thisnarrative for personal gain,

(29:45):
believe. And also out of fear ofretribution. That's become a
really big thing in our societyright now is the condemnation of
people. Doctors, I believe aregood people and I believe they
do want to help people, butthey're only as good as the
information that's put intothem. Well, when you have a
governing body that says, we'rethe ones who decide what that is

(30:07):
and you're going to take what wetell you and this is going to be
how it is, or you're not goingto have this career.
You're not going to be able todo this field of passion.
Sometimes they have to outweighthe balancing go, okay, well,
I'll put up with a little bit ofcorruptive in nature to be able
to help people. Twenty yearsdown the later or down the road,
they're nothing, resembling whatthey originally thought it was

(30:29):
going to be.

Seth Holehouse (30:30):
And so getting back into antibiotics, what was
there before modern dayantibiotics? If you're a
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(31:13):
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Jeff Adam (31:53):
Well, there was less of these diseases for one.
That's true. I believe a lot ofthese things happen because of
not only the big pharma, butalso the chemical companies,
which are tied into big pharma.The nutrition we used to get,
people used to grow their ownfood from local sources.
Everybody bought meat from thesame town and you didn't have a

(32:14):
lot of these diseases runningrampant.
And when somebody would get acold or something like that, it
would go away. And then youwould run into like your measles
or your mumps that were a littlebit Again, they weren't deadly.
They were just incredibly justuncomfortable and they spread
fast. So, we started creatingvaccines for them. And at the
same time, we're depleting theminerals in our soil.

(32:35):
We're not allowing our soil torest remineralize. We're not
planting alternative crops toremineralize the soil in the
name of profits. So, it's been,I believe, a whole organized
teardown of natural medicine.And that's why people are so
sick these days. And that's why,as much as you would think I'm
against pharmaceutical drugs,I'm really not.

(32:57):
I'm against big pharma. I'magainst the lies and
manipulations. But if it's takenme sixty years to get this sick,
there's nothing all naturalthat's going to knock it out.
Sometimes you need somethingthat's more powerful that's
going to help you. My problem isright away going to the drugs is
the problem.
Let's some of the natural stuff.Let's start educating doctors on

(33:17):
food. They don't require doctorsto take nutrition courses. I
found that appalling, especiallywhen there's a lot of diseases
that are a lack of diet, lack ofiron in your system, a lack of
vitamin C, scurvy. I mean, youeat oranges, lemons, or limes,
it's going away.

(33:37):
But if a doctor prescribes thatto you, he loses his license for
prescribing an unauthorizedmedicine.

Seth Holehouse (33:44):
It's it's crazy. It's crazy, isn't it? I mean,
yeah. Before you mentionedscurvy, I was thinking scurvy,
right, and how so many of ourillnesses are actually just
deficiencies. You know, even,you know, John Richardson, you
know, talking to him, he goes,look.
You know, he looks at cancer asbeing a deficiency of of of
amygdalin. Right? And that'sthat's his kind of what he talks

(34:05):
about. He's like, no. He's like,you know, cancer is a deficiency
issue.
It's not like your bodiesrandomly get sick, and it's
like, oh, I just randomlydeveloped a tumor. It's like,
well, like, what what shouldyour body have inside of it, to
to make sure that tumor doesn'tget there? Now obviously, you
know, the amount of toxins inour world now versus a hundred
years ago are probably, I don'tknow, 10,000,000 times what we

(34:27):
had, you know, a hundred yearsago. So you you walk outside,
you've got chemtrailing, you'vegot, you know, poison in your
water. That's actually why, youknow, why do we drink mostly out
of copper?
Perhaps. Right? This is this ishow we consume most of our we've
got a Berkey, So we're on wellwater. Alright. Now, so we we
take our well water, and wealways filter it through our
Berkey.
So and that's or we'll do wehave a a distiller, or we have

(34:50):
various ways of of gettingwater. But mainly, we're just
drinking out of our Berkey, butwe put it into copper, and drink
it. And it's funny becauseactually, I saw a post. We've
got chickens, and we've gotgoats. Right?
We've got a little kind of hobbyhomestead. And I'm on all these
different groups and someFacebook groups on these things.
I saw someone shared something,in their Facebook. This this

(35:10):
chicken Facebook group, and theysaid, hey. Just submit or maybe
it's a homesteading group.
They say, some advice for you.If you drop a copper pipe into
or a piece of copper into yourwater vessel where you're
feeding your animals, you're notgonna have any issue with
bacteria and and and mold, andit keeps your water really
clean. And the funny thing wasis that I saw I saw someone post

(35:32):
on there, and this woman hadreplied and said, no. Look.
Like, there's so many studiesthat this can cause poison.
This can poison your animals.And the next post down was this
guy who said, oh, wait till shefinds out that all of her pipes
in her house that run her waterare copper pipes. And it's like,
oh, yeah. It's a good point.That all of our water now now
the modern houses, though,they're they're, you know, using

