Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Welcome to Sunday
Night Live and Sunday Morning
Monday Morning Live.
And I guess it's much easierjust to say welcome to this live
stream, because it's whereveryou are.
It's now, clocks are ridiculousand I ain't heard you speak on
(00:23):
it, david.
Okay, I want to answer.
I don't.
I have, david, I'm not surewhat you're talking about.
You asked me about your mom'sbreast CFCs that has spread to
her lymph nodes and pelvis, andyou ain't heard me speak of it.
David, do me a favor and listencarefully and don't listen for
(00:45):
your mother's name and don'tlisten for anything specific.
Just listen carefully andyou're going to hear all the
answers you need to hear,because I don't know.
I talk about what you're askingall the time.
That's all I talk about.
So if you haven't heard it, youhaven't been listening.
So I want you to listen, allright.
Well, listen, david.
And at the end, I want you totell me if you heard the answer.
(01:07):
Okay, all right, you guys,let's get started.
Let's get started.
Sunday Night Live, mondayMorning Live, today in the
Universe, right now, live.
Okay, so where are we?
Get rid of this here?
I don't want this.
I want come on.
I don't want that either.
Where is it.
God there, it is Okay.
(01:28):
So this stuff I got to tell youguys.
As you all know, you can submityour questions.
The format of this Sunday night, monday morning, live stream
the format is that you send inquestions and then I try to
answer them.
All, do my best to answer themon the weekly live stream.
(01:48):
That's the format.
The groups, on the other hand,which are three Health and
Healing, parasites and CFCs it'snot that way.
There's no pre.
You don't send in questions,you ask them spontaneously as we
talk so we can interact.
It's a much more.
It's kind of the forum that youall look, I can see it, because
(02:09):
you're asking me questions andI can't like.
For example, someone just askedme what is the proper
Mabendazole dose?
That depends who we're talkingabout.
We're talking it's.
I can't answer that.
There's too many variables.
So if I could interact withthat person, we could do it.
And then there's another fellowwho doesn't think I answer his
questions about his mother'sbreast CFCs that have gone to
(02:32):
her lymph and her pelvis, whenthat's all I talk about is CFCs
that start somewhere.
It doesn't matter if they startin the breast or in the nose or
the elbow, they're the samething they're chronically
fermenting cells, period.
That's what they are.
They're not anything else.
And if they're not fermenting,they're not CFCs.
(02:53):
Okay, I'm going to use your wordfor a second, because you're
not.
I know you didn't learn thatword yet, david.
I don't use the word cancer andyou shouldn't either, unless
you'd like to torture yourmother and yourself.
You don't like to torture yourmother and yourself.
You don't wanna torture eachother.
Don't use it.
It's not a helpful word.
It communicates nothing butfear.
So use the word chronicallyfermenting cells.
Now, that's the hallmark andthat's the only thing that is
(03:18):
universal in all CFCs Breast,brain, prostate, lymph node,
bone marrow, testicle, ovary,tongue, lung If it's fermenting,
it's that word, and if it's not, it's not Okay.
So, therefore, we talk abouthow to eliminate those and how
(03:41):
to prevent them from coming backall the time.
And do they go to the lymph andthe bone?
Yeah, what's the difference?
Nothing, it's the same.
It's the same cell going onthere.
It just means you haven'tgotten rid of the source of the
toxicity and or and usually, andyou haven't been able to stop
the immune suppression by thetumor microband.
(04:03):
But you got to be able tolisten to these things, because
I say them all the time.
Okay, so anyway, that's thisformat.
But again, if you join thesegroups, then we can talk weekly
and if you're in the CFC groupwe talk twice a week.
Now the other thing is just, ifanyone's new on Instagram,
(04:28):
facebook, youtube, linkedin andRumble, it's at drthomaslody,
and then on Twitter, which is X,it's at drthomaslodyMD.
That's all Okay.
Now there's this Beljanskiconference coming up April, I
(04:50):
think, this belgian, uh,belgianski conference coming up
april, I think, and I wassupposed to be there too.
I was going to give the firsttalk of the, of the of the
conference and uh, to kind ofset the tone and all that.
But I can't go, I just can't go.
I, I can't go.
Remember, I always I try toemphasize I hate that word I
emphasize all the time that wehave one billion neurons in our
(05:14):
gut, in our gastrointestinalsystem.
That's a lot.
It constitutes a mini brain,anyway.
But the good thing about thisbrain is it doesn't have a
prefrontal cortex to give it allthe shoulds and coulds and
wouldn'ts and shouldn'ts, itjust perceives.
Anyway, my brain down there istelling me don't go two, one
(05:49):
hour or one, two hour orsomething.
Live webinar where everyone willbe invited by, by, by, by,
whatever platform they use.
I don't know if it'd be zoom orwhatever, but it'll be a sort
of platform for a live webinarand I'll be uh, talking, uh on
that conference and it's comingup pretty soon, so I better come
up with a topic anyway, and uh,and then I don't know if you
all had a chance to see thepodcast I had we just put up
(06:11):
posted with Dr Jen Simmons and I.
I had her on my podcast andfantastic woman.
I don't know if you all knowher, but she's a
fellowship-trained breastsurgeon, practiced 18 years,
quite a while, in that field,right, removing breasts and all
(06:33):
that.
So she kind of has an ideaabout what's going on with
breasts and she no longer cutsthem off.
She now saves people from thatAmazing woman, very bright.
She now saves people from thatAmazing woman, very bright.
You know, one of the few peoplethat I've actually met that I
can consider a true colleague.
She really gets it so anyway,so I have her on my podcast, so
(06:54):
we posted that and then I'll beon hers this month 27th, so
it'll be fun.
I love talking to her.
So that's it.
So let's get on with thequestions.
Let me see if I.
How many people have I offendedso far?
Yay, thailand, hand waving,pink waving, yay, what else are
(07:16):
we doing?
Yeah, yeah, I got this.
You know, normally I don't, Idon't, I mean, I hate to go, I
hate I it.
I don't know how to describe it, but it somehow is a deep agony
of my soul.
If you can have such a thing togo there.
(07:38):
I just don't like it, you know.
I mean listen, listen, ifyou're, if you are a, if you are
a person of color I'm going totry to say this so that I don't
offend anybody Okay, if you're aperson of color, if you're dark
, if you come from Africa orsomething like that, then you
can use the word that we allknow begins with N, but nobody
(07:59):
else can.
