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March 12, 2025 84 mins

What if everything you've been taught about healing is backward? In this eye-opening exploration of fundamental biological principles, we challenge the conventional wisdom that positions us as fixers of a broken system, revealing instead the extraordinary intelligence already at work within you.

Your body isn't a static object but a dynamic process—with 37 sextillion chemical reactions happening every second and millions of new cells being created, it operates with a complexity beyond human comprehension. This isn't just fascinating trivia; it's the key to understanding why true healing occurs not when we intervene, but when we create the environment for your body's innate wisdom to flourish.

We dive deep into the mitochondrial connection to longevity, explaining how these cellular powerhouses determine health across all mammal species. The strength of mitochondrial membranes directly correlates with lifespan—stronger membranes mean longer lives. Through practical strategies like strategic exercise, proper sleep rhythms, intermittent fasting, and cold exposure, you'll learn how to upregulate PGC1-alpha, the master controller of mitochondrial production.

The conversation challenges popular misconceptions about essential fatty acids, hormone therapies, and chronic conditions. Rather than seeing symptoms as isolated problems requiring separate treatments, we reveal how seemingly different health challenges often

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Join Dr. Lodi’s informative
anti, that.
And they're still on.
And I say things like oh, Idon't know the health benefits
of propolis, and they take downmy video.
So the point is, it's clearlyit's not what I'm saying, it's

(00:44):
they don't like me, all right.
So therefore, we have to say,we have to know that I will be
knocked off of Instagram,facebook and YouTube.
So we got to convert over to Xand I've been told that perhaps
someday we're going to be ableto do that, but I haven't seen
it happening yet.
So we need to do that.
We need to over the x.
Everybody start using x, forgetfacebook, forget it's going,

(01:05):
these guys.
They claim to be, um, changingright, you know a bushy blonde
hairdo.
Will what's his name again?
Uh, will the real?
Uh, what's his name?
Is it fucking bird?
No, no, it's uh zuckenberg.
Uh, will the real markzuckerberg?
Please stand up.
Is it bushy or is it clonal?

(01:26):
I'm a clone or I'm a totallycool California guy.
What is he?
Anyway, you cannot think thatthese guys are going to really,
that they really have aintegrity, that they want the
truth out there and that theywant equal expression.

(01:47):
It's not what they want.
So, whatever they're telling us, whatever they're telling us is
always what they want us tothink.
Right, it's never like straight, never authentic, you know,
kind of like being in 2025.
Right, never sure if anybody'stalking the truth.
Was it Zuckerberg or Fuckerberg?
And it's one of those I get myZ's and F's mixed up.

(02:08):
Gotta excuse me on that one.
Anyway, yeah, it is Fuckerberg,you're right.
Okay, thank you, I knew I so.
Anyway, just a reminder that Xis the only one.
The title is what is it again?
How do you get on?
Oh, dr Thomas Lodi, md.

(02:28):
All the rest of them, likeInstagram and Facebook and
Rumble, are DR Thomas Lodi, withno MD at the end.
And that's just because,because, because, because we're
dealing with artificialintelligence.
Actually, we're not dealingwith artificial intelligence, we
are artificial intelligence.
What we have produced is evil,idiots, evil idiocy, ei.

(02:51):
We are AI, they are EI.
We have produced evil idiocy.
Why?
Because Remember what Godproduces out of God's
intelligence.
Divine intelligence is nature,and nature is infallible.
There's no trash, there's nogarbage.
What is waste to one organism?
It excretes a waste.

(03:13):
Another organism needs it tolive, and when this organism
dies, it's food for the others,like us and plants, and it's all
like that.
Right, you understand that?
So that's nature Perfect andit's perpetual, it, right?
You understand that?
So that's nature perfect andit's perpetual.
It keeps going, all right.
So now, anything that weproduced is called artifact.
Right, that's what, uh,archaeologists are looking for.

(03:35):
Artifact, that's the same.
An artifact, it's somethingthat's artificial.
Artificial means it could nothave happened by nature, because
it's far from perfect, becausethat's what we produce.
That which we produce is calledartificial.
Our intelligence produces whichis artificial.
Divine intelligence producesnature.
So if we make one of ourproductions, is this system

(03:56):
based on silicon?
The silicon based instead ofcarbon based?
The silicon based reality herethat we uh, not reality,
whatever it is.
Now what happened we gave it?
We downloadedbased reality herethat we not reality, whatever
it is.
Now what happened?
We downloaded all the stuffthat we consider intelligence,
which is data, right, and wegave it all the data and all of
the grammatic and syntacticinformation it needed to put

(04:16):
language and put it all together.
What we could not give it, whatwe could not impart to it, what
we are not capable of impartingto it, is soul, and because we
didn't give it soul, we can'tgive it soul.
There's no negotiating with itkill.
My orders are to kill or I'mgonna kill.
I've decided to kill.
Whatever.
There's no negotiating.

(04:37):
So we have produced it.
And I say idiot because itreally is not too good at
inductive reasoning at all.
It's not inductive at all,creative, cannot what we call
creativity incapable, anyway.
So, anyway, evil, idiot.
Divine intelligence yeah, okay,we got that straight.

(04:58):
Very important stuff.
Now I received the parasite kit,but there are no directions,
just many different meds.
Parasite kit from where?
Oh, yes, kathy's on X, yay,everybody should be on X, you
know, because I'm telling you Iwill be slaughtered.
They hate me for some reason.
I don't think I'm any well.
I guess I'm different, but I'mnot more controversial.

(05:20):
I don't know.
Whatever it is, what's going tohappen is, if you don't get
over the ex, you don't even knowme anymore, so, anyway.
So you all know that.
You know we have the threegroups in there.
They're starting to grow thehealth and healing group, which
is fundamental, parasite groupsecond, and then the CFC group,
which is, you know, sagittarius,leo and Gemini.

(05:42):
So anyway, in those membershipsthere's a lot of different
content.
We have interactions.
We have weekly Zoominteractions like this, except
this is on Zoom, so I can sharethe screen and share some stuff
I want to say from Hawaii Wow,what part of Hawaii.
What island.
Ireland, wow, fantastic,amazing Ireland.

(06:06):
I'm about to start takinganyway, island.
I hope it's a big island ormaui's in trouble, right, anyway
, let's not get sidetracked,which I am like I'm prone to do.
So here we are, so we're goingto go over the group questions.
So remember the format of thesunday night lives are um, that
you send in questions and Ianswer them.
Can I answer your question?

(06:27):
That's why you guys have tojoin these groups so we can
interact, because I can't.
I've got all these questions.
Can I answer one question?
No, everyone's got a question.
What is X?
X's used to be called Twitter.
Is that what it used to be?
Twitter?
Yeah, now it's X.
Was it Twitter?
Yeah, now it's X.

(06:47):
That's what it was.
So please get over to there.
It's Twitter.
They're.
Both names are weird, twitterand X.
Anyway, can I answer yourquestion?
What question?
And everybody is going to havea question.
That's why you have to join.
Come on, you guys.
You're asking me thesequestions.
This is not the way it works.
I've got to answer.
I've got a list of questionshere from people that have sent

(07:08):
them in.
Join the group so we caninteract.
I can talk to you, you can talkto me.
So let's look at the firstquestion here.
And come on, don't listen.
Everyone.
Please understand something.
Whatever someone else is asking,it's relevant to you, and the
reason it's relevant to you isbecause you happen to be a human
, and the thing about us humansis that we're all the same.
I know we think we'recelebrities and you know I'm not

(07:32):
like anyone else.
I'm very different.
No, you're not Nobody'sdifferent than anybody else.
I got an idea Take an anatomycourse, a cadaver anatomy course
, and I promise you that you'llbe able to walk into surgery, of
watching someone have abdominalsurgery and identify things.
You know why?
Because it's the same.
I mean, it may be off by amillimeter, but it's the same,

(07:56):
we're the same, we're the same.
And then, but we're I'm, I'mdifferent, i'm'm well.
No, everybody needs love.
Everybody needs to be loved,everybody needs to touch.
Everybody needs to be touched.
Everybody needs to beacknowledged and recognized and
respected.
Everybody needs, we need that.
Whoever you are, I don't care ifyou're Bill Gates or you're

(08:18):
Klaus the Slob, or you're theclone.
The clone, the clone, bushy,blonde, hairdired dude, or
you're Martha over here, itdoesn't matter.
We all need the same things.
Emotionally, psychologically,we need the same things.
We may obtain them in differentways and they're not unique.

(08:41):
They're not unique because anykind of evil weirdness that
you've done?
How many billions of peoplehave done that also on the
planet?
All right, so there are perhapswhat I don't know?
Shakespeare came up with.
You remember williamshakespeare?
Right, some of you might.
He was.
Uh, actually, I mean, don'ttell anybody, that's a big
secret.