(35:53):
plastics and, you know, youknow, these kinds of things.
But, you know, most of if I lookat my house, for instance,
almost all of our pipes are incopper. So there's obviously
something that we're missinghere. And and that's why I'm
getting into silver. Right? Sobut how is it that, you know,
whether it's copper or silverbecause I remember doing doing
research on silver and think andkind of learning more about

(36:13):
silver.
And, you know, people say, like,okay. If you look into, say, the
pioneer days or, like, howpeople keep their water clean,
what was really common is thatthey would drop, like, so this
is this is a now this is toobig. This is a 10 ounce, you
know, kind of little bar ofsilver, but they might have a
one ounce silver coin that areroughly an ounce, and they would
drop it into their water bucket,and that would keep their water

(36:34):
pure. It's like, no one'stelling us this stuff now.

Jeff Adam (36:37):
Yeah. Matter of fact, the first recorded use of silver
was 3,000 BC. The Phoeniciansused to line their clay vessels
with silver so the waterwouldn't stagnate. I mean, so
when you go back, biblically,silver is purity, you know, and
it's kind of neat how a lot ofthis stuff ties in. But yeah,
before refrigeration and even inthe 1800s, scientists would

(37:00):
actually sterilize our petridish by dropping silver coins in
them.
That way they could make theoutcomes of their studies are
not compromised by some kind ofbacteria, fungus or virus
getting into it. And copper,much like silver, it has an
ionic charge to it. It is amineral and a metal. It's not
just a metal. That's why it'snot a toxic metal is because
it's a mineral.

(37:21):
There's a benefit to it. Youneed to have it in your body.
And that's why they startedoriginally putting copper pipes
in hospitals was theantimicrobial effect from the
water going through there. Andthat woman was just ignorant. I
hear a lot about coppertoxicity.
I don't even believe it Ibelieve that they'll test people
and they'll say, Well, too high.You have too high a copper. A
lot of times it's the body notabsorbing the copper. It's not

(37:43):
that they're too high. That'ssomething the inflammation of
body stopping them fromabsorbing it.
But years farmers used to putsilver in their chicken's water
and putting the copper in there.And you don't have to go get
some raw copper. You canactually go down to the Home
Depot, grab a little copperelbow or piece of copper pipe
and sand it off a little bit,wash it off and drop it in
there. And the way that copperworks with its ionic and

(38:06):
magnetic charge, it'll actuallykill bacteria, that's
antimicrobial. So you won't getthat growing in the water.

Seth Holehouse (38:12):
And so I wanna again kind of hone in on silver
because pre, you know,penicillin and Rockefeller and
all this, and this actually inour one of our earlier
interviews that we did, I didn'tknow this, and it was really
shocking. He told me this, butactually that before the
Rockefeller medicine kind oftook over, that silver was the

(38:33):
most commonly used antibioticaround the world. I mean, is
that correct?

Jeff Adam (38:38):
Yeah, was. They use it for everything. I mean, it's
got a long history of beingused. And that's one of the
things that big pharma has beentrying to get out of medicine is
this silver because can'treplicate it. They can't really
compete with it.
So, before 1965, there was 5,000references to silver in the
journals of medicine. Nowthere's less than a hundred. So,

(38:59):
they keep trying to get it outof there because what the
micronic silver does, it takesalmost 5,000 of their products
to do. So, again, they'relooking in the name of profits
versus actually curing andhealing people. But we go back
to the plague was 1348 to 1350,almost three hundred million
people died around the world ofthe plague.

(39:20):
And this is what really got meduring the pandemic we just had.
People are trying to compare itto the plague. Three hundred
million people died during theplague. And they're going, Well,
this is worse than the plague.No, it doesn't even hold a
droplet to what happened duringthe plague.
But less than a quarter of 1%were wealthy. So, they found

(39:42):
that they ate off of realsilverware. So, the scraping of
the silver on the teeth actuallygot in their system and they
didn't end up getting theplague. And And doctors would
prescribe people to walk aroundwith silver spoons in their
mouth. And that's where thatterm, where you're born with a
silver spoon in your mouth,which means does not apply to
you, you're not going to getsick.
That's where that came from.

Seth Holehouse (40:01):
Incredible. And so, I also I know that in modern
hospitals even, a lot of theirinstruments are silver lined, a
lot of the different things.Like, silver is very common in
in in, you know, modernmedicine. But how is it that
like well, look at this forinstance. Okay.
This this chunk of silver. Thisis, point nine nine nine, you

(40:22):
know, fine silver. So it's it's,you know, the triple nines, you
know, purity of silver. It'slike, we're used to silver being
a metal. It's like, okay.
This is a metal, and then youmight look at, say, you know,
some vitamins, you you know, abottle of vitamins you can
shake. It's a powder. It's easyto say, okay. You shake that up
and you eat it, and the powdergoes inside your body, this is
just metal. Right?
So but you mentioned that thatsilver is not just a metal, but

(40:44):
it's a mineral. So Yeah. Like,you would never think
necessarily this is somethingyou could ingest. Right? In
fact, I'm not gonna try to eatit.
You know what I mean? Or, youknow, maybe I could lick it. But
how how is it that silver hasthese properties? How is it that
this chunk of silver will keep ahuge rain barrel free of of the
the bad bacteria? Or how is it Imean, can silver be used to

(41:08):
treat bacterial infections?
Like, if a kid has a somethingthat normally would be you go to
the doctor and you get anantibiotic for, can silver be
used in in its place? And anddoes silver have the longer term
negative aspects of a lot of ourmodern medicines where it builds
up and ends up creatingproblems?