Okay, got that All right.
Now, if you are germany, ifyou're not from journey, don't
say anything bad about germany,uh, oh, by the way.
And if you're white, I guessyou can then you can use words
like white trash, but if you'reblack, no, these understand
these words.
These rules are as as divisiveas they are attempting to
(08:23):
prevent and cure.
They are divisive.
Anyway, since I'm from my wholepoint of this ridiculous little
tirade here is that since I'mAmerican, I can tell you what I
think of it.
And you can't get pissed off atme.
Ok.
And if you like America, great,stay there, buy another, dig
your feet in, go for it.
Ok, I don't, and I haven'tliked it since I could stand up.
(08:48):
I remember being real little andI just looked around.
I said I didn't have words yet,but as soon as I had words they
were get me out of here.
Okay, why would you say so?
You're the greatest country inthe world.
I don't know, it was just anintuition.
And I looked around and I saweverybody just acting,
everybody's acting.
It's just all a show.
(09:10):
Now I know, okay, I grew up inHollywood.
My mother was in the movieindustry, so I kind of looked at
the world that way.
I thought everybody was actinganyway, but for sure, here I'm
under the table, little kidlooking up, and I realize they
were all acting and I knewsomeday I would have to act, but
not today.
So I would hang out on thefloor and I had fun being a kid,
but I didn't have to act, but Iknew everybody was acting.
(09:30):
Anyway, as I grew up I realizedit wasn't.
Yeah, it was now, it wasserious acting and people were
like getting emotional abouttheir acting.
Oh my God.
So anyway, basically I can sayyou know it reminded living in
America reminds me of living inthe land of Saran Wrap, in the
land of a cellophane.
It's huge Superficial, is thatthe word I used?
Yeah, I saw it.
(09:50):
You said superficial.
Well, so does the rest of theworld.
Didn't you ever do that?
Yeah, okay, the whole world'sgot its problems right and then
we all fit in certain places.
I just don't fit there.
I just don't fit there, and Iknew it from the time I was
young.
So I ran out at the age of 19.
And I had to come back aboutfive years later because I
didn't know what to do.
I didn't have a job, I didn'tknow how to work.
(10:12):
So I came back to figure outwhat I was going to do and I got
stuck like quicksand for 40years or so, finally got out in
2012.
And I don't want to go back.
So, hey, forgive me.
If you guys like it, yay, go forit.
You should be there.
Wherever you love you should be.
And if you love it, love it.
(10:32):
Good, and I'm glad and I hopeit gets better, and I hope this
whole thing we're seeing is notjust a show.
I mean, it looks too good,right, it looks really good,
doesn't it?
I mean we've got, which isnamed, the guy with the flag
behind him and the blood on hisear.
What's that guy?
Yeah, yeah.
And then we've got, of course,rfk, who's like an angel, an
(10:54):
intelligent angel, comes alongand all of a sudden they're
running the show.
Huh, that would be kind offantastic.
So it was that easy.
I mean that easy.
We went from the threat oftotalitarianism to, in just one
(11:14):
day, november.
What was it?
Third, wow.
Anyway, I just have.
I've become a bit pessimistic,and that's the word most people
use.
I would say I've become alittle bit pessimistic, and
that's the word most people use.
I would say I've become alittle bit more realistic.
I'm just saying let's watch, becareful, because whatever the
main show is, we know thatthere's stuff.
(11:35):
Remember Lance Burton?
You ever see Lance Burton?
Or Siegfried and Roy, or any ofthose guys in Vegas Meanwhile
over here?
So be careful of what's goingon underneath the covers.
Hey, those guys in VegasMeanwhile over here, okay, so be
careful of what's going onunderneath the covers.
Okay, all right, you guys, I'llstop with that, sorry.
Let's get back to the seriousstuff.
Okay, yeah, the webinar isonline for your day.
I don't even know, megan,that's a good question.
(11:57):
You know, can't cost money,maybe, I don't know.
Anyway, if it does, then I'mgoing to redo it anyway for you
guys.
We'll do it again if it causesit.
Parasites in the brain,neurosysticosis Okay, all right,
so I'm going to answer thisquestion Now.
All right, you're talking abouttapeworm eggs, larvae that get
(12:21):
up there.
Tapeworm eggs Okay, that's whatthey do, they go up there.
Tape worm eggs okay, yeah,that's what they do, they go up
there.
You know, the other well-knownparasite that goes to the brain
is, uh, um, is toxoplasmosis,which is a parasite, which is a
protozoan, not a worm.
So, um, anyway, what, what youwant to do is, um, so, but you
know what, david, what I'mafraid you're doing is, um, or a
(12:43):
lot of people do this, is thatyou focus on this one area, this
one manifestation of a problem,and you think that's the
problem, and you've got tounderstand that Everyone.
Please remember that whateveris manifesting in our bodies,
like you know, whatever acne,tumors, pimples, uncontrolled
(13:05):
blood sugar cysts, ovarian cysts, hormones out of control are
all manifestations, fruit on thetree, but the tree is what we
need to deal with themanifestation.
Unless they're life-threateningthe particular manifestations
or extremely uncomfortable,causing nausea or pain or
(13:28):
chronic itching or anything likethat, then just let's pull the
plug.
Pull the plug, eliminate thereason why those manifestations
are occurring.
Just try to keep that in mind.
I mean, you know it's the porktapeworm.
Okay, as then it can likely livein us because we are oh, I'm
(14:07):
sorry, we are animals.
No, no, no, no, no, we're notanimals, we're humans, we're
animals.
You know why I say we'reanimals?
Because we move and that,compared to a tree, we're
animals, but we're not animals,we're human, as if that's better
.
Right?
Have you ever heard anyone getmad and say this guy, he's an
(14:27):
animal?
Don't say that.
Animals are pure.
Animals never deliberately goout and torture people.
They just don't do that stuff.
Okay, animals are pure.
So if you say to someone he'san animal, that is a compliment.
That means this person's pure.
Hey, bangkok, how are you?
(14:49):
Sawadee kap?
So we need more people fromThailand Now, okay, okay, so
let's just go back to the sistercircuses.
You say which is from the porktapeworm?
Right, and I got one idea foreveryone Don't eat pigs, I mean
dead or alive.
(15:09):
Don't eat dead ones or aliveones.
If you're, I'm a carnivore, I'mon a carnivore diet, okay.
So if you eat live pigs, holdoff on that, okay, anyway.