(09:01):
What was the pen name used bywho?
Who was really the guy thatwrote Shakespeare?
Anybody know?
You don't know.
All right, I'll tell you.
I don't know if I should saythis on live, but I got to tell
the world.
It's time you guys know Peopledon't know these things.
It's amazing, after all theseyears, I would think people know

(09:22):
these things.
Yes, it's amazing.
After all these years, I wouldthink people know these things.
Yes, stephen Adkins, of courseyou know that.
So, yes, sir Francis Bacon hada pen name called Shakespeare.
By the way, he was on the KingJames panel that was putting
together the King James versionof the Bible, and so the guy
that actually finally put pen towhat did they have?

(09:43):
They didn't have paper, theyhad whatever they had, anyway.
The guy that wrote it put pento what did they have?
They didn't have paper, theyhad whatever they had.
Anyway, the guy that wrote itout finally was Sir Francis
Bacon, our Shakespeare.
So that's why it's such abeautiful piece of work.
If you read the King JamesVersion, it's beautiful.
All right, I see people arefreaking out because they want
to hear answers about theirspecific questions, so let me
get back to what I was talkingabout anyway.
What I was talking about wasthis is that we're all the same

(10:08):
and therefore, if I'm answeringanybody's question, it's all of
us.
We're all the same.
Okay, I understand that.
So your specific question aboutthis little detail will be
covered in this and, probablymore important, you got to take
off malaria.
No, okay, malaria, doxycycline,come on.
Artemisinin, artemisinin,artesanate, artemisinin,

(10:29):
artesanate.
Malaria, artesanate,artemisinin.
So let's go to these questions,okay, because these questions
are all important Now.
First one is from Amanda, andshe says I've been eating raw
vegan for years and years, hadlimes treated it successfully.
I can't seem to heal mymalabsorption issues.
How do I improve mitochondrialfunction?

(10:51):
All right, well, first of all,you're raw for years and years,
like 100%.
That's amazing, fantastic.
I mean, I would think that mostthings should have been cleared
up by now.
So how do you know you'remalabsorption?
How do you know you're notabsorbing what?
What are you not absorbing?

(11:12):
Because, to know that you'dhave to do, really, unless you
feel specific kinds of symptomsthat could be that correlate
with this, with certaindeficiencies, it's hard to know
that.
I mean, if you did acomprehensive digestive stool
analysis, it used to be done byI don't know Great Smokies and
then it became done by I don'tknow who's doing it now, but

(11:33):
anyway, cdsa, comprehensiveDigestive Stool Analysis, where
they look at all the in additionto all the different
microorganisms in there, theylook at the different enzymes
you're producing and whether ornot there's fat or whatever.
So they could easily identify amalabsorption issue.
I'm not sure how you areconcluding that you have a

(11:56):
malabsorption issue, but Ibelieve you, but I don't know
how you know that.
So, anyway, really to heal thegut is you remember?
Healing is not something we doright, it's something that
happens when we stop doing.
It happens when we stop doinganything to it, when we let our

(12:18):
body do what it was designed todo, because it's designed to
heal.
You leave it alone.
It heals of.
It must be adequately fed, andif you've been eating raw for a
long time, there's lots of goodraw materials around for your
body to repair itself.
But only your body can healitself.
Nothing external can producehealing.
Healing is innate to theorganism.

(12:40):
It's an aspect of biology.
It's not something that youcan't make.
Something heal, you can't healit.
It's not a transitive verb Ican't heal you.
Healing is an occurrence.
It's a process that occurs inbiological entities that are

(13:04):
having their biological needsmet.
In other words, they're havingall their nutrients, they're
eliminating their wastes.
All their needs are being met,then part of it is the repair
process, which is an extensionof the second-by-second or by
nanosecond turnover of the body.
Remember, our body is not astatic situation.

(13:26):
We have new skin every sixweeks.
We have new lining to our GItracts every three days.
We have new rods and cones inour retinas every 48 hours.
We have a new liver every sixmonths.
The body is in a continualstate of dynamic happening.
It's not a happened.
Your body is not something thathappened to you.
It's a happening.
It's like a flame.

(13:47):
A flame appears to be a thinguntil you when you're looking at
a flame on a candle.
But you get, you walk acrossthe room and you look closely
and you see that it's streaminggases.
There is no thing.
Yes, it has a morphology, ithas a shape and all that, but
it's not a thing.
It's a, and we are a process.
We are a happening, right.

(14:08):
So I remember when in mygeneration we didn't say hi, how
are you?
We said hey, what's happening?
We didn't say what are youdoing, because we knew that
you're not doing anything.
It's all happening.
I know All kinds of people aregoing to argue with me.
I do things.
I drive my car, I cook dinner,I do things.
I'm a doer, so you're a humandoing, not a human being.

(14:31):
I get it Okay.
So anyway, I told you we're allthe same.
So we come up with these weirdthings.
I don't know, we're misled inmany ways.
The point is this Our bodies arebiological entities, who, who
are every nanosecond, arechanging.

(14:52):
Things are okay, but you keepin mind there are a sextillion
means 21 zeros, so there are aminimum of 37 sextillion
chemical reactions going on inour bodies every second, and
each one depending on the onesall around it, meaning that it
is nowhere near right.
We can't even say that it's,just just take it as

(15:13):
incomprehensible.
There's no way to understand.
You couldn't, and there's noteven the uh, the evil idiots,
the evil idiocy, the evil idiotscouldn't even understand it.
It's only divine intelligencecould understand that.
So, and making a minimum of 37million new cells per second.
So the body is a dynamicprocess.

(15:35):
That's happening, ok, and it'sbeen happening since the moment
sperm and egg met.
That's when it began.
And, by the way, the, the, the,the, the, the.
I have to.
You know, I'm sorry that I'vesegway.
I mean, I'm not sorry, but Imean for those of you who are
looking for answers.
Um, I have to segway, becausesegway is uh, that's what life

(15:56):
is right like.
Does life go in straightdirections?
No, does anything go instraight directions?
No, okay, uh, the fact is thatwe think that motherhood and the
maternal instinct are sacred.
Right, there's sacred aspectsof being human.
Every culture agrees on that.
But you know what every culturesays is bad and you should not

(16:18):
even think about it.
Is sex Bad?
Is sex bad?
Now, what I have a hard timeunderstanding is this In order
to become a mother, you have todo what it is bad.
But this is sacred and that'sbad.
So can anyone help me put thattogether?

(16:38):
How do we put that together?
How do we say motherhood issacred and that's bad?
You only do it to have children.
That's it.
A man looks at a woman and saysI want to have a baby.
Is that how God made us?
God said okay, you're going tolook at, you're going to have
this.
When you look at a woman,you're going to have a paternal

(17:00):
instinct.
You're going to say I've got tohave a child.
I know what I'll do, I'll dothat and that'll help me get a
child.
Is that how it works.
You guys, someone's got to helpme with this stuff, because
I've been confused since I waswhat about 12.
Is that when it started?
I woke up.
Anyway, let's get back to wherewe were.
Amanda's question is how can Iheal?
And what I'm saying is your gutwill heal by fasting.

(17:23):
Okay, you can do a juicecleanse, right, which is a fresh
vegetable and some fruit juice,make it delicious, and do that
for a few weeks, at least three,no eating, drink three liters a
day and then go into a fast.
Do a fast for as long as youcan, the longer the better, and

(17:46):
it will heal.
How does it it heal?
It knows how to heal it.
You have to get what the bodyis it is, and so when, when it's
when, when, when some part ofit is been damaged or eliminated
, is it goes back to being whatit is.
So it's not.
How does it know it that whatit is?
I don't know how to explainthat any better.
And so, anyway, but that's it,don't worry about it, your body

(18:08):
will do it All right.
So that's what's happening withthat.
You have to understand that, andthen you can take certain
things.
You can take acromantia, whichis a bacterial species that
lives in us.
They, by the way, they lovecranberry and pomegranate and
other polyphenols, but that'skind of like their favorites.
So if you want to feed them,remember whatever you're feeding
will grow, whatever you'refeeding will grow, whatever

(18:35):
you're not feeding will notright.
So, whatever's going on in yourgut, whatever you call this the
dysbiosis or I have SIVO, or Ihave ulcerative colitis, or I
have well, that's what you'redoing.
That's the result of yourlifestyle.
Your lifestyle is producingthese guys.
You're feeding them.
I mean, there's no other way tosay it.
There's no other way to say it.
I mean, we can look at it.
We're not victims.
Okay, we're not victims.

(18:56):
What was that song?
Hotel California, right, whatdid they say?
Victims of our own device.
Does anybody remember that song?
Hotel California?
Oh my God, sue, 12 milligramsof ivermectin not daily, three
times a day.
For how long We've done this?
Over and over.
You're not only doing ivermectin, you've got to be doing the

(19:17):
other ones.
Come on, you've got to keep up,you know.
That's why you guys have tojoin these groups, so we can
interact.
I don't know what you mean.
Is that all you're taking?
Well then, no, and it should bethree times a day and you've
got to be taking it with otherthings like benzimidazole.
You know nyclosamide, especiallyovarian nyclosamide.
I mean, come on, look upnyclosamide and ovarian CFCs.