Jeff Adam (41:25):
Well, does not have the negative aspects of those
because you need silver in yourbody to survive. Much like
copper, like zinc, you cannotlive without that in your body.
Even arsenate, which is anatural form of arsenic, you
have to have in your body. Youknow, when you look at cyanide
versus cyanide, cyanide'snatural, you actually have to

(41:48):
have that in your body. Youcannot live without it.
And this is where big pharmascreate a

Seth Holehouse (41:51):
lot of

Jeff Adam (41:51):
confusion. John Richardson talks a lot about the
cyanide from Africa. It'sactually cyanide, which is an
all form of Every seeds have it.A little strawberry seed has it
because those things are growingunderground is where they start
with plants where there'sfunguses. So, you need something
to kill the fungus so it doesn'tdestroy the plant itself.

(42:12):
So, every seed has it. And thoseare natural things that we have
in the body. Now, the silver issomething that you have to have
in your body and it's sopowerful that it works at the
subatomic level. Very, verylittle bit of it can actually do
a lot. And that's where they gotinto a colloid.
If you've heard of colloidalsilver, that's a particulate,

(42:32):
small little particles. You gotinto ion, which is a subatomic
particle or an ion, which meansmissing electrons. You can
barely see them. You almost needa nuclear microscope to see
those. And then you got into thenanosilvers, which the
nanoparticles, smaller, evenmolecules with a bigger blade

(42:54):
surface on them for conductiveenergy.
Then we created the micronicsilver, which is a subatomic
particle with a string of highatomic mass. So, it's a lot
different. But one of thesethings have been effective
throughout history. It's justbeen the evolution of it's been
a lot slower than with bigpharma because you haven't
really needed to evolve with it.It works just as well as it did

(43:16):
then.
John's dad, Doctor. Richardson,he's the one who invented the
Silverdeen cream they used inhospitals for burns in the late
60s. And they still use thattoday. Silver's got a long
holding power of the things it'sdone and it's very well known
among certain communities. Thething that the pandemic we went
through did is it exposed allthe lies about drugs and stuff

(43:39):
that's supposed to work.
And it's really getting peoplegoing back to the natural
things. And now, the bigconversation, of being well, big
pharma are all natural. Theconversation now is, is it going
to be something that's going toassimilate well in the body? Is
it going to be an ion electronor something like that that's

(44:02):
going to work in your immunesystem that is going to be the
powerful antidote for you goingforward? And I think you're
going to see a lot more peoplegetting involved in the natural
health movement because theyjust don't trust big pharma.
They don't trust the lies thatthey've been told and the
manipulations. And I thinkthat's by design.

Seth Holehouse (44:22):
It is. I I would agree. It's also it's exciting
because there's this massiveparallel economy that's building
of people that are seeing youraverage person. I I mean,
actually, I've looked into thisbefore. Like, if you look at
distrust in big pharma or trustin big pharma, it went from
being, say, 70% of the people Idon't know the exact numbers,
but it's, 70% of the people havethey trust big pharma.

(44:46):
Whereas now it's gosh, last timeI heard it was maybe 20%, only
20%. So they're they've lost thetrust of the people. And I'm
sure that you're seeing it too,that you're seeing that there's
this massive wave of people thatare not just rushing off to
their doctor and say, okay. Whatare the natural ways of treating
this? And I think one of the bigones though is antibiotics.

(45:06):
And this is obviously we'relooking okay. There's natural
ways of lowering blood pressure.There's natural ways of getting
rid of flu. There's all kinds ofthese natural ways. But having a
natural antibiotic is is reallykey.
Now we've used colloidal silverfor quite some time, and that's
what we're you know, I wasalways familiar with that. It's
like, once I startedunderstanding that, okay, silver

(45:26):
has a medical application, itwas most oftentimes you'd find
colloidal silver. Right? Now,but what is so what is micronic
silver versus colloidal silver?Is it just a a new marketing
name for it, or is thereactually something that's
different in in it at a very ona structural level?