But you can treat this, okay.
So the sister cirrhosis, youknow they get it Now I don't
know where in the brain.
They call it neurosysticcirrhosis, and you can take
(15:29):
albemizol, you can takeprosecuanto, you can take, uh,
you know.
Then the other things they useare they give you drugs for
anti-seizures, which you know.
The reason you can have aseizure, if you have any kind of
lesion or space-occupying thingin your brain, is that it
(15:51):
compresses on other nerves,nerves in your motor cortex or
different.
Anyway, it can cause thosethings.
So they give you drugs toprevent the seizures and so you
just want to get rid of it,right?
So the albendazole would be 15milligrams per kilogram per day,
right?
And the prosaic quantal isanywhere from 50 to 100
milligrams per kilogram.
600 milligrams, three times aday, okay, and with the
(16:13):
albendazole, you know, just makeit like 200 milligrams three
times a day.
That's what I would do for me ifI had such a thing, but I won't
, because I don't eat pigs.
I won't eat live pigs and Iwon't eat dead pigs, and I won't
eat pigs that are in a coma andI won't eat pigs that are in,
and if they've died and they'vegone to purgatory, I'm not going
to eat them.
(16:33):
If they went to heaven, I'm notgoing to eat them.
Do pigs go to heaven?
I don't know.
I got to learn about that one.
Is there a pig heaven?
When they think about them?
They had to get killed, scaredto death, then killed and then
eaten by mindless humans.
They deserve to go to heaven.
I mean anybody.
I mean that's kind of likepaying your dues.
(16:54):
I mean gosh, hey, don, you'refrom the Philippines.
Wow, fantastic, I love that.
Anyway, so that's the story.
Okay, if your mother's got that,she needs that, but she needs a
lot of other things and, as youknow, david, you should know by
now we're talking about thedental.
You can't just focus on onething, otherwise you'll never
(17:14):
get out, because there arebillions of like.
You know, can you imagine beingout in a place where there are
landmines all over the place?
That's what it is, so it's notjust oh, I'm going to get rid of
, no, they're all over, so youcan't deal with all the
different manifestations.
So, therefore, just deal withthe underlying cause, and that
(17:36):
is, get rid of all of thepotential toxins, starting with
your mouth, and you got to go toa biological dentist.
There's no sorry, no way out.
Right, and I've talked aboutmany times.
Have I heard about thisinfectious fungus?
What infectious?
There are a lot of fungi.
(17:57):
Is it fungi, fungi or funguses?
Anybody clarify that for me?
You know, I'll tell you.
I had a guy one time, a man andwoman, when I was still back in
the gulag, and the woman hadCFCs and we were talking and all
this.
And I was talking about thefungi because he said I'm a fun
(18:21):
guy.
So from that day on, I said letme come up with another word
Fungi, funguses.
Non-human animals don't go toheaven, Right, non-human animals
don't go to heaven.
Why?
How do we detox from fungus?
All right, you guys, you knowthese are the conversations and
I don't get these conversationson my.
(18:43):
You guys, these are all greatconversations.
Join the live, join the group sowe can interact.
I've got to answer questionsnow.
I can't do this Diagnose.
Okay, you guys are using thelanguage you haven't learned.
Why do you have not learned?
Does everybody still not knowthe power of words?
Do you not know the power ofwords?
(19:04):
Anybody not know the power ofwords?
Do you not know the power ofwords?
Anybody not know the power ofwords?
Huh, you don't know the powerof words, everybody.
No, Anybody know the power ofwords.
I don't know.
Hey, hammy and Pi, if you're on, there's only 11 people on all
the restreams.
Are you sure they're working?
We got Facebook right.
We got YouTube.
(19:24):
Who else?
We have Rumble X.
All right, I guess peoplearen't interested, all right.
Anyway, doesn't matter, I'mgoing to talk for a while anyway
and then say goodbye.
Now let me just tell you thesewords.
You're using the word diagnosis.
If it meant something important, she was diagnosed with stage
four.
What does that mean?
Do you know what you're talkingabout?
(19:45):
I don't, neither do they andneither do you, okay, so don't
use words that we don't knowwe're talking about.
If you don't know the power ofwords, how about walking up to
somebody and saying I love you?
Or walking up to someone andsaying I hate you?
How about walking up to yourmother and saying I hate you, or
(20:05):
you about walking up to yourmother and saying I hate you, or
you're walking up to your uh, astranger and saying I love you.
Come on, power of words.
You don't know.
All right, how about if I usewords that you're not four
letter words not supposed to?
Oh my gosh, why?
Why do words bother?
Why should it bother us?
Because they have power, youknow.
Do you realize?
It's interesting If you say aword that is forbidden, but a
(20:27):
person from I don't knowUzbekistan, who doesn't know
English, hears that word that weare and they say it.
It means nothing to them.
Just like if I tell you a wordin Japanese that if you said in
the Japanese public, you wouldbe, either they would all be
like they would be right.
Or I got another word in Thai.
I can tell you, okay, that youcould say it and you don't know
(20:50):
what it means, but they do.
Okay, there's power in words.
There's a power beyond yourunderstanding.
Okay, in fact, if there's noword for something, it doesn't
exist.
If there's no word forsomething, in the beginning was
the word Okay, words pre-exist.
Let there be light, let thewords.
(21:10):
They're very powerful.
Words mean nothing, they ensure.
Okay, I could say a few wordsthat might make you change your
mind, I'm done.
Anyway, words have everymeaning in it, because when I
say you have Sagittarius, oh my,that changes your life.
Believe me, that word andeverybody here who's been told
(21:30):
that they have this condition,that they've named, that the
rockefellers have named anastrological sign, anyone has
been told that, please, wouldyou please, talk to, uh, to anda
, explain to her how powerfulthose words are.
How powerful are those wordsyou got?
Anybody here had been told that?
Yeah, if you've been told thatand it was, there's, no, they
(21:54):
mean nothing, right?
It meant nothing to you, right?
Everybody I'm trying to.
Are you guys awake?
Does it mean nothing to you tohear that you have amazing?
Anyway, I'm sorry, anda, butwhat you just said is the
opposite of the truth.
They mean everything.
Anyway, let's go here.
(22:15):
Where are we?
Where's?
Where is this question?
Here we go, here we go, okay,so now let's just answer these
questions.
I never got a chance to answerthese questions, so sorry you
guys.