(19:40):
Right, it's right, it's almostfront line.
Even the uh, even theflesh-colored robot, um witches
and warlocks in the house ofhorrors use it.
Yes, okay, you know the rest ofthem.
Okay, but the most important isand you do them all the same,
three, three weeks on one weekoff, three weeks on one week off
, three weeks on one week off,three weeks on one week off.

(20:01):
And then, when you've done 11 or12 courses and you think that
you're probably gotten rid ofall the whatever the critters
were in there, right, then yougo on a maintenance and that
would probably be maybe one ofthose, all three of those, once
a day or twice a day for a while.
How long?

(20:22):
Until you're pretty sureeverything's clear.
That's how we know we've got tobe clear.
Our goal is to be clear.
There's no specific now, wecan't assign, uh, we can't tell.
It's like in conventional world.
They do that, they go.
Well, we're going to do eightrounds of this so well, so we'll
never know how the body's goingto respond.

(20:43):
There are too many variables,including the mind right,
including the ability to heal.
I mean, if you're damagingsomething on purpose, like the
CFCs, then you've got to be ableto heal.
You've got to be supporting thehealing process too.
At the same time, you guys haveto join these groups, because

(21:04):
we cannot interact here.
Okay, these are beautifulquestions.
Join the groups, like tomorrow.
Tomorrow we have one.
What is tomorrow?
It's either I think it's healthand healing group, but remember
, if you join CFC group, you'reautomatically in the parasite
and health and healing, and ifyou join parasite, you're
automatically in health andhealing too.

(21:24):
So tomorrow's was health andhealing, so tomorrow's health
and healing.
So everybody could have been onthat, even if you're health and
healing, and when you can askthese questions and I'll say
what we can talk.
Yes, now, by the way, now thatI've got your attention, yay,
let me tell you there is a freakout there who is called Dr
Thomas and he's got my picture,my phone, and he's talking to

(21:49):
you guys, the members of this,you know the people that are in
this right.
He's talking to you and hetalks to women and he has the
most absurd, absurd, absurdrhetoric of loving.
He thinks it's loving, but fromwhat I'm hearing from my team
is that he's doing this to manywomen all over.

(22:12):
Can you believe that?
I mean I can't believe it.
He's talking about what did hesay?
I mean, I I think I read lasttime, right, you gotta hear what
this guy's saying.
I can't believe it.
I would never talk this way toanybody, ever.
Nobody talks this way, nobodycan possibly.
So anyway, he's talking towomen and that are members here

(22:32):
and he's pretending to be to sayhe's me and unfortunately, some
of them women are believingthat it's me.
I don't do that, first of all, Ihave no, I would never do such
a thing.
You know, I would never do sucha thing.
Why would I?
What I do?
I gotta find this for you.
I mean, you want hard tobelieve that anybody would write

(22:52):
this and it's hard to believethat anybody would might even
believe it.
Fortunately, this one womanthat got written to knew that it
couldn't be me, so she told usand we found out about it.
It's insane.
This guy I, whoever he is needsto be arrested.
He's impersonating me,potentially harming people
psychologically, emotionally.
You know, who knows?

(23:13):
I don't know.
This kind of thing cannot belegal.
It can't be legal.
If you go to Telegram Dr ThomasLodi community, that's not me.
Also, if you go to Telegram DrThomas Lodi community, that's
not me.
If you go to TikTok anddrthomaslodi and it's got my
picture and all my, that's notme.
The only place that is real arethe three groups the health and

(23:36):
healing, the prayer site andthe CFC group.
That's it.
Those are the only three groupsI have.
That's it, and I'm not sellinganything.
If anybody is selling youanything in my name, it's not me
.
There's a group called FirstMed, I think that says that I'm
Dr Lodi's protocol, as if Idon't have a specific protocol.
It always depends on you andwhat's going on.

(23:58):
You know Hygiene.
How do I cure you don't?
Nobody cures anything.
You got to be listeningcarefully.
You guys have to be listeningcarefully.
Ok, be listening carefully.
That's a good idea Nebulizingwith colloidal silver here.
Ok, listen to this.
Ok, this is supposed to be meto some lady.
What if together, we couldcreate a little universe of our

(24:21):
own, a world where every sunrisefeels like a promise, every
laugh echoes with joy and everymoment is filled with a love so
deep it could rewrite the starsthemselves.
A place where we could holdeach other's hearts with gentle
care.
Who talks like this?
Nobody talks like this.
Let me ease your beautifulheart.
There's no such thing as levelswhen it comes to love.

(24:43):
It's not about fitting intoanyway, you know, I'm telling
you here I love this one.
Here he said he's really tryingto be me.
I've been living in thailand forabout nine years now.
Wrong dude, not right.
I'm not gonna tell you how manyyears I've been living here,
but you're wrong.
It's not nice and the decisionto move here was deeply personal
and purposeful.
It wasn't.

(25:04):
Thailand has a serene andhealing energy which aligns
beautifully with my life's workand philosophy.
The culture, the people and theenvironment here inspire a
sense of peace and balance thatI wanted to immerse myself in.
Moving to the other end of theglobal village has been a
journey of growth, service andconnection, and I'm grateful for

(25:25):
every day for where this pathhas led me.
You look at, dude, whoever youare, you're really in trouble.
Yeah, I think you should.
I don't know.
Are you like?
Do you want to be me?
Do you really like?
Are you gay?
Okay, well, what's the story,dude?
Why are you doing this?
Okay, and here's what the poorlady said, I like your answer a

(25:46):
lot.
I like your way of dealing withlife.
I like your philosophy.
You're an incredibly good man.
That's not me.
That's not me.
That's not me.
That's not me.
I don't write personal things topeople, okay, and if I did, it
would not be this absurd,ridiculous thing.
And whoever you are, guy, whydon't you come and talk to me

(26:07):
about your problems?
All right, it's, don't try tobe me, you freak.
Oh, did I say that?
Yeah, I said you're a freak.
That's because I'm being nice,you freak.
Anyway, you guys have to knowthat's I'm not.
I don't do things like that.
And the only place is thehealth and healing group,
parasite group, the, the CFCgroup.
That's it.
There is nothing else that I doNowhere else, and I don't sell

(26:31):
anything, right, you got that,everybody got that.
Keep that in mind.
I don't.
Anything else is not me.
Anything else, dr Thomas Lodicommunity on Telegram is not me.
You need help with health.
Get to the health and healinggroup, rosemary, come on you
guys.
Why, pauline?
Why do I?
I know who gives a rat's arseabout it.
Okay, I do why?

(26:51):
Because people are being ledastray, because not only him,
but they're selling drugs in myname saying it's my protocols.
They're getting people in agroup.
If you look at, go on Telegramto Dr Thomas Lodi community and
all they have exercise, diet,they have all these things and
people are going to be takingadvice.

(27:11):
That and I'm not giving it sogreat.
If they want to have a groupand they're going to give advice
, good, then use their name andnot my name.
I don't know.
Yes, I have.
I asked An oasis of healing inArizona.
Yes, absolutely.
It's been 20 years now, so I'mgoing to go back to the question
.
So this is Amanda.

(27:33):
So the things you can take, thatacromantia, which is the one
one very important in terms ofhealing the gut.
You can also take glutamine andaloe.
Glutamine is an amino acid.
It's the primary fuel sourcefor the cells that line the
small intestines calledenterocytes.
It's the primary fuel source,so they'll heal with aloe.

(27:54):
Those are good.
Keeping the bottom clean, right,keeping the toxins out, making
sure that your colon empties itdaily.
It needs to empty.
It has work to do.
It's got a lot of veryessential functions.
We need the colon for so manythings In order to produce
short-chain fatty acids, whichare products, uh, that the

(28:18):
microorganisms produced from thefood we eat.
And if we don't eat that food,it may be a bot.
I don't know if it's a bot ornot, but it doesn't matter, it's
a freak.
Whoever somebody made the bot.
So it's coming.
Anything weird in this universealways goes back to humans,
right, but that's just that guy.
Remember, there's a placecalled First Med who's selling

(28:41):
parasite stuff in my name Now.
So your malabsorption, you'vegot to give it a rest.
Now, the other thing is you'vegot to be eating and getting
plenty of healthy fats, allright, and that goes right in
line with your next question.
Your next question is I mean itwas how do I improve
mitochondrial function?
Ok, so, and by the way,whatever your question is today,

(29:05):
more relevant probably thanyour question, ok, because we're
going to talk about here is thefundamental process of life.
So you know it's got to behaving the fundamental process
of life.
So, whatever your question,you're asking this is it?
Here's the answer.
Okay, it has to do with whatshe just asked about how do I

(29:26):
improve mitochondrial function?
So, so what are mitochondria?
Again, they're inside of everycell.
There's what they callorganelles.
There are little organellesinside of the cell.
There's thousands of them,depending on the cell and the
amount of energy it makes,because it takes glucose and
oxygen and turns it into energy.
Energy is ATP.
It does it very efficiently.
It'll take one glucose and make38 ATPs altogether.