Jeff Adam (45:46):
Yeah. The the micronic silver is different
total structure when you look atit under a microscope. It's
truly unique in its formationand what it does. Typically,
when you look at colloidalsilver, ionic silver, nano
silver, they're basically justtwo electrodes in water. And
then there's alternatingcurrents.
So depending on the arc,colloidal here is here, ionic is
a little bit deeper, nano is alittle bit deeper. So the

(46:07):
smaller the deeper the arc, thesmaller the molecule. They're
made the same. Ours is a threestep process. So, it's not just
calling it a different name.
And there's been a lot of peoplethat have tried that. They've
tried different names for thesame product. Ours is actually
different. So, it's a three stepprocess. We start by
restructuring the water,changing the hydrogen bond

(46:27):
angles.
So, instead of having eightoxygen molecules, it has like 28
oxygen molecules, for example.So, it's getting more oxygen in
there. And then we restructurethe ions, getting it to create
ozone in itself with the mix.So, ours is a total different
product. It's still a silverbased product, but what it did
is it created stability.

(46:48):
So, for people that know aboutsilver, they know that the one
drawback on silver is that it'sunstable. It reacts with light,
heat, temperature, barometricpressure. It's like if you look
at it funny, it's a differentproduct. So, what we've been
able to do is we've been able tostabilize it. So, we've got a
consistent product.
By doing that, what we didn'trealize is that all silvers and

(47:12):
their formin mechanism beforewere destroyed by stomach acid.
So, they were sublingual onlyabsorbed under the tongue. If
you look at the bottle, say,absorb under the tongue,
sublingual application. And whenyou swallow it, it hits the
stomach acid creating silverchloride destroying the silver.
Now the colloidal ionic and nanosilver only stays suspended in
the body for six to eightminutes.

(47:34):
So if you see like a silversole, call it SOL is the active
suspension, means the particlesare suspended. That only stays
for about six to eight minutes.That those silvers have about
six to eight minutes to startentering a cell. And once they
enter a cell, you're not worriedabout the suspension, they're
gonna get in. So, but colloidalionic and nano silver were
really effective at disruptingthe chemical lung of the single

(47:55):
cell organism in a type ofsuffocation, hitting it with
ionic charge, killing it.
And then that silver would betrapped inside that dead
bacteria, fungus or virusencapsulated cell and get washed
out through the lymphatic andwaste system. What sets the
micronic silver aside is thatit's not only a sublingual
delivery, it's not destroyed bystomach acid. So, it's a
sublingual and an ingesteddelivery system. The micronic

(48:16):
silver stays active in the bodyfor about eight to ten hours
instead of six to eight minutes.And it works outside the cell.
Again, being a micron is asubatomic particle with a very
high atomic mass. When you haveyour bacteria, fungus, or virus,
you have the micronic silver,when it comes in contact with
it, instead of being absorbedinto the cell, it actually pulls
the electron through the cell ofthe bacteria, fungus or virus,

(48:37):
killing it on contact, makingthe micronic silver really like
an antiseptic so nothing canbecome immune to it. The
micronic silver takes in theelectron, which it cannot hang
onto because a micron is still aform of an ion, which means
missing electrons. It can't hangonto them. It ejects that
electron, which is like abattery into the nearest thing,
which is a blood cell giving youenergy.

(48:58):
Now, instead of getting washedout through the lymphatic lace
system like the colloidal, theionic nano, ours goes after the
next bacteria, fungus, or virusworking with the immune system
in a rapid fire effect for eightto ten hours instead of six to
eight minutes.

Seth Holehouse (49:10):
I see. Okay. I'll pull up your website here
and have you walk through it. Somychronicsilver.comor.net.
Right?
Yeah.

Jeff Adam (49:22):
Both work. Yeah.

Seth Holehouse (49:22):
Okay. And I've got I've got a bunch of these,
you know, because I, you know, II like to use the products or at
least get the products that, youknow, of the people that I have
on. And so, like, walk usthrough so I've got here I'll
I'll make this a little bigger.So I've got this is just like
the silver dietary supplement.But this one, actually, this is
my favorite.
This stuff is this sonic let'ssee if I can get the camera to

(49:45):
focus on it. There you go.

Jeff Adam (49:49):
There we go.

Seth Holehouse (49:49):
So this right here, this nasal spray, this
sonic mist nasal spray, I can soI I've I broke my nose when I
was younger, and I I think itactually collapsed, so, like, my
nasal passage. So and and also,I have a smaller nose. Right?
Like, I don't have like, my dadhas a the whole house nose,
which is much larger. As a kid,was like, I don't want a big
nose, but now I'm like, wish Ihad a bigger nose so I could I

(50:11):
could breathe easier through mynasal passage because it's so
much healthier than breathingthrough the mouth.
I can tell you this stuffthough, it's like yeah. It's
almost like you see the thethose those, the patients in the
movies, and they're like dead ordying, and someone hits them
with that shot of adrenaline.They're like, like, this that's
what this is like. It's like youspray it up in there, just like,
woah, just wakes you up, andeverything is going, and it's

(50:34):
like opens my entire nasalpassage up. How is that
possible?
Like what's achieving that?