All right, so just to let youknow, I'll get started, okay, so
this is Raphael and she issaying how to start.
(22:37):
Ivermectin what's a good brand,diagnosed three years ago and on
chemo, but it's not working.
Doctors seem to be giving up.
I need help and a number to theoffice, okay, wow.
So, rafael, if we're talkingabout ivermectin in the context
of CFCs, remember why we'redoing ivermectin for CFCs.
(22:59):
We're not only doing ivermectin, we would be also.
We're looking at it from thepoint of view of how do I get
rid of these chronicallyfermenting cells, this
ivermectin, one of thebenzimidazoles, either fenben,
meben, alben okay, there'salbendazole.
Fenbendazole and mebendazoleare the main three.
(23:19):
The other ones are not reallyused that much at all.
There's one that's used.
The other ones are not reallyused that much at all.
There's one that's used.
It's using some.
Don't worry about that one.
So, and then niclosamide, theking, I love it.
And or and or not, and maybeprosaquanto.
Those would be the main onesfor the worms, the helminthics,
(23:40):
ok, but each one of them alsoturns off the specific pathways
that are necessary forchronically fermenting cells to
exist.
That is pretty good.
That is amazing, ok.
For example, if we look at thebenzimidazole which are, which
are crazy.
I mean, you know the.
You understand thatbenzimidazole is a class of
(24:02):
medications that includes thealbendazole, mebendazole,
fenbendazole, right, remember.
And this, what's his name?
Joe Tippins, right, that's howwe all came to know about it was
because of Joe Tippins' story.
Right, you all know the storyof Joe Tippins.
He had small cell lung CFCs,was treated by standard
(24:23):
protocols at the clinic.
He went to the center he wentto, which was called MD Anderson
, and they gave him a standardchemotherapy, which was on the
algorithm.
By the way, for those of you whoare just tuning in, realize
that all specialties in thefield of medicine cardiology,
(24:43):
pediatrics, orthopedics,obstetrics and gynecology,
neurology, oncology, hematology,doesn't matter Every specialty
has a professional organizationto which you better belong to it
, right?
And in fact, you feel so proudthat you are now eligible that
(25:05):
you can join this AmericanCollege of Cardiology or
American College of Obstetrics.
So, yeah, you get the job.
Now they give you what they'recalled guidelines, guidelines
for your practice.
Now, these guidelines is a is aeuphemism for instructions.
Is a euphemism for instructions.
You do it this way, or what?
(25:25):
Well, you won't be accepted byyour peers or your community.
You're going to lose yourstatus.
You may even get some sanctionfrom your medical board.
Okay, but I thought as a doctor,as a clinician, I could weigh
all the data and the facts andthen make a decision.
Sure, you can make a decisionas long as it fits into our
(25:48):
decision tree.
So understand that that's whathappens.
So, when they choose to giveyou drugs and that's why they
want a diagnosis they want adiagnosis which is merely a
description of what they seeunder the microscope.
That's why they want a biopsy,because if you don't give them a
biopsy, they can't look underthe microscope.
(26:09):
If they can't look under themicroscope, they can't describe
what they see there, becausewhat they see there is what they
call a diagnosis, even thoughit has nothing to do with
anything else except that it'sthere.
Why do I say it has nothing todo with anything else?
Because I'm going to ask you aquestion.
I'll ask you a question here.
Suppose you have DCIS, ductalcarcinoma in situ, or you have
(26:33):
invasive ductal carcinoma, oryou have and it's stage 3B or
it's stage XQ or 12 knee, whatare you going to do?
Well, I think I'm going to dosurgery, chemo radiation.
Well, maybe just the chemoradiation first and chemo after,
or maybe the surgery, or yeah,so you're being able to do the
same thing, no matter what.
Well, not really the same.
I mean, you know it's a littlebit different.
(26:54):
I mean you're not really.
How is it different, doc?
Well, I mean, we might givethis combination of drugs and
that works better than the other, right?
So with this I'll be okay,right, doc?
Well, I can't go that far.
I mean you're gonna save mylife if I do what you say, right
?
No, that's not what I meant.
(27:14):
What I meant is all of this.
Oh my God, okay, very good bye,shanna.
Yeah, so anyway, and if youdon't know, if you think I'm
crazy, that's because youhaven't been through the House
of Horrors enough.
Go back.
You need another tour of theHouse of Horrors.
(27:37):
Go in there, let them give youa diagnosis.
Abracadabra, you are diagnosed,you are cursed.
I'm insane, right, insane, thisguy.
Abracadabra, you are diagnosed,you are cursed.
I'm right, insane, this guy'sinsane.
Right?
They're saying they'retorturing, killing, dismembering
, sending people off to themorgue.
They're not insane, I'm insane.
Okay, you see why I don't livein that country and at least
(27:58):
here people don't think I'm thatinsane?
That's because they can'tunderstand me.
No, that's not the reason.
They do understand me, becauseI can be just as insane.
Speaking time not quite, it'slittle.
I'm not quite as specificallyinsane, but insane enough for to
make them go anyway.
Benzimidazoles are veryimportant.
They basically block the, thesemicrotubules that allow cells,
(28:22):
that cells need to divide, thatlike they're, it's almost like
their're musculoskeletal system.
It gives them shape andmovement, right, it's how our
cells divide and all that.
So it's really quite a and thisblocks, it, shuts everything
down.
Yeah, so can I recommend anyonespecifically in the US?
(28:45):
For what?
In terms of what?
Biological dentists?
You guys, you're not going tojoin, you're not going to join
the groups where we can interact.
Right, you're going to try tocome on here when I'm trying to
answer this person's questionand we're going to keep asking
you questions and you're, you're, and I understand it's urgent.
So join, because tomorrow iswith the first group we're going
(29:05):
to talk.
All right, come on.
Anyway, I can't.
I think you just sidetrackedpeople with all of the crazy
chat.
Crazy, it's not crazy, david.
Do you think it's crazy thatthey kill people?
Do you think it's crazy thatthey lie to people?
It's crazy.
I'm crazy for pointing,pointing it out, and I don't
(29:27):
stick on the thing I'm answering.
Yes, barry, biological dentistEmma Abramayan in Glendale
California, the best in theworld.
Emma Abramayan, glendale,california.
D-r-m-a-d-d-s, d-r-m-a-d-d-s,d-r-m-a-d-d-s At Gmail.
I'm pretty sure that's it Allright.