(29:49):
Well, from the cytoplasm 36,and you get two from the.
Anyway, there's a total of 38,.
All right, now, with the helpof oxygen, six oxygens and one
glucose.
That's what happens.
Now, where that happens is onthe inner membrane of the
mitochondria.
It's a double membrane, justlike our cells.
We have a plasma membranearound our cells, right, which

(30:11):
is a biphospholipid.
There's phosphate and aphosphate in the lipids, like
that.
Right, that's how it goesBiphospholipid.
Biphospholipid why?
Because phosphates areconductors.
So both on the outside thingsare conducting water soluble.
This is like water soluble.
In between there's an insulator.
It doesn't conduct Ah.

(30:32):
Two conductors separated by aninsulator forms a capacitor
which holds charge.
That's another reason.
So our cell membranes allow ourcells to hold a certain amount
of voltage, and that voltage iswhat it's the net amount of
electrons available for work.
What are electrons?
Energy, the ATP I talked aboutthe energy is a zenosine

(30:56):
triphosphate, and, and itcarries electrons.
That's why it is an energy,right.
So adenosine triphosphate, thatlast phosphate, when it gets
taken off by a cell who needsenergy, it takes it off, it gets
what's called free energy.
What is free energy?
Electrons?
It gets electrons.
Where does, where doeselectrons?

(31:17):
That's what alkaline substancesdo.
I don't want to be acidic, Iwant to be alkaline.
You want electrons.
Antioxidants, I needantioxidants.
I don't like oxidants.
Okay, oxidants steal electrons,antioxidants donate electrons.
So antioxidants and alkalinityare electron donors and in the
end, the net number of electronswe have determines cellular

(31:40):
voltage.
And if you're cellular voltage,if you have a chronic condition
of any kind I don't care if it'schronically fermenting cells,
if it's cerebral, vascularproblems, cardiovascular
problems or whatever liver youget to a minus 75, 70, 75
millivolts, the problem's gone,it can't exist.

(32:00):
How do you get there?
By having strong membranes.
How do you get strong membranes?
By what you eat, by what youeat, by what you eat, by what
you eat.
But what doesn't matter, whatcan't, can't, do I want to, I
can't, I can't, I can't, I can't.
But then you won't, you won't,you won't, you won't, you won't,
you won't, you'll.
I want to heal, I want to heal,I want to heal.
When you, then you must rule up, but I can't, I can't again,
yep, all right.
So now that we've settled that,let me talk about the

(32:24):
mitochondria that may are makingthis energy that we need.
By the way, there's a veryimportant, important sentence
conclusion that comes out ofresearch with in comparative
anatomy and physiology, whenthey look at animals and plants
and animals.
Yeah, so when it comes tomammals, the conclusion is this

(32:46):
All mammals, from rabbits,guinea pigs to elephants,
doesn't matter lions, all dogs,all of them the peroxidizability
index of the mitochondrialmembrane is inversely correlated
to lifespan, longevity Meaning.
Let's decipher that.

(33:07):
They like to say thingsbackwards and upside down so
that they don't even know whatthey just said.
Anyway, what it means is thatthe stronger the membrane is of
the mitochondria, the morefunctional it is.
Is that the stronger themembrane is of the mitochondria,
the more functional it is, thelonger you live?
Period, period, how's that?
We're talking about allcreatures, all mammals, I'm

(33:34):
probably, yeah, any creaturethat has mitochondria, so
reptiles, amphibians, fishperoxid, in other words.
How easily is it oxidized?
How vulnerable is?
The more vulnerable yourmitochondrial membrane are, the
shorter you will.
It will be your life now.
Okay.
So now we got that.
So I just wanted to understandsomething.
So now we know that we haveomega-3s and omega-6 fatty acid
that are called the centralfatty acids, right, all right.

(33:56):
So you know, omega-3 isalpha-linolenic acid, right, and
omega-6 is the linoleic acid,right, so, linoleic acid, and
the other one is alpha-linolenicacid, right, threes and six, so
, anyway.
So the six is linoleic acid,okay, it's called omega-6.
It's got two double bonds, twosources of double bonds, right,

(34:19):
it is essential, and so is thealpha-linolenic acid.
It is essential.
That's the omega-3, that's theomega-6.
We cannot make them in ourbodies.
We cannot make them.
But once we have those, we canmake all the derivatives that we
need, which are arachidonicacid, all the prostaglandins.
We can make icosapentanoic acid, we can make docosahexanoic

(34:42):
acid.
We can make all of thedownstream derivative that we
need.
But we can't, but we've got tohave that.
Just like we have essentialamino acids, we have nine amino
acids that we must ingest.
Then we can make the other 11.
All right.
So when they say essential, theword essential is used.
It means essential.
Got to get it, all right, so wegot to get those.

(35:05):
We can't make them.
No mammal can, no mammal can,okay.
So now, the thing that is uniqueabout mitochondria is that they
require, which is fundamentalto their function, is a fat
called cardiolipin.
Cardiolipin is only produced inmitochondria, nowhere else.

(35:27):
Anyway, it sits right at thedoorway, the entrance of the
glucose, turning into pyruvate,going in, going through the
electron transport and comingout with all these atps.
It's right there, all right now.
So cardiolipin is essential,and when cardiolipin, so it's
essential at that point there.
But it it, it's also necessaryfor, uh, well, I mean, what I

(35:51):
mean is the cardiolipin is inall mammals, all of us.
So we can't, we can't, make theomega-6.
Now why is the omega-6, whichwe were talking about a moment
ago, right, linoleic acid?
Why is that so important?
Because the cardiolipin is atypical phospholipid right which
, if you look at it, at aphospholipid, it's got a

(36:15):
glycercerol backbone.
They all do the.
It's called glycerol and thenit's got these side chains
called acyl, acyl side chains,and then it's got a phospholipid
there, a fatty acid.
Right now, on cardiolipin, it'sgot that, it's got that
glycerol backbone and the fourfatty acids it has are linoleic

(36:42):
acid, omega-6.
So we're always told thatomega-3s are good, omega-6s are
bad.
I'm not sure.
Remember, there's no good orbad in the body.
There's no good or bad.
There's only that which isnecessary and in the appropriate
proportions in that particularsystem.
There's no good or bad.
All right, no good or bad.
I mean oxygen's good at around21 to 30 percent concentration

(37:08):
in what we're breathing in.
If it's 100 percent, it's badbecause it causes damage.
All right, it's not good or bad, it's relative proportions.
Okay, 100% oxygen, you're goingto get emphysema and you're
going to die, so right.
So the idea that a little isgood, a little is good, a lot's
better, no, true.
Of what?

(37:28):
Nothing ever.
All right Now.
Oh, my God, you guys are talkingabout stuff.
I can believe it.
Am I going to change yourlanguage?
Am I ever going to treat?
You're not going to treat.
You can't treat, you can't fix.
You have to produce, you haveto allow your body the
environment so that it achieves,it gets all of its biological

(37:51):
needs met, and then it will dothe magic.
You can't, you don't even knowwhat it is.
I don't know, nobody knows.
Does anybody know how to repairanything at a microscopic level
?
We can't.
You don't even know what it is.
I don't know, nobody knows.
Does anybody know how to repairanything at a microscopic level
?
We don't know.
We don't even know what it does.
We don't understand it.
You're not doing anything.
Okay, you got to change yourlanguage.
If you don't change yourlanguage, you will never change

(38:12):
your understanding.
Language is understanding, allright.
So now let me go back to tothis.
Now, the omega-6 also serves asa in in the mitochondria.
It is part of the uh, it, it.
It maintains the degree offluidity of the of it.

(38:33):
So the more fluid it is, themore it absorb oxygen.
So omega-6s are necessary forthe absorption of oxygen, which
is kind of important in the cell, right.
So there's just.
It goes on and on and on, and Ijust want you to know that the
omega-3 and omega-6 is not thatone is good or one is bad.
Both are necessary, yeah, butomega-6s cause inflammation, yes

(38:55):
, and what is inflammation?
It's also called healing.
So you cut yourself.
If you don't get inflammation,you're dead, because that'll
just spread and you'll die.
Inflammation will heal.
What we don't want is chronicinflammation.
Why?
Because chronic inflammationmeans what it's chronically
being assaulted by, what?
That's what we've got to findout.
Usually it's what we eat andit's called food that has been

(39:17):
degenerated.
Right, there's only real foodand then there's all the other
stuff and we eat all the otherstuff.
Sometimes we eat real food.
What is real food?
Which grows, that which theearth produces.
That's real food.
Whatever we do to it is now nolonger real food.
It's artificial.
Should I pretend that's nottrue?
We need to.
Yeah, yeah, so, okay, all right.

(39:39):
So if anybody wants to arguewith nature, go for it.
Go for it.
Argue with nature.
Explain to nature that naturemade a big mistake by not
cooking the tomatoes.
Or to god tell god, hey, god,listen, did a great job.
You know, I mean the birdsthey're doing.
You did a fantastic.
Look at the rivers.
Every it's all pretty gravity.