Jeff Adam (50:43):
So, well, it's got the micronic silver in it. So we
have our micronic silver nasalspray, and then we have the
Sonic Mist nasal spray. Themicronic nasal spray right there
is a % micronic silver. It'sbasically the same formulation
as a dietary supplement. Andthat's your cold, your flu, your
allergy kind of thing.
The sonic mist is made forpeople that have had long time

(51:04):
chronic issues. It'll work oncold

Seth Holehouse (51:07):
and

Jeff Adam (51:07):
flu, but it's amazing in its function. It's silver,
ozone, hemp, and CBD from aDelta-eight. It's non
cyclogenic. It's not supposed tomake you feel high. And this is
where people get confused withCBD.
There's Delta-eight's andDelta-nine's. The Delta nine is
for the body. The Delta eightI'm sorry, the Delta nine is for
the mind. The Delta eight is forthe body. The Delta 9s make you

(51:29):
not care about being in pain.
So when you're taking thesegummies, it's just making you
not care about being in pain.It's not doing anything for the
pain or inflammation. TheDelta-eight works on the
nicotine receptors in everysingle cell, which is in control
of pain and inflammation in thebody. So, with the Sonic Mist
nasal spray, we put it in withthe silver and ozone. So, it is
the only product in the worldthat has silver ozone hemp in

(51:51):
CBD.
And when you spray it in yournose, it's also methylated, so
it heats up a bit, but it'llactually reduce ocular pressure
behind the eyes. It'll get thegestation tubes and drainage
canals down the ears. You'llfeel it going to your throat. It
is amazing. You know, you getabout a twenty second little
burn or heat.
Oh, You feel it. Boy, does itopen you up.

Seth Holehouse (52:12):
It does. Yeah. You'll have to I'm not sure what
tissue box is, but, it does.It's like you sprayed up in
there and it's just like it'sit's like, the the
defibrillator. Just like clear.

Jeff Adam (52:25):
It's like,

Seth Holehouse (52:25):
it's Yeah.

Jeff Adam (52:27):
Maybe we should maybe that's what we should have
called it. The nosedefibrillator. Yeah. We we had a
boxer that he had his nosebroken eight times. Apparently
wasn't very good.
He couldn't breathe out of hisnose for twenty five years. And
I mean, and his face looksswollen and he did the sonic
mist in there. And over the nextthree hours, he went through a

(52:50):
whole roll of toilet paperblowing his nose. And you could
actually see the inflammation inhis face shrink up. And the next
morning he called and he's like,They said I would never be able
to breathe out of my nose again.
He's like, I'll breathe in. Idon't ever remember breathing
this well. So it is extremelypowerful. Because of the hemp

(53:10):
and CBD oils in there, it's notdrying out right away. So like
with most nasal sprays, evenwith our micronic nasal spray,
it's water based to evaporate.
You know, where the sonic miststays active in there and the
oil is keeping it lining thenasal passages, stopping the
inflammation, reducing it. So,it lasts a long, long time.

Seth Holehouse (53:31):
And so, now what about just this other micronic
silver? That's a straight upmicronic silver. It says, you
know, twenty seven PPM, micronicsilver with ozone stabilization.
Is this something, like, if if,you know, say, if my my kid is
you know, little girl's comingdown with a cold or something,

(53:54):
is this, like, kind of, like,the first thing you go to, or is
how how is this different thanthe other things?

Jeff Adam (54:00):
Well, that's our flagship product. So, that's the
micronic silver at its core thatwe created. And that is your
first line of defense for theimmune system. It helps build
your immune system, boost it,get it to work the way it
should. And I mean, literally ifyou got food poisoning, you
could take two teaspoons of thatand four minutes of diarrhea
throwing up stomach pain stops.

(54:21):
So it works on the salmonella,the coli, but it really works
with the white blood cells inyour system. So, a lot of
everything we do is the micronicsilver dietary supplement. It
can be sprayed in the eyes forlike conjunctivitis. It's really
good on that. But that was thecore product that we made and
that's when we realized beingstabilized, we could do much,

(54:41):
much more with it than youraverage colloidal silver or
ionic or nano silver.
And that would be the one thatpretty much you take for
everything. You just take acapful or a teaspoon once a day.
Unlike if you were using anothercolloidal silver and you got
sick, they would say to take ateaspoon every hour to be
effective. Well, with ours, it'sonce a day. So that little

(55:02):
bottle for one person on averageis a forty eight day supply.
And if you have a toothache, ifyou take that same amount, you
swish it around your mouth forthirty seconds, generally the
toothache will be gone. It'llhelp neutralize the infection.
Then you hold that under yourtongue for thirty seconds and
swallow it is how you usuallytake it. Interesting.

Seth Holehouse (55:18):
And so is this similar to the nasal spray?

Jeff Adam (55:23):
It's actually the same formula.

Seth Holehouse (55:25):
Oh, okay.

Jeff Adam (55:25):
Yeah. We put the money into a really good nasal
sprayer. So that's got a reallystrong spray to it. So when you
spray it, it'll have a reallystrong plume. You probably have
to get in the pickup tube.
Oh, So three or four sprays andthen it'll

Seth Holehouse (55:39):
And you can spray it back in your throat
too, right?