(29:48):
So yeah, david, I'm notsidetracked, I'm staying on
track and the track is you goback in those house of whores.
I guarantee you you're going tonot walk out the front door one
day.
They have a back door that youdon't want to go through, door
that you don't want to gothrough.
It's not a matter of hatingdoctors, it's just what they're
doing.
You got to understand whatthey're doing.
They're living off.
I don't care if they're the UK,singapore, indonesia, thailand,
(30:12):
america, canada, australia,germany, france, italy,
afghanistan.
Well, maybe they might be saved.
They're all going under.
They're following the AmericanMedical Association, okay, and
the American ManticoreDiagnostication, okay, and the
American Society of ClinicalOncology they're following.
Can I say it?
So if you are a really good boyand girls and you just follow
(30:35):
the rules to school, then towork and then to death, then
you'll be okay.
That's exactly what it is,anyway.
So getting back to Raphael withyour question on ivermectin,
sorry, david, sorry, you got offtrack there.
I was talking about helpingpeople save their lives.
What a stupid segue.
Okay, so the ivermectin.
(30:59):
The beautiful thing aboutivermectin and benzimidazole and
the niclosamide is they notonly get rid of worm-related
parasites, they also get rid of,they change, they block the
pathways that allow the CFCs toexist.
And then finally, if thatweren't enough, they kill the
stem cells so they can't spread.
Yeah, so they're reallyimportant and your dosage really
(31:19):
depends on your liver function,because if your liver okay I
got to answer this question but,um, okay, so all of these
medications require processingby the liver to be cleared from
the body.
So the more you use frequentlyand all that, the more you're
going to strain your liver andthat's you're going to have
elevated liver enzymes.
So you do three weeks on oneweek off, three weeks on one
(31:39):
week off, but the dosage and allthat depends on where we start
out with.
If you don't have any problemswith your liver, you can start
at those doses that we normallydiscuss.
Or if you do, then you have toadjust the dosages accordingly.
So I have to answer this onequestion, just because it
happens all the time.
(31:59):
So this question if you'realready sorry, would you stop
rebounding or anything thatmight stimulate the lymphatic
system for someone with CFCs inthe pelvis?
No, you want to increase it,you want the flow, because
lymphatics are designed to what.
Take it and get rid of it, dumpit off into the blood, then the
blood will go through the liverand the kidney.
This is how it works If youleave it.
(32:26):
If you leave whatever is there,the toxicity or the malignant
process?
It's going to just fester andgrow.
What do you think it's going to?
That's what's going to happen.
That they don't.
The doc, the, the witches andwarlocks in the in the house of
horrors don't know that for somereason that they took anatomy
and physiology, they got greatgrades listen, top 10% but then
they forgot it.
They forgot everything laterand they went in the hospital's
name.
Here we are in the hallowedhalls, the hallowed halls, the
(32:49):
ivory towers, and they forgoteverything later.
Yeah, yeah, the heart, thecyclic AMP they forgot.
Forget that, anyway.
So, raphael, that's the answer.
Okay, you not only want to dothe ivermectin, you want to do
several of them.
That's the answer.
Okay, you not only want to dothe ivermectin, you want to do
several of them.
(33:11):
However, if the doctors aregiving up, then actually I want
to tell you you are lucky,because now there's no way you
can.
They can't hurt you anymore,and so what you need to do is
you need to do everything thatwe've ever said, and that is,
you've got to start with themouth.
There's a whole protocol and Ihope you've been listening.
If you haven't, if this is yourfirst time or second time
tuning in, you're not quite surego to the groups, get on the
(33:32):
CFC group, all right, and we'llgive you a plan, a way to get
out of this.
There is a way to get out ofthat.
It's like saying, well, I hadno choice.
Here's the thing You're on aship and the ship's on fire, so
they give you the gangplank, youcan walk off.
(33:54):
You can get on and walk off anddie, I might say if I were in
that situation.
Okay, are there any otherpossible options?
No, what about just putting outthe fire?
What?
What about just putting out thefire?
What do you mean?
Just putting out the fire?
It's insane.
Okay, your only choice is towalk off the gangplank.
No, it's not, that's what theytell you.
(34:15):
Okay, so there's no particularbrand of ivermectin.
You'd be lucky if you can getit.
Unfortunately, because it'sbecome contraband because of
that wonderful, incrediblybrilliant and honest and
compassionate and loving humanbeing by the name of Anthony
(34:36):
Fauci.
Anthony Fauci, anthony Fauci.
He's an incredible human being,although you can't find him
right now.
He's hiding somewhere.
Oh sorry, david, did I talkabout something else?
Oh my God, I should never talkabout anything else except a
specific question.
Okay, so, all right.
(34:56):
Anyway, they're giving up onyou.
Good, so now you can take careof yourself and heal, all right.
And the way you take care ofyourself is you want to get rid
of all the possible toxins thatcaused this to happen in the
first place, and that meansstarting with the mouth and
everything else.
That's a lot.
You got to join the group so wecan get into it.
Next thing you want to do isyou want to wake up the immune
system, because it has beenparalyzed by the immune, by the
(35:19):
tumors paralyzed.
Gotta wake it up.
And then the next thing we'lldo is in the third and this is
all simultaneous, not that youdo one first and the other thing
you're going to do is you wantto eliminate that, the tumors
that are there, without harmingthe healthy cells.
Pretty good idea, right, right,okay.
So those are the three aspects.
Stop making it target andeliminate without harm and wake
(35:40):
up the immune system.
What's the key key, the bridge,what brings it all together?
It's called the mind King ofthe wall, king of the Y'all.
Remember that song, rogerMiller's King of the Road.
I'll bet there's only threepeople here that remember that
song.
They only know what they aretaught.
No, no, no, no, david, theydon't only know what they're
taught, they also know what theysee.
And they see it.
(36:02):
I started a fellowship inoncology and it didn't take me
six months to see what we weredoing.
I couldn't stay and they didn'tteach me that that's what
they're doing.
They were teaching me that thisis good, we're helping, and
that's not what I saw.
I saw someone come into ourcenter looking okay good.
(36:22):
In fact, if I didn't know theywere sick, I wouldn't.
If they didn't tell me Iwouldn't know.
I just saw them walking on thestreet.
But we got a hold of them.
I'm telling you within eightweeks.
They look like they just cameout of a concentration camp.
So, yes, david, they don't onlyknow what they're taught.