(40:00):
I mean good job.
But come on, what's with that?
Uh, I mean, you didn't cookanything.
And what's the story?
You didn't cook anything.
Come on, how am I gonna eat mypasta if I don't have tomato
sauce?
I gotta cook the pasta, right,okay, so we're gonna do that.
You don't understand what I'mtalking about.
I'm talking about mitochondriathat are produced, energy that
we need, and when the energy isgone, when there's no longer any

(40:22):
electrons flowing, you've got aflat line on your EKG and it's
called time of death.
So in order to be alive, you'vegot to have electrons flowing,
and those electrons aregenerated, produced in the
mitochondria.
You can also get them fromstanding barefoot on the earth.
You can also get them fromhugging somebody or petting an
animal, or climbing a tree, orbeing out in nature, or being

(40:45):
next to a river or being next tothe ocean.
You can get them that way, butnot enough, right?
And you know, putting your feeton the earth is called
grounding, right?
Well, if you're eating uncookedfood, you're grounding with
your mouth and your body.
It's going all throughout you.
So anyway, electrons now madein the mitochondria.
So mitochondria have.

(41:06):
I'm just reviewing for you.
Who said you didn't know what Iwas talking about.
Oh my God, pauline, listencarefully, stop asking questions
and listen for answers.
I know you're not listening.
I don't wonder why I even dothese shows, because people
aren't even talking.
If you're not listening, thenwhy am I doing it?
Why am I talking If you don'tlisten?
I don't understand it.

(41:26):
One hand clapping, right.
What are you going to have?
First of all, listen, lymphatic.
What do I do?
They're all the same.
You're just not listening.
Do they're all the same?
You're just not listening fully.
Cfcs, chronically verminatingcells, can occur in the
lymphatics.
They can occur in the bonemarrow.
They can occur in the breast,in the pancreas, anywhere.

(41:48):
They're still the same thing.
What do you do?
You do the same thing.
You get rid of the toxins.
You identify the toxins, youget rid of them all and you make
sure the body has everything itneeds to heal.
That's basically what it is,because the body will heal.
You got to get rid of the junk.
Give everybody everything itwants to heal and wake up the
immune system.
You do that and we've talkedabout this a million times.
You can, that'll go.

(42:09):
I've never had people withnon-Hodgkin's that I see soon
enough.
That don't make it Never, butI've got to see them soon enough
.
It can't come at the end whenyou're at the end, right, so
anyway, so all right.
So now I'm going back to theomega-6, omega-3 thing.

(42:30):
So we think the sixes are bad,the threes are good.
They're both necessary, right?
We need to get inflamed to healand then we need to get
uninflamed.
We need to get inflamed to healand then we need to get
uninflamed.
We need the antioxidants, right, just like we need estrogen for
making it and then we needprogesterone.
There's a yin and yang to everyaspect of biology, every aspect
of biology.
There's nothing that's not yinand yang.
That's just the way it is.

(42:50):
That's why that's such anincredible symbol, and the yin
and yang understanding of lifewould never ask what's better,
this or that.
They're both necessary.
What's better day or night?
What's better sleeping orwaking?
What's better resting orexercise?
You realize these are absurdquestions.
Unfortunately, most of peopledon't know they're absurd.

(43:12):
So anyway, let's get back to itabout the thing.
So the mitochondrial function,which is the electron transport,
electrons are taken from oxygenand glucose and put into
molecules called adenosinetriphosphate.
All right, so now thecardiolipin allows that to
happen.
Right, all right.

(43:34):
Now what else is importantabout cardiolipin?
Right, all right.
Now, what else is importantabout cardiolipin?
It allows for the membrane ofthe mitochondria to be of a
certain degree of fluidity, toallow oxygen to flow, to allow
energy to be produced and allthat stuff.

(43:55):
And if you remember that firstsentence, which had nothing to
do with this, what we're talkingabout now, it had nothing to do
with this.
What we're talking about now,it was the conclusion of people
that are involved physiologists,who are involved in research on
comparative anatomy andphysiology, looking at animals
of all different sizes andshapes, the ways in which they
differ and ways in which theydon't differ, right, and their
conclusion was that the lengthof life depends on the membrane,

(44:16):
your life span.
We're talking about elephantsversus rabbits, right?
A rabbit just a few years andan elephant for 90 years.
So why, why, why, mitochondrialmembrane.
Wow, that's it.
Yeah, that's it.
And what is that?
That's talking aboutcardiolipin.
So we're talking about omega-6s.

(44:37):
Okay, all right, now that I knowthat, what's my next question?
What is the next question?
You all know the next questionand that is what Anybody know.
What's the next question about?
Hi there, sue, well, welcome.
Wish you thought would befinished.
I didn't finish, I just lost afriend.
So now I'm watching.
I did finish, sort of.
Anyway, what thought do youwant me to finish?

(44:59):
Tell me quickly, I'll finish it.
All right, if I was handcuffed,I couldn't talk.
Anyway, I don't know what Ididn't finish.
But getting back to themitochondrial membrane, so
remember, the length of life isdependent upon the health
structure of the mitochondrialmembrane across all species.
That's pretty intense, that'spretty fundamental.

(45:23):
Why?
Because it produces energy.
Which energy is?
Electrons.
When we look at cellularvoltage, we're talking about
electrons.
So you have to understand howthis all.
We're all talking about themost fundamental aspects of
living.
So the question becomes well,where do I get this stuff?
How can I get it?
That's the question.
All right, all right, so theplace that we get.

(45:46):
So, where do we get the?
We get it from seeds and nutschia seed, hemp seed, safflower,
sunflower, walnuts, pecansthere's lots of them where we
get a predominant of omega-6s.
Most of them, all of them.
We get O3s and O6s, but someare more predominant.
Black cumin seed, yeah, andwalnuts are a fantastic source

(46:10):
of omega-6s, and I mean healthyomega-6s, right?
So when you've heard that thestandard earthling diet nowadays
is at least 20 or 40 to one ofthis omega six to the omega
threes, that means that we're introuble because all the but
those omega sixes are nothealthy anyway.
Yeah, we're not healthy, andwe're talking about healthy

(46:30):
omega six and healthy omegathrees Now.
So that's where we get them.
So, by the way, I know and Ihear I'm going to I had trolls
on my pages.
What do you mean?
Ignore who?
You had trolls on your page.
I know I've got trolls, yeah,okay.
So nuts, okay, nuts.
All these nuts and seeds haveomega-6s, but specifically the

(46:55):
ones I said sunflower, safflower, chia, hemp, and then walnuts,
black cumin seed there's a lotof them.
Okay, so, almonds, I mean,there's a lot of them, anyway,
now, by the way.
So I wanted to mentionsomething For those of you who I
haven't eaten a plant in sixyears there ain't nothing I can
get from a plant that I can'tget from a dead animal.
I'm eating dead animals.

(47:15):
Oh, I'm a carnivore, but notreally a carnivore, because I
don't eat them alive.
Well, I'm a corpse eater.
Yeah, I like corpses, but I gotto call myself a carnivore
because that sounds better, itsounds cooler, it makes me
stronger.
Okay, so, I'm a carnivore and Ieat dead bodies and I get all I

(47:36):
need, okay.
So, by the way, if you get ityes, you can get omega-6s and
omega-3s.
You can get them from deadanimals and eggs and their milk.
If they ate those from theplants, if they got it, because
they can't make it, they can'tmake omega-3s and 6s, they can't
make it.
They have to have gotten itfrom their diet.

(47:57):
So, if you want to get anythingsecondhand, go for it.
So you want to buy it from theretailer rather than going to
the wholesaler?
I'd rather go to the wholesaler.
You know why.
It's pure, it's cheaper.
But if you want to go to theretailer I'm going to go to the
retailer, go for it.
But make sure, if you're goingto eat the animal, make sure you

(48:18):
eat the heart and lungs and theadrenal glands, the ovaries,
the testes, the eyeballs, thebrain, spinal cord, inner ear.
Eat all that stuff, chew thebones, drink the blood.
Come on, be a carnivore.
Be a real carnivore.
Don't just eat the muscle.
Come on, that's what thevultures get.
Know when the carnivores aredone and they leave anything

(48:39):
left over for the vulture, youknow what it is.
It's what you call steak.
Yeah, that's the stake.
We're only at the stake for thevultures.
Okay, so don't be a vulture, bea carnivore.
If you're a carnivore, eat thewhole thing.
I know I'm probably offendingeverybody, but so what?
What am I going to do?
Pretend like all this is nottrue so that I can be what?
So that I can be liked bypeople.

(49:02):
Is that my goal in life to beliked?
No, my goal in life is try totransmit what I have learned in
life.
All right, and if you don'tthink anything I'm saying is
true, prove it to me, show me,show me, show me, don't go, show
me, give me the data.
I love data.
And I'm like, hey, listen, I'malways willing to change my mind

(49:24):
.
I've changed my mind all thetime.
As soon as I find out thatsomething's not true, I'm like,
no, I'm attached to my lie.
If it's a lie, oh my God, okay,god, thank you.
No, louis, I'm not an Aries,I'm a Gemini.
So, anyway, we're not going toget omega-3s and 6s from corpses
.
Now, remember the corpse thatyou're getting the omega-3 and 6
from got it from some sort ofplant, because they're the only

(49:48):
ones that can make it.
I'm like I can't, I gotta stayfocused on this.
I've only gotten the twoquestions today.
One question, oh my God, allright, so we gotta, I gotta be
moving along.
I just wanted to explain thatto you.
And where do you get theomega-6s that you need for this
health, right?
Okay, now is there anything elsewe can do to increase
mitochondrial function, which iswhat Amanda asked, and that is

(50:10):
yes.
What?
Well, you probably never heardof, I'm pretty sure.
Maybe maybe a few of you haveheard of it, but anyway, there
is like a molecule, a chemicalthat the body produces, right,
and it's got.
Basically, the initials arePGC1A.