Jeff Adam (55:42):
Sore throat start at the top of the back of the
throat. So it'll take about fouror five pumps to get it in the
pickup tube, but it's a strongspray. So it'll get the top of
the back of the throat. It hasno taste or no burn to it. It's
easy to use a muscle.
And it's got that clear cap. Soonce you spray it, you could
actually spray it upside down inthat cap and you can use it for
drops in the ears also.Interesting. So what we do is we

(56:03):
recommend people after they getthat sprayer to hang onto it and
use the dietary supplement as arefill. So it'll be less
expensive for them.

Seth Holehouse (56:10):
Oh, so you can just keep filling it up with
this one. Yep. Okay. Okay. Thisis helpful because actually I
just got I just ordered allthese within the past couple of
weeks.

Jeff Adam (56:19):
Yeah. And unlike other companies, so we have our
dietary supplement and then wehave a topical healing spray.
Most companies just put asprayer on their dietary bottle
and say, Here's our topical. Weactually make our topical twice
as strong. So it's fifty partsper million where the other
one's 27 because you're going tohave an amount of evaporation
being on the outside of theskin.
So anything with skin issues, werecommend taking the dietary

(56:40):
internal and using thattopically. So you sandwich any
bacteria, fungus, or virus. Soit can't retreat in your system.
Now you're truly getting rid ofit instead of suppressing it.

Seth Holehouse (56:49):
What about animals? Like like my dogs I've
I've got two dogs that arebrother and sister, and the
brother's always picking on thesister. So I I go she's always
got little cuts and stuff ashe's chewing on her ears. And,
so is this something you need tospray? Also, we have chickens
and goats.
So can this be sprayed on on,like, if I see rashes or
infections, same thing?

Jeff Adam (57:09):
Oh, yeah. Yeah. I use it. So I have a Rottweiler.
She's about one hundred andtwenty five pounds.
She's a big But she gets likethe goop in her eyes. Yep. So we
spray that in her eyes and whenwe forget to spray it, we know
because then she'll have thatjunk in her eyes. When we use
it, it doesn't happen. And we'veused it, we put in our chicken's
water, a little bit of thesilver in there.

(57:30):
So the eggs tend to not havesalmonella on them because that
kills it in the chickens. Also,we've got a couple of ducks and
ducks, they get a froth or foamover their eyes, which they can
go blind from. And actually,when we spray that topical
healing spray, it just clears itright up because that's all
bacterial.

Seth Holehouse (57:49):
And what about for burns? Same thing?

Jeff Adam (57:52):
It'll take the heat of a burn away almost
immediately. So I don't know ifyou had a chance. I think I
mentioned before that at onepoint I had burned my hand from
oil at 400 degrees. I don't knowif I ever told you this story.
No.
So, the burn came around thefingers, down around the thumb,
and they said they would have toamputate my two fingers. Oh,

(58:12):
this

Seth Holehouse (58:12):
is a serious burn.

Jeff Adam (58:14):
Yeah. It was from oil at 400 degrees. It boiled it
down to the muscle.

Seth Holehouse (58:18):
Right after asked him, how'd you do that?

Jeff Adam (58:21):
Well, I had an elderly gentleman that his wife
had Parkinson's and the micronicsilver would help with the
tremors and the body pain. So Ijust happened to drop some off
by his apartment. It's storyapartment building. He was on
the Third Floor. So, I come inand I drop it off and he was
cooking and he had a bottle ofolive oil too close to the
stove.
So, when I got there, we wentinto the living room, we're

(58:41):
talking, suddenly hear pow. Iturn around, the whole wall is
glowing orange, running thekitchen, flames are shooting out
of the bottle. The cabinets arealready starting on fire. I'm
like, Let's get you and yourwife out of it. She was a
mobile.
So the kitchen wall was thebedroom wall. So she's on the
other side of the wall. And Isaid, Let's get you out of
there. And then I realized thewhole back of the apartment is
carpeted and there's no windows.If that bottle explodes, they're

(59:05):
not getting out of there.
So I ran back into the kitchen,he had a towel sitting there, I
put the water on his sink, stuckthe towel there, stuck it off. I
ran across the kitchen, grabbedthe bottle that was on fire and
took it over and dropped it inthe sink. In the meantime, it
spilled all over my hand andcaught my hand on fire. And
right away, so I tossed it inthe sink and I grabbed that

(59:25):
towel with the water on it,wrapped my hand to put the fire
out. And then I proceeded to putthe cabinets out and everything.
And I was actually dropping themicronic silver off to him for
his wife. Right away I was like,Do you have like a one ounce zip
oc bag or something? And he'slike, Yeah, yeah. He sits over
here in the cabinet, so I gotit. And I took that whole bottle
I was going give him.