I'm just clarifying things, youguys, I'm just clarifying things
(36:43):
.
You guys, I'm just clarifyingbecause not all of you have had
the misfortune of being in thefield that I'm in and being
exposed to the insanity thatI've been exposed to, so I can
talk with authority, just like Ican talk about America.
I grew up there.
Okay, I'm American, I grew up.
But I grew up there was no.
Mcdonald's didn't exist.
(37:04):
Mcdonald's Burger King didn'texist.
None of that stuff existed.
But I saw it be born.
I was there.
I went to baseball games.
What else did I do?
Elementary school we stood upevery day.
I played the Legion of theThames, the United States of
America.
I did that.
(37:25):
I can talk about America.
I'm also a doctor.
I can talk about doctors,doctors, doctors.
I'm privileged to do that.
I will.
As long as I can breathe, Iwill.
When they stop me frombreathing, I won't gives me.
I'm privileged to do that.
Okay, and I will.
As long as I can breathe, Iwill.
Okay.
When they stop me frombreathing, I won't be able to
talk.
Maybe I'll visit you from thecloset anyway.
So where are we?
So I, I raphael, you have gotto do that.
(37:47):
Okay, you, it's important,right, okay, now, here is margin
, margin.
I followed your protocol for athree-week period for my.
Okay, now, when you it says youfollow my protocol, I don't
have a protocol in particular, Ihave suggested protocols for
people that are healthy, liverfunction, and and then I and I
don't know your situation and Imight I would ask you I might
(38:10):
give you this instead of that.
So my protocol, specifically,no one has because I doesn't
exist.
I I don't have a protocol.
I have suggested ways we goabout it and it depends on what
we're doing.
Are we actually know we have aparasite problem or do we think
that they may be underlying theproblem that we're concerned
about, which is CFCs?
That's a whole different story.
Okay, anyway, you followed theprotocol for three weeks for
(38:33):
your 14-year-old son, who hasbeen experiencing seizures and
epilepsy since he was six yearsold, although his seizures were
controlled with Keppra, and hestill had seizures due to the
high die-off of parasites.
Okay, how do you know they weredue to the high die-off of
parasites?
I was able to manage them usingCBD oil.
(38:53):
I administered three dailyenemas alongside the treatment
using your method, includingantiparasitics and vegetable
juice.
During these enemas he expelleda large number of long
jelly-like parasites.
This is good for everybody todo If you see something like
that come out.
(39:13):
If something like that comesout of you, of you, capture it,
put it in a jar and just put ina little bit of lightly salted
water or you know the kind oflike.
If you go get a saline solutionlike for your eyes at a
drugstore.
You know that kind of saline.
Just keep it in there and thentake it to the laboratory, get
it, find out what it is.
(39:34):
Don't just assume, because wedon't know.
When you say jelly likeparasites, sometimes that can be
the lining of our intestines.
We don't know what it is, andunless you start moving and
eating, and yeah, which youusually don't.
Okay, my question is that I havebeen giving myself all chemical
antiparasitics such asivermectin, albendendazole,
femendazole, niclosamide,tindazole and fluconazole, as
(39:58):
well as herbal antiparasiticslike oregano, black walnut,
clove, wormwood, berberine,myrrh, frankincense, mct oil,
mimosa, quassia, male, fern rootand powder, arco, and
everything recommended by DrClark, except the Zapper three
times a day During the one-weekliver rest period.
(40:19):
Should I stop the herbalantiparasitics along with the
chemical ones?
All right?
So, anyway, the answer is no,because you can't look at it
quite that way.
All right, you have tounderstand that, with Dr Clark's
formula, which is fantastic,right, and I'm sure you all must
know about Dr Clark's formula,right, I'm assuming everyone
(40:41):
here, because if you've beenconcerned about this stuff for a
while, you've probably beenconcerned.
All right, so her combinationis pretty amazing, right?
She's got the black walnut,right, which kills the adult
parasites, right, and thewormwood, which is also called
Artemisia we know about thatright, it kills the larva and
the parasite and the larva,which is pretty nice right.
(41:04):
And then you come along withthe cloves, which kills the eggs
.
Pretty amazing combination.
Anyway, they all start up on dayone, right, and they usually go
up to a certain point.
You know you're doing it dailyup to a certain point and then
you're down on a maintenancedose and there's no real
(41:27):
vacation from it.
All right, and each one isdoing different things, so they
don't really do that.
The other thing that uses, ofcourse, is a zapper, and the
zapper is just putting in lowamounts of direct, direct
voltage.
Well, there's no reason to stopon those, and that's one
protocol.
And if you're going to followher protocol, just follow her
protocol, don't even think aboutthe other.
(41:48):
The only reason we were doingthe three weeks on, one week off
a couple reasons with the uh,the pharmaceutical products was
because of their all beingrequired to be being cleared by
the liver and perhaps gettingelevated liver enzymes putting a
strain on the liver.
Okay, so you don't want to needthe one we go off of.
(42:08):
You should also be taking, youknow, the silymarin, you know,
500 milligrams three times a day.
You should be taking alphalipoic acid three, four hundred
milligrams three times a day.
You you should be taking analpha lipoic acid three, 400
milligrams three times a day.
You should be taking a heavydose of the B-complex twice a
day, or the.
What is that?
I have the hardest timeremembering the fat-soluble
vitamin B.
(42:29):
It's a word that I don't wantto say.
I've tried to say it, I've readit a hundred times.
I'm not going to say it becauseI can't.
So, anyway, the answer is youdon't have to right Now the
other question you had.
My other question is about largedark spot that appeared on my
neck and upper back when I waspregnant with my son.
What could be the cause of this, considering that my son was
(42:52):
born with a urinary tractinfection and generalized edema?
All right?
Well, I don't think there's anyrelationship there, because
when, during pregnancy, theplacenta produces ACTH, which is
adrenocortical stimulatinghormone.
(43:19):
Acth, which is adrenocorticalstimulating hormone, which means
that normally, in our normalphysiology, our pituitary gland
produces that which tells theadrenal glands to produce
cortisol.
That's how that works normally.
But ACTH has its own effectsanyway, other than just
stimulating the adrenal glands.
So it has other effects thatwe'll talk about in a second.
(43:40):
But so, anyway, that's secretedby the placenta.
Why would the placenta do that?
Right?
And the placenta also.
It produces several otherhormones, right?