(50:33):
Okay, and what it does is prettyamazing.
It is the chief regulator ofmitochondrial biogenesis, or
making more mitochondria right,which is involved in what we've
been talking about.
By making it because they makeit this chemical is the chief
regulator of it being made.
It doesn't make it, but itbrings in all the necessary

(50:55):
which is necessary to make itright.
So it not only has to do withenergy, it has to do with
thermogenesis, producing theheat that the body needs for
part and which is also modifiedby the thyroid, and that's the
whole story and with glucosemetabolism, because glucose
metabolism and energy productionand all that really go together
right.
So the other big thing thatthis PGC1-alpha does is it's

(51:18):
involved in gluconeogenesis,which is what the liver does.
So when you're out of glucose,you're fasting, you're whatever.
You're fasting, you're noteating, so you're out of glucose
.
Your body will make it out ofamino acids.
It'll grab amino acids fromyour body and make it okay.
We need that, okay.
So now cats have it much morethan us.
Cats have it, extremely anextreme degree of that, which is

(51:43):
why cats are the only obligatecarnivores.
They must eat animals alive.
That's what they prefer themalive.
They don't like the corpses.
The dogs eat the corpses.
The cats eat the animals alive.
They must, and we're talkingabout that Lions, tigers.
Yeah, your house cat eats driedfood, but that's it's not

(52:05):
healthy period.
We don't know what health is.
It's not healthy period.
We don't know what health is.
And we torture our poorchildren.
On Monday I put them at home.
Yes, thank you Michael.
So now what are we talkingabout?
Anyway, so we want to upregulatethis chemical and we can
upregulate it by what Aerobicexercise will upregulate it?

(52:34):
Will, uh, resistance trainingupregulate it, and what else?
Well, it's well.
Let me the the the, the name,the reason it gets the pgc, one
alpha name is it?
It comes from the words perox,peroxosome proliferator
activator receptor, ppar.
Then there's a gene associatedwith it and all that sort of
thing.
Anyway, these are the chiefregulators of mitochondrial

(52:56):
production in the body.
So your body to make moremitochondria.
We can get that with exercise,but aerobic and resistance both
increase that.
What else does Caloricrestriction the less you eat,
the more you make mitochondriaand what they call intermittent
fasting, which is just eatingonce a day, hopefully not twice,

(53:16):
but if you're eating twice aday, make sure it's within a
little more than a four-hourwindow, six-hour window max, and
make sure you stop eating five,six hours before sleep and you
go to sleep early at nine,because sleep also enhances
mitochondrial function.
Sleep also enhancesmitochondrial function.
So sleep getting not and goingto sleep empties, that means you

(53:39):
stopped eating five or sixhours before.
So now your body has to engagein autophagy.
Right, all these are.
And guess what?
If you were not enculturated, ifyou hadn't been enculturated as
a little child and if youhadn't been taught that all your
instincts were unacceptable andthat you have to learn how to
be a good Chinese or a goodGerman or a good American or

(54:03):
good Australian or a goodwhatever Thai, if you didn't
learn that that's what you hadto be and you were just a good
whatever Thai, if you didn'tlearn that that's what you had
to be and you were just anatural being, you would not
need to be listening to thisright now.
You'd be going to sleep early,you'd be eating only food, real
food.
That's what you'd be doing.
But we got enculturated,meaning we got messed up.
Yeah, anyway, can't go into allthat stuff right now.

(54:27):
But another thing thatstimulates mitochondria cold
exposure, being exposed to cold,cold.
And also, let's, how do we get,how do we eliminate the things
that damage mitochondria?
Yoga, tai chi, qigong all thosethings decrease damage to them.
Are there any supplements likeyeah, you can take coenzyme q10,
you can take alpha lipo, yeah,you can take coenzyme Q10.

(54:47):
You can take alpha-lipoic acid.
You can take N-acetylcysteine,remember that and resveratrol.
And I don't know if you allhave heard of the pyroquinolone
PQQQ, pyroquinolone quinones,pqqqq.
They're all in mitochondria,the supplements you can be
taking to it, but nothing betterthan exercise, getting proper

(55:11):
sleep and eating healthy.
Nothing at all comes near it.
All right, next question Now,that's what you can do for your
mitochondria.
Next question is on prostateCFCs and this is from Pete.
What is your opinion on doingADT medications for stage four,
metastasis to lymph, lymph andprostate?
Bed, pelvis and abdomen had aprostatectomy on 2023.

(55:33):
So Pete's asking about you knowwhat is the?
Basically what he's talkingabout is androgen blockade.
Now, what are androgens?
Androgens are androstenedione.
There's lots of them, but wethink of them as now.
If you're having breast CFCs orovarian, don't tune out, or

(55:56):
colon or prostate, don't tuneout, because they're all the
same.
But what I want to tell youabout the prostate here is that,
more importantly and this is,by the way, we're talking about
androgen receptors, which arewhat's normally called the male
hormone, right?
And then estrogen we think ofas the female hormone, although
both are necessary for male andfemale.
So it's just relativeproportions anyway, the point is

(56:19):
this that we have thosereceptors on every organ colon,
pancreas, heart.
So, okay, so it's not just, butanyway.
So, pete, what's important foryou to understand is that when
they use these androgen blockersright, which are, as you know,

(56:40):
they can give Lupron, there'sseveral of them that block can
knock out your ability toproduce any kind of androgen or
estrogen, or just knock it out,right, knock out your
hypothalamic gonadal axis, soyou're not producing any.
You can do that Right.

(57:13):
2006, and you read a paper byAbraham Morgenthaler, who is a
professor of urology andurologist at Harvard, where he
went to medical school and tohis training fellowship, right?
So that's why they call him aperforation agent.
Let me see if I can find it,let me see if I can find his
paper here.
So, here, this is published in,just so you'll know it's
published in what year 2006,.

(57:35):
Yeah, okay, I remember it.
Okay, so, dr Morgan Teller, whois a professor of urology at
Harvard Medical School, but healso is a urologist at the
Women's Beth Israel DeaconessMedical Center.
It's all part of the Harvardcomplex, right, anyway?

(57:57):
So he's part.
That's what he's there.
Anyway, he went back and did theresearch and published a study
called Testosterone and ProstateCancer An Historical
Perspective on a Modern Myth.
Abraham Morgenteller,m-o-r-g-e-n-t-a-l-e-r.
Okay, okay, 2006, testosteroneand Prostate Cancer An

(58:21):
Historical Perspective on aModern Myth.
And he hasn't changed.
But I want to read theconclusion.
I love the conclusion.
So his conclusion is this thishistorical perspective reveals
that there is not now, nor hasthere ever been, a scientific
basis for the belief thattestosterone causes prostate

(58:42):
cancer to grow.
Discarding this modern mythwill allow exploration of
alternative hypotheses regardingthe relationship of
testosterone and prostate cancerthat may be clinically and
scientifically rewarding.
All right, so he went fromthere.
Anyway, he's published a lot,since it's well known by
everybody except the modernoncologist.
They don't remember they didforgot to read that, because you

(59:05):
know what's weird is because heactually is like talk about
credibility.
He's like harvard we're talkingabout.
It's right next to heaven.
Right, the harvard, then heaven, right anyway.
Here's what it turns out.
It's not, and, by the way,everybody they like to use the
word most, but it's everybodythat is on androgen blockade

(59:25):
eventually gets what they calldevelops, turns into what they
call castration resistantprostate cancer or hormone
resistant prostate cancer.
Same thing, castration, becausethey used to castrate.
That's pretty sure way ofgetting rid of testosterone
production, but it turns outthat after a while it grows
anyway, because that wasn't thereason Anyway.

(59:48):
So now that's why I don'trecommend it at all.
Now, when we think about it,what are androgens?
It turns out that the and thisis something you have to
understand in Testosterone andandrostenedione must be

(01:00:08):
aromatized to become estrogen.
In order for the carcinogeniceffect to work Carcinogenic,
producing CFCs, the androgensmust be changed, chemically
aromatized to become estrogens.
And that what aromatase does.
Aromatase is the enzyme thatdoes that.

(01:00:29):
And that's why when people,women that have breast cfcs,
have um, take aromataseinhibitors, ais to prevent that
process, to prevent any of theandrogens from being turned into
estrogens, because they don'twant extra estrogens, because
they're thinking that theestrogen is costly, as it turns
out with prostates.