(59:45):
I'm like, I'm sorry, but I needthis. And I dumped it in the bag
and I stuck my hand in there andthen taped it around my I had no
pain. The minute my hand went inthere, no heat, no pain,
nothing. So this was 2015. So Itaped it around my hand and of
course the sprinklers just wentoff about that time.
And then the fire department gotthere and the fire department
came up and assessed everythingand they're looking at my hand,

(01:00:07):
they're going, We're calling anambulance for you. I don't need
an ambulance. I'm fine. They'relike, Oh no, you're going to
lose those two fingers. I cantell you that.
They're like, I haven't seen aburn that bad in a long time.
They said, You got to get to thehospital right now. And I'm
like, No, really, I'm fine. Iwas like, Well, then you're in
shock. And I was like, I'm notin shock.
I took the tape off my wrist, Ipulled my hand out and in like

(01:00:27):
five seconds, feels like myhands on fire again. And I stuck
it right back in, no pain. So Igot done doing what's there. I
drove myself the hospital andthey get me in right away and
the doctors, tastes, Well, let'sget your hand out of that water.
I said, Well, it's not water.
I explained to him what it isand he just kind of shrugged it
off. And he gets out hisscissors and now my hand's

(01:00:50):
swollen. He's like, We're goingto cut all that dead skin off. I
pulled my hand off. I was like,Are you And I don't swear that
often.
I'm like, Are you effing nuts? Isays, You're not cutting that
open. He says, Well, yeah. Hesays, You can get infection. I
was like, I'm in the place withthe most bacteria and virus
anywhere.
Hospitals are known for that. Asmany people get sick by going to

(01:01:11):
the hospital as ever actuallyget sick before they're at the
hospital. I'm like, No, you'renot cutting that open. I was
like, So just wrap it up andI'll go home. And for about
twenty minutes, he's like, No,no, we really have to do that.
You don't understand. We mightbe able to save your fingers.
And I'm like, know what? I'm notworried about that right now. I
said, But you're not cutting.
That's all antiseptic in there.It's all sealed off. It does not

(01:01:34):
make a bit of sense for you todrain that. Instead, it'll drain
it on its own naturally whenit's ready. So they use
Silverdeen cream on my hand andthey wrapped it up and I went
home.
Then every day I would soak itin the silver and then you have
a little jar called the Lia Zonethere that I have for you. Now

(01:01:55):
that product is our only productthat doesn't have silver. That
product is literally a % ozonetrapped in an Liaropa oil. So
what I would do is I would takethe dietary supplement
internally and then soak my handin the silver. And then I would
put the Lia Zone on the bandage.
Now, ozone is the second mostpotent purifier known to man. It

(01:02:16):
turns carbons to water andoxygen. It destroys everything
it touches. So I put that on thebandage so that way when I wrap
my hand up, that when I pulledthe bandage off the next day,
that I'm not pulling new skingrowth off. What I didn't
realize is that takes the heatout of the burn immediately and
the pain.
So, I mean, I've gotten sunburnsand had people that had sunburns

(01:02:38):
that put it on and it'll be coolto the touch where the sunburn
is immediately. So it takes theheat right out of it and stop it
from burning. Incredible. And soit was those three things and it
was actually a % healed intwenty three days. No pain, no
scarring the whole time.
I didn't even feel the Vicodinprescription because I literally
had no pain.

Seth Holehouse (01:02:58):
Incredible. I tell you, I'm still feeling
this, like this nasal spray. Imean, it's like, it just it's
it's I guess if you're used tonot breathing much through your
nose and you finally do, you youit's it's magical. You're like,
just walk around sniffingthings, and and I can still feel
it though, actually. I can feelsome drainage in the back of my
The

Jeff Adam (01:03:20):
first fall day, when you get that crisp cold first
fall day,

Seth Holehouse (01:03:23):
you

Jeff Adam (01:03:23):
go outside and there's no pollutants in the
air, everything is heavy and yougo, wow.

Seth Holehouse (01:03:28):
It's the air after a thunderstorm.

Jeff Adam (01:03:31):
Well, yeah. And that's that's the ozone being
created by the lightningstrikes. Yeah. That's so oxygen
is o two, ozone is o three. Sothis noxious gas that they tell
you about ozone, oh, it's this,it's that.
It's a single oxygen moleculedifferent than than oxygen.

Seth Holehouse (01:03:47):
Incredible. So let me go back to your website
here, pull this up as we'rewrapping up. My
chronicsilver.netor.com. I'llput that link in the
description. So the things thatwe've talked about here, we have
the dietary supplement righthere, which is a bottle that I
showed you.
The oleozone, here's the topicalhealing. Now, is it the, Silva

(01:04:11):
Zone?

Jeff Adam (01:04:12):
The Silva Zone is our oleozone product and the
Micronic Silver dietarysupplement mixed together.

Seth Holehouse (01:04:18):
I see. Okay. So it's ozone and silver.

Jeff Adam (01:04:21):
Right. That's an anti aging cream. It hydrates the
skin, but it also reducesarthritis and joint pain very
quickly.