It produces the alpha, the betaand the gamma melanocyte
stimulating hormone, or MSH,right, uh, it produces the alpha
, the beta and the gammamelanocyte stimulating hormone,
or MSH.
All right, um, and which resultsin melanocortins, and
(44:03):
melanocortins are, uh, they have, anyway.
There's one really long, largemolecule that breaks up into
several other molecules, andthey have.
The variation in effects isamazing.
You, finally, you can come upwith, you know one, the one that
stimulates melanin, which isdark, darkening pigment.
Another one stimulates thesexual response.
(44:25):
Another one stimulates has todo with analgesics and opiates,
and I mean, it's the body's waytoo amazing to all you can do
when you see the body is justbow to it and say God, my God,
wow, all right, so I can say now, anyway, but the reason that we
(44:46):
always try in science, what arewe doing?
We're trying to know.
All we're trying to do isfigure out what's going on and
how, why.
And so why would it do that.
Well, it turns out that themelanocyte, this melanocortin
which, by the way, yes, causesskin to pigment dark.
So, on a woman, the places thatwould get dark are the areola
(45:08):
of the nipples, the labia, labiaminora usually Labia majora,
labia minora get dark, get dark,get dark and freckles any
freckles or other kinds of molescan get darker.
And then there's somethingcalled melasma, which is the map
they call it the mask ofpregnancy because it's so common
, and it almost looks like theclassical signs of when you see
(45:30):
lupus if people have heard oflupus, um, but anyway, whereas
lupus is going to be kind ofreddish, this is kind of darkish
, and so if you have spots onyour back or wherever you were
referring to, and they werealready dark, this might have
made them darker.
Yeah, this is why it is, butit's very interesting.
I think probably one of themost amazing functions of the
(45:53):
placenta producing of themelanocortins that are produced
by the placenta.
They do all sorts of things.
They're responsible for how thebrain and kidney and the gut
develop.
They are right in there, sothey're kind of important.
That's why the placenta ismaking it, because it's not
going to rely on the body to doit.
It's the placenta that's doingit because it wants to survive.
But then one of the other coolthings is it helps modulate and
(46:18):
modify and adapt to differingenergy requirements, including
the switch that you're going tohave to make, when you're born,
from endogenous feeding toexogenous feeding.
Endogenous means you're gettingfed through your umbilicus,
right, your umbilical cord, fromthe mom.
(46:41):
That's this endogenous feeding.
Then, when you get the cord cutand you squeeze through the
cervix, and then you get slappedand they say welcome to planet
earth, babe, now you're hungry.
The first thing they do is theystick something in your mouth.
Right, what do we do?
Wah, wah.
And there begins the act ofstuffing.
(47:03):
We get stuffed.
From the moment we're born weget stuffed Until we wind up.
At 12 years old, we get stuffed.
Yeah, you're not supposed tocry.
If you cry, I'm going to feedyou.
Yeah, that's right.
If you cry, I'm going to feedyou.
And when you're happy, let'scelebrate by eating.
And if you're sad God, that'swhat happened, something neat If
(47:28):
you're sick chicken soup, I'mgoing to feed you, no matter
what happens.
To be able to adjust to thatadaptation from going to
exogenous feeding requires themelanocortin.
It's pretty cool, huh?
And it's not only with us.
Not only with us, by the way.
Now close your ears.
If you don't like to hear thiskind of stuff, close your ears.
It happens even in salmon.
No, no, it doesn't happen insalmon.
We're not salmon, we're notfish, we're not animals.
(47:51):
It happens in salmon and ithelps them adapt from exogenous
feeding.
No, no, no, I'm going to tell myreligious authority.
All right, I didn't really saythat everyone.
So your darkness is probablyfrom that.
Now it usually goes away afterthe woman gives birth, right,
(48:12):
because obviously there's nolonger a placenta and it's no
longer producing those hormones.
But sometimes it's already doneit and so it's already got that
.
The color has changed and it canbe permanent.
So it's hard to say.
You can go to a dermatologistand they're going to try to come
up with whitening creams andstuff like that.
(48:34):
And what I would say is well,first of all, it's not related
to your son's being bored with aurinary tract infection.
There's no relationship at all.
Number two, if it's just thecolor discoloration, that's just
a cosmetic concern and it'sreally nothing to worry about in
terms of your health.
So let's get back to what's thenext problem.
(48:59):
How do you work conference withmy PCP.
How much do you charge fortalking to my doctor?
I was tested for parasites by aresearcher for a lung problem.
He found parasite diphyllidium,tapeworm and protozoa giardia,
plus six oocysts, and suggestedmonths of on-off treatment.
(49:20):
My PCP described the one-daytreatment of vitricide.
See your PCP.
You know what does PCP stand for?
Pitifully confined person.
Yeah, you're pitifully confineda person, or shall we say,
physician.
You're a pitifully confinedphysician, can't think, and so I
(49:44):
could have a discussion withhim or her.
But being incapable of thinkingmeans that the discussion would
probably go nowhere.
But of course they don't eventhink they'd ever want to speak
to me anyway, and so the onlything that would work is if your
PCP wanted to speak with me,I'd be happy to, and then the
(50:08):
charge would not be for you, itwould be for your PCP.
I would just If they didn't wantto pay it, because I'm not.
I wouldn't do that for themoney, I just want to do it just
to see if they really aremotivated right.
Suppose I charge $8.75.
Is that going to do it?
You think the PCP is saying noway, I'm not going to do that.
(50:28):
You think I'm going to spend$8.75?
We'll see.
Anyway, I'd be happy to do it.
So you're not going to get yourPCP to do anything other than a
PCP can do, because all PCPswant to be good CPCPs.
Right, that's what a PCP wantsto do.
I'm a PCP and I went to a lotof school to get to be a PCP and
(50:48):
I don't want to lose my PCP.
Yeah, okay, this is what theyare, okay.
So they realize that you're notgoing to get them to change.
So, unfortunately.
Well, we're not unfortunate.
So therefore, what you need todo is you need to find a doctor
other than your PCP.
It's not covered by insurance.
So it doesn't matter, becausewhat's covered by insurance will
kill you.
(51:09):
Oh, my God, did I just saywhat's covered by insurance will
kill you?
I think I should say it again.
All right, I'll say it one moretime what is covered by
insurance will kill you.
Therefore, you want to payWhatever you got to do.
I mean, collect bottles, got toget out of the PCP, right?