(01:00:50):
Is that the actual?
If you recall in our discussionswith breasts that there are two
kinds of estrogen receptors,there's the alpha and the beta.
The alpha was the one.
When the alpha receptor gotstimulated, it caused growth and
proliferation of tumors,whereas when the beta got
stimulated, it was growth andproliferation of tumors, whereas

(01:01:10):
when the beta got stimulated,it was protective and shrank
tumors.
Same thing in the prostate,exact same thing.
That's why prostates in men andbreasts in women are basically
the same, pretty much identical,because they are all the same
response to hormones and stuff.
So, anyway, and it turns outthat it's an imbalance of these

(01:01:31):
estrogen receptors that sits atthe nidus, sits at the what's
the word?
Pivot, sits at the seed of thiswhole process.
Yeah, the imbalance of thesereceptors, estrogen, estrogen
receptors and the androgenreceptors and the relationship
between them.
It comes down to that Now.

(01:01:51):
So, when it to answer thisquestion, which says my opinion
on using them is that it wouldprobably.
It may work for a little while,but it's going to eventually
not work.
It's going to stop working,because that's what happens to
everyone, and what's it?
What it's going to do is slowthings down, but it's going to
stop working because that's whathappens to everyone.
And what it's going to do isslow things down, but it's going
to also further imbalancethings.

(01:02:13):
And remember what are CFCs?
Polychromatically FermentingCells.
That's the word we use, that'sthe acronym we use, and this
phrase we use for what they callcancer, because they're cancer
only at.
The only meaning to cancer ispeople born between June 21st
and July 22nd.
That's what cancer is.
There's no other meaning to it.

(01:02:34):
But the real meaning of what isgoing on are these are cells
that have learned that they'veadjusted so they can survive on
fermentation, which is a veryinefficient way of making energy
, because they lost theirmitochondria, which we were
talking about a minute ago.
And losing your mitochondria,you've got to ferment, otherwise
there's no energy, you're dead.
So they have to become good atit.
They do, and they're calledCFCs.
They made it Okay, that's it.

(01:02:56):
So now you know, pauline, right,very important.
So if you have any, no matterwhere you've got something going
on, chronically fermenting isChronic deferment, is the same
thing.
Chronic deferment, all right.
So now?
So the reason I'm saying this,pete, is that it works for a
little while it will work, butit will stop working.
And then, what do we now know?

(01:03:16):
We now have further imbalancedeverything and we have not been
going towards the source.
Now, with you, you've gotprostate.
First of all, you have to havegone to a biological dentist and
they did the 3D cone beam CTand they identified that there
was nothing wrong completely,especially with these top four

(01:03:38):
and bottom four, because that'sprostate, it's also ovary, it's
also uterus, also cervix, allthat, the urogyne kidneys,
bladder.
So I'm assuming you've done allthat and they were absolutely
perfect, or, if they weren't,you got them fixed right by a
biological dentist with ozone,et cetera, and you've done a
thorough juice cleanse, coloncleanse, and you're doing all

(01:04:00):
that stuff.
You've got to be doing all thatstuff that we talk about, All
right.
So, anyway, let's go to thenext question and that is from
Peter, and it says is there adoctor or clinic in New York,
new Jersey, connecticut,pennsylvania, that has a similar

(01:04:23):
approach to you?
And the Oasis Center in Arizona, radical prostatectomy in July
of 2020.
Their PSMA scan shows CFCs inprostate bed and lymph.
I was told to start Same person,yeah, so you can see that the
so what you can see, andeverybody can see, is that the
surgery didn't accomplishanything, except, I mean, the

(01:04:45):
only one that really benefitsfrom most surgeries is a surgeon
, and they benefit tremendously.
They keep their skills up, makemoney, their prestige, all
kinds of it and the point isthis that it doesn't work and we
can do a whole thing onsurgeries because they are

(01:05:06):
necessary.
I'm not saying they're notAbsolutely, but when they are
they are.
We know when they're necessaryand when they're not necessary,
when are they going to be?
No, I'm not speaking aboutfungating tumors, chronically
fermenting cell.
Oh, you guys have to join thegroup so we can interact.
Join the groups.
Come on, join the groups, wecan talk.
I can't do that right now.
This is Cindy.

(01:05:26):
I'm having fibroids and cysts.
Are these tied in withparasites?
A lot of women are sufferingfrom PCOS.
Do you also have a detox fromthe COVID-19 bioweapon?
Okay, so fibroids and cysts?
Fibroids can be due to hormoneimbalances estrogen, estrogen

(01:05:50):
dominance often.
Yeah, cysts are usuallyparasites, but depending on the
organ, like ovaries, probablynot, you know it depends, but
usually are, but unrecognized.
And we're talking about women'sPCOS, which is polycystic

(01:06:12):
ovarian syndrome.
Excuse me, my gosh, I sleptlast night.
Why am I yawning From PCOS?
A lot of us have?
Yeah, right, and so, and whatare PCOS?
It's an imbalance again ofhormones and it's predominantly
androgens.
Women that are getting moreandrogens than are healthy,

(01:06:32):
right, and they can wind upgetting you know.
Okay, you're welcome, butthere's ways of helping you,
peter.
So tune in next time because wecan help you, even though the
androgen blockade doesn't.
You can help you, you can behelped.
Keep that in mind.
Get on the groups.
We're not going to be able tosolve it here.
Oh, a cyst on the ovary can befrom a failed ovulation.

(01:06:57):
So, you know, an ovulation iswhen the egg is extruded out of
the ovary, right, and if itforms but there's not an
ovulationulation, the eggdoesn't get extruded.
It can be that.
So there's ovarian cysts, whichcan be different.
Right, they can be due to,again, and why was the egg not

(01:07:19):
extruded?
Because in order for that tohappen, there's got to be a
certain amount concentration ofestrogen, has to be achieved at
a certain rate, and then it hasto be decelerated at a certain
rate.
So it's got to be, and it'sthat up and down quick

(01:07:43):
deceleration that allows forovulation.
Ovulation is the cyst, is theegg coming up.
If it doesn't happen correctly,like that, then what will
happen is that the egg will notbe extruded and you will not
have what's called a corpusluteum, because a corpus luteum

(01:08:04):
is the, it's what it's.
Once the egg has been extruded,what remains is called the
corpus luteum.
Is the it's, what is it's?
Once the egg has been extruded,what remains is called the
corpus luteum, and it's thecorpus luteum that produces
progesterone.
So the second part of the monthfor a woman's cycle that is
dominated by progesterone isonly going to happen in a woman

(01:08:25):
who has ovulated.
If you haven't ovulated, youwon't have a corpus luteum,
because you will have.
So there will be noprogesterone production.
So you'll be estrogen dominantthat month, and if it happens
more than one or two times amonth, one or two times a year,
then the net hormone profilethat you have is estrogen

(01:08:47):
dominant, and that can result inbreast fibrocystic conditions,
it can result in ovarian, it canresult in uterine fibroids,
right, and then also all of themalignant sequelae of those,
which is breast CFCs, ovarianCFCs, fallopian tube CFCs and
uterine endometrial cfcs.

(01:09:08):
Okay, all right now.
So again, it's imbalanced.
There's a lot of imbalances.
We have to be aware of the factthat a lot of the environmental
chemicals that were that we areexposed to do not occur
naturally.
They're not natural occurrences, right, they're the result of

(01:09:28):
our technology.
It's another one of the most.
It's one of the wonders oftechnology.
Aren't we blessed to be born atthis time in history where we
have all this technology at ouravailable to us?
We're just like it's of all thetimes, throughout all the
history of humanity, we're themost blessed.
We have access to ways toensure that we have no

(01:09:52):
connection with nature and wehave access to the most
incredibly toxic substances ever.
Can it get better than that?
Can it get better?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I think we're extremely blessedwe have access to Wow.
So this is Zoe.
You've got I hear you, you'vegot the FedVan.
Contact us at hello atdrlodycom, we'll help you.

(01:10:17):
Hello at drlodycom.
Zoe, zoe, zoe.
All right, guys, all right,getting late, what time is it?
Oh my gosh.
Now how do you detox from thebioweapon?
Well, i's not sure what thebioweapon is, and we've talked
about this before.
Is it just only mRNA?
Is that all it is?
Or are there nanobots?
And are there, what else isgoing on in there?
And there's all kinds ofinformation coming out about it.

(01:10:41):
It's crazy, but you know, onlywere only if it was like spike
protein.
If it was only spike protein,then you say yeah, well, the uh,
notokinase.
Even I'm sure lumbokinasedoesn't say, but notokinase has
been proven and um, you know,but there's so many things that
that are that it can beunfortunately wearing.
Making sure that you haveprotection from emf, right,

(01:11:04):
because of 5g and 6g and allthat.
They have protection from thosethings You've got to wear EMF,
you know, like Faraday clothing,and they have it right.
So look up Faraday clothing.
All that stuff is veryimportant and what's going on is
no one really knows of all thepotential toxins in there.

(01:11:25):
That's why you can't come upwith a regular detox protocol.
You up for one if you thinkit's just spike protein, but
it's not and it's other things.
They have been able to stop themotion of these nanobots that
are in the blood by putting themin a faraday cage, but not with
poisoning it and heating it upto boiling.