Seth Holehouse (01:04:26):
I see. Okay. And we've got topical spray. We've
got the the nasal spray. There'sa Neuromist spray.
And this is the let's see. Thenthe Sonic Mist. Yep. This is the
one that I've that I used justnow in the show, the Sonic Mist.
And so I know that we've got apromo code set up for people.
I think it's Seth, s e t h,they'll get a discount on their

(01:04:47):
order. Aside from that, I mean,this this is I always love
talking to you because I andwhat's also it's actually fun
now because I've got thesethings, and so I'm like like,
okay. This one works for thisway, and and so it's nice to
actually have these thingsphysically. And so yeah. So my
chronicsober.comor.net, promocode Seth.
And I guess as we're any lastfinal thoughts as we're wrapping

(01:05:10):
up?

Jeff Adam (01:05:10):
Well, that are interested in trying several of
our products, we have what wecall our silver bullet kit. And
that's the five flagshipproducts that we have. That's
the dietary supplement, thetopical healing, the Aleozone,
the micronic nasal spray and theSilva Zone. And that's pretty
much everything you need in yourmedicine cabinet. And our

(01:05:31):
products generally have about aten year shelf life.
So, if you don't use them rightaway, they don't go bad. They
don't need to be refrigerated.So, unlike a lot of the
pharmaceutical products, theyhave a two week or three week
lifespan and you can't feed theanimals after midnight or they
turn into something else.There's just all these little
things on them. So if you wantto try several of the products,

(01:05:53):
that's our best deal.
It saves you about $40 or $50It's like getting the SilvaZone
product for free pretty much.But that will allow you to try
it on a bunch of differentthings and see how it works. We
have an 89% customer reorderrate of our product of at least
three times. So, I mean, ourproducts are highly, highly

(01:06:14):
effective. Our customers get tobe like friends to us.
New customers are always greatbecause we get the testimonies
and people much like yourresponse with the SonicMist and
people like, Oh my God, thisstuff saved my pet. This stuff,
I had gained green on my toes.We did the micronic silver, we
did the Leo zone on it. Now thedoctor's saying, I don't even
need to have surgery that theythink it can heal. So those are

(01:06:37):
so uplifting for us.
Those stories are just keep usso motivated to keep going with
this stuff. Because we do havebattles that we face with
certain organizations that don'twant us out there. And of
course, competitors out therethat they don't have a product
as good as ours that are alwaystrying to undermine us and stuff
like that. But we go forwardwith the grace of God. And if

(01:07:00):
there's something our productdoes, we will tell you it
doesn't do it.
But we will also make arecommendation of like the
apricot seeds or Cardio Miracleor some of these other products
that you know that are out therethat work with people. So, we're
finding this natural healthcommunities coming together now,
where there's a lot of us thathave gotten to know each other,

(01:07:22):
are working together with eachother, that recommend each
other's products because ourproducts synergize with them
because they're all natural. Wedon't have to worry about
contradiction because thischemical will respond with this
chemical and it'll be poisonousto you. So there's really good
stuff and a good movement. Andas I said before, in Revelation,
at the end of times, as it getsdarker and darker, his saints

(01:07:44):
are going to shine like brightbeacons and speak with a
thunderous voice.
So sir, you're the thunderousvoice that's allowing us to
speak. So we are so grateful foryou. We do pray over and bless
our products. So it is the powerof His word that works in it.
And we would love to hear fromyou.
My personal cell phone number'son the website, and I get
customers that call me all dayand are shocked when I answer
the phone. So, you know, feelfree to call me. I mean, we're

(01:08:06):
here to help.

Seth Holehouse (01:08:07):
I really appreciate that. In a day when
you're lucky to get a companythat actually has customer
service rep that will talk toyou instead of some AI bot on
their website. And you realize,like, oh, wait. You're probably
in Indonesia or, The Philippinesin a call center. To have a
person here in America thatpicks up a phone and answers it
is, is special.
So, Jeff, thank you for doing.Thank you for giving us your

(01:08:29):
time today. It's always apleasure speaking with you.

Jeff Adam (01:08:32):
Well, thank you, Seth, and I look forward to our
next conversation. And gosh, whoknows where that'll go?

Seth Holehouse (01:08:37):
Who knows? Who knows? We'll take Yeah.

Jeff Adam (01:08:41):
That's what people like. We're not always just
about promoting our products.

Seth Holehouse (01:08:43):
Oh, exactly. Exactly.

Jeff Adam (01:08:44):
That we're having general conversation as friends,
and we're allowing people to bea fly on the wall when we do
that.

Seth Holehouse (01:08:50):
Exactly. Well, take care, and god bless. Thank
you.

Jeff Adam (01:08:54):
Thank you, and god bless you.

Seth Holehouse (01:08:56):
Do you keep hearing more cases of your
friends and family getting alife threatening diagnosis of
cancer, or perhaps it's evenhappened to you? Well, the
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(01:09:17):
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(01:10:00):
weight loss, wrinkles, acne,dementia, cognitive function,
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