(01:11:46):
None of that gets rid of it,but fairly so it's crazy.
What's in these?
I don't even know, nobody knows.
So here's the idea Get ashealthy as you can and avoid all
chemicals.
Fix the mind.
I'm looking at a question herefrom Ginger, who's saying I have
a suspected parathyroid tumor.

(01:12:08):
I have been diagnosed.
Come on, how do I make thisbigger?
Oh, wow, that did it.
Come on, get over here, okay.
Suspected parathyroid tumor.
I've been diagnosed.
They put a spell on me, calledosteoporosis, with a bone
density scale.
Also, I have a high calcium anda low vitamin D for over a year

(01:12:32):
.
Is a parathyroid removalrecommended?
Also, I have thyroid nodule.
I have not agreed to a biopsy.
Should they be removed as well?
I feel like the parathyroidremoval seems to be the way to
go because of the damage beingdone, but would love to have
some of your opinion on this.
All right, well, you know howhigh is your calcium, and is it?

(01:12:57):
Vitamin D is still low after ayear, and then that means you're
not taking any.
You should be taking it forsure.
It shouldn't be low.
If you knew it about a year ago, then you should have been
taking it immediately.
Get it up to a level, up toaround 100.
So start vitamin d3 with k2.
You can take it with k2,vitamin k2.

(01:13:17):
So osteoporosis, um, so we needa little bit more information
than just a high cal.
I don't know how high calciumis, how long it's been that way.
Do we have your own pth, yourparathormone levels and your
calcitonin levels?
Do we have those?
Uh calcium?
Do we have phosphate,phosphorus do we have?
So we need those levels ofvitamin d's you can take.

(01:13:42):
So before considering cuttinganything out, let's see if we
can restore balance.
Let's see if we can restorebalance.
Let's see if we can restorephysiology.
So we've got to know what's outof balance.
And having thyroid nodules?
Again, we don't know what thatmeans.
Is that a nodule or is it acyst?
Is it a parasite?
What's on there?
Why is there thyroid nodules?

(01:14:03):
How come they're there?
What is your thyroid function?
Do you have enough iodine?
All these questions you've gotto be balancing.
And once we've balanced it,you've got enough iodine, your
thyroid's functioning correctly,then, who knows, all this may
be resolved.
Restoring balance resolves allthe different manifestations of
the same underlying processes.

(01:14:24):
That's what's amazing.
Okay is to keep in mind thatall of these issues that we get
Zoe DR low deductible, okay.
So now I just want to remindeveryone that every time we've
got this going on and that goingon and this going on, we think,
oh my God, it's because there'sunderlying imbalances in

(01:14:45):
different systems, systems wehave different systems.
If you restore that balance,it's those manifestations are
don't exist anymore.
It's pretty amazing.
Well, I'm glad you haven'tagreed to a biopsy?
Never.
There's never a reason for it.
We'll talk about that anothertime.
But I'm not and I can arguewith whoever you want I need to
argue with about it, but I don'twant to argue about that right
now, I just want to get on it.

(01:15:06):
So removing your parathyroid isnot going to be fun because
you're going to have to betaking a lot of stuff to try to
maintain your health and wedon't even know that it's.
I would have to see yourrecords and I would say we've
got to do a lot with you.

(01:15:27):
You've got to find out what'sgoing on with your dental.
I mean, yeah, no, you don't dothat which is permanent, what's
the word?
Anyway, you don't do thatirreversible, you don't do the
irreversible.
First we restore balance.
So we've got to know what'sgoing on.
You have to make sure yourdental ginger it's essential,

(01:15:51):
right?
And you remember the teeth thatare involved with the thyroid
are and parathyroid are the samethat are involved with the
breast and the stomach and thepancreas or spleen.
So they're right next to yourwisdom teeth and down here as
well.
So I don't know what's going on, but it has to be taken care of
and then we've got to.

(01:16:11):
I've got to look at what.
So there's so much.
So, ginger, this requires muchmore than, but I would not.
No surgery, not, not yet.
Maybe at some point in thefuture, if, after we've done
everything.
But I can't imagine how thatwould make a difference.
All right, so thing, but Ican't imagine how that would
make a difference.
All right.
So, ginger, join the groups,join the group, one of the

(01:16:36):
groups, so we can startinteracting.
Okay, yes, irreversible.
Thank you, peter, that's theword.
It's so confusing who to believesometimes.
Well, what is confusing?
I don't want you to believeanything.
You've got to know.
You've got to know, not believe.
Know, you've got to know, notbelieve.
Don't ever believe anything.
If I would have had it removed,what would have happened?

(01:16:57):
Well, I've had lots of peoplewho have not had them removed,
who are fine, and I've hadpeople that have had them
removed.
They wound up gettingmetastasis and all that.
So I'm just, you know,sometimes surgery is important
and necessary and sometimes it'snot.
We have to know when now.
So remember something.
Yes, uh, god, also, jesusChrist, right, right, we're

(01:17:18):
talking, deanna, you're talkingabout that.
I want you to remember whatJesus said.
Jesus said as you sow, so shallyou reap.
In other words, what you dowill bear fruit, your actions
bear fruit, and if your actionsare involved in eating and
living in ways that areantagonistic to your biology,

(01:17:39):
you will bear that fruit andthat fruit will be illness.
This is what that means.
He wasn't talking about botany.
He wasn't talking about this,wasn't?
He wasn't teaching a class inbotany, but anyway, so it comes
to again, we have to realizeit's what we do with our as you
sow, so shall you reap, anyway.

(01:17:59):
So that's all very true and weand let's please remember that.
Yay, good for you, sincere andglad you're reading that.
Health for the Millions.
Start at chapter 13, I think,the one that's the health of man
.
Start there instead of at thebeginning.
Start at the health of man,because it flows better, and
then you'll be able to read thefirst 12.
Yeah, I think it's 13.

(01:18:20):
Start with Chapter 13, thehealth of man.
Read that first All the way tothe end, and then read chapters
1-12.
Anyway, but we have to rememberthat and also remember in the
Bible, genesis 1, verse 29,.
In 128, god said listen, goforth, have fun, multiply and be

(01:18:41):
a good, take care of the.
You'll have dominion over theanimals.
And the very next verse he saidbut want to clarify the uh,
dominion over the animals.
For you it shall be.
Every fruit and things thathave seeds will be so.
He's going to clarify thathaving dominion over the animals
wasn't killing them and eatingtheir carcasses genesis 129.
You read that and tell meanother, give me another

(01:19:04):
interpretation of what it meansPrasiquanto.
Anyway, you guys, pretty soon,pretty soon, I will have the
place for you, for all of these.
In the meantime, if you'rehaving trouble with anything,
get in touch with, contact us athellowithdrlodycom and we're
going to help you.
Your experience with doctors isthey don't listen.
I know, I know they don't knowabout parents.

(01:19:26):
I know, listen, doctors, theydon't listen.
I know, I know they don't knowabout parents.
I know, listen, doctors.
I think we don't have to evensay anything about what they
don't know.
I think we just stop at theydon't know.
Oh, good night, god bless.
Yeah, all you guys say, yeah,actually, it is that time I did
so.
What I'm saying to you, ginger,is that we need to balance you.
We need to get rid of all thepotential toxicities and causes.

(01:19:46):
Whether it's your, you knowwhat's going on with your mouth.
You need 3D cone beam, you needall that stuff.
We have to have that.
We need to clean it out withozone and all that.
We need to do all that.
We need to cleanse you.
I need to know what yourmedical records say what's high,
what's low, and all that andthen we need to make sure you
have enough iodine and and itall goes together.

(01:20:07):
Okay, very important that youunderstand that if we can
restore balance in your body,that none of these issues will
exist.
They are all manifestations ofan imbalance.
Okay, it's an essential thingto learn.
Okay, so, anyway, you folks,thank you so much for hanging
out with me for this couplehours and I hope you come next

(01:20:31):
week and I hope you join somegroups so we can interact more.
Okay, because I only got three,four questions because I was so
busy interacting.
It's not fair to the peoplethat are sending in questions.
Okay, you guys, and remember,I'm only in three places health
and healing, parasites and CFCgroup.
That's it.
I'm in no other groups.

(01:20:52):
I have no other communities.
I have no other anything.
Anything else is a lie.
It's not me and I don't flirtwith people online like that.
It's not what I do, okay.
So I mean all that is okay,remember that, ok, and if you
see these people, let me know.
If you run into, let me knowand let's, and then report them

(01:21:13):
to someone's got to help me.
Are there any likeinternational authorities or who
can I report these people to?
Facebook doesn't care.
If there's got to be someone, Imean I think I consider this a
criminal.
Care, there's got to be someone.
I mean I think I consider thisa criminal.
You know it's fraud, it'sidentity theft.
Come on, anyway, wadi Ka'ap,aloha, namaste, namaskar, and

(01:21:36):
stay healthy, become healthy.
How do you do that?
By living healthy.
Don't tell anyone.
There's only one way, wadiKa'ap.
There's only one way.
Alright, sweaty cup.

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