The pitifully confinedphysician who used to be a
(51:32):
person, but now they're aphysician.
Yeah, most physicians used tobe persons, but they gave it up
to be a physician.
Yeah, I know.
So, anyway, one-day treatmentof pitricide.
I mean, there's no commentingon that.
Karen, get a new doctor.
What are your thoughts on puregum, terpithine for parasite?
(51:54):
Well, excuse me, here's thething with the pure gum,
turpentine.
It's got to be the pure gumwith nothing else Food grade as
they call it.
But most of the time you're notgoing to get that.
You're going to get the productthat they have available for
(52:16):
pig thinner and stuff like that,and the problem is you can get.
If you get the wrong one, ortoo much of the right one, you
can wind up with, you know, withkidney failure and all kinds of
coma, although there is a tonof anecdotal information, people
talking about how well they'vedone.
(52:38):
And it's from the pine tree,it's a natural substance and
it's been used for centuries.
But as far as back, I read anarticle written in 1803.
An article written in 1803.
(53:04):
By the way, people really wroteand thought better.
You got to realize.
The reason I've been kind ofabsent recently is that I'm just
really going to finally finishone book.
I got a book that I'm workingon and it talks about this kind
of thing specifically language,words, right, but specifically,
and how we are in trouble folks.
The name of the book is calledthe Coming Dark Ages and I'm
(53:26):
going to hope to finish itwithin two, three weeks.
Then I'm just going toself-publish and put it out
there, because it's got to getout there.
It's important information andyou all know it.
Maybe you haven't connected thedots, and that's what I am.
I'm a dot collector, uh,connector.
I don't like to collect them, Ijust connect them.
Um, anyway, but the pure gumturpentine.
So I've read, I read, I readback as far as 1803, I think 180
(53:49):
, something, uh, about how therewas problems, people got sick
and all that sort of thing, andin those days that's, that's all
they had.
I think was the pure.
So you've got to be careful andfor that reason I don't have
any personal experience with itand so I can't answer from that
perspective.
All I can tell you is that I'veread a lot of anecdotal
(54:13):
information accounts of it beingexcellent, and then I've read
of the problems with it.
So, just like you which is whyyou're asking the question,
because it's confusing and sadlyI can't give an answer because
I haven't used it, becausethere's so many other options
that are.
There's herbal options and then, of course, the pharmaceutical.
So I'm a 55 yearyear-old womanliving in Canada, always healthy
(54:36):
before no surgeries nor anyprescribed medications, no
vaccines, overall healthy.
Some kind of CFC is attackingmy left breast and lymphatic
system for over one year fromJanuary 2024.
I don't know what kind it is.
I don't trust our medicalsystem and doctors here.
(54:57):
I do juices every day, eathealthy red lights, exercise,
but it's not going away.
I believe with good environmentit will shrink and go away and
my body will heal itself.
My left breast is gettingbigger and very hard.
Can you please suggestsomething for me, what to do?
Doctors here are not helpbecause I'm not doing what they
(55:21):
want.
Please help.
Thank you.
All right, isabella.
Isabella, you must have beenlistening to these lives for a
while, right?
So you know that.
I'm assuming you know that youshould have already gone to a
biological dentist, right?
You have no problems with theroot canals on either up here or
(55:44):
down here, right?
No cavitation stuff.
You've taken care of it withozone, the right way, because if
you haven't done that, then youcan't.
You've got to take care of themouth.
There's no another way.
All right, and there's nothingattacking you.
There's not something that isnot you attacking you.
(56:07):
That language will get you introuble, will get you in trouble
because it's not true and itmakes you think that, in the
wrong, if I'm using the wrongwords, then my understanding is
not true and it makes you thinkthat, in the wrong, if I'm using
the wrong words, then myunderstanding is not correct.
I'm being attacked.
I got to defend myself, right.
You're not being attacked.
Your body is adapting to atoxic situation and so if I
(56:31):
don't remove the toxins, my bodywill continue to need to adapt.
But once I remove the toxins,then my body will no longer need
to adapt.
It's a completely differentparadigm, completely different
understanding.
And, yes, words do matter.
In fact, you understand thosetwo different words, groups of
(56:51):
words, completely changed theidea, completely changed the
concern and the way to resolveit and all that.
Those words are very important,so nothing is attacking you.
You've got to get that out ofyour mind and realize that your
breast is doing what it needs todo to survive under the
circumstances, and it becauseyou have not removed the toxins
(57:13):
and I don't know if they were inyour mouth.
If they were, you're gettingexposed to them daily or
environmental toxins, like anyof the plastics and the
microplastics and the heavymetals and all the things that
we are heir to in this wonderful, incredible technological era
(57:34):
that we've been blessed to beborn in, and we've never had it
so good.
Never Things have never been asamazing as they are now.
Just think of it I have thetouch of a finger and I can
watch anything I want.
Yes, and it doesn't have to betrue.
(57:54):
Nah, not with AI anymore.
Did you all see?
I see, I don't know.
No, maybe you didn't see anyway.
Uh, you know, I've been attackedby talking about parasites.
I have, I've been, I've been,uh, uh, I I'm being, uh, I've
got a parasitic problem.
It's a two-legged parasiticproblem and these, uh, human
parasites are, they're not quitelike.
They don't have the couragethat these other parasites,
these other parasites, they getin your body.
(58:16):
They're right, they're notquite like.
They don't have the couragethat these other parasites,
these other parasites, they getin your body.
They're right there.
They're saying come on, it'sbody to body, let's go for it,
right?
Not these guys.
They hide out in this littleweird, strange, never, never
land called cyber Siberia.
They're in Siberia, they're inSiberia and they're in Siberia
and they're sneaking around andlooking for these freaks or
(58:39):
maybe it's one, there's several,because some of them are saying
that they're affiliated with meand they're selling medications
.
I don't do that.
I'm not affiliated.
The only clinic in the worldthat I'm affiliated with is the
one I founded.
It's called an Oasis of Healing.
It's in Arizona and that's it.
There's no other clinic.
(59:00):
I used to have some in Thailand.
Don't anymore, don't want them.
All right, there's a problemwith the ETHICS and I'm not into
violating ETHICS.
All right.
So one clinic and we're notinto violating ETHICS, all right
.
So One planet, and we're notonline selling drugs.
That's not what we do, allright.
So the other guy is the guy,the guy that's impersonating me,
(59:24):
in fact.
So the reason I was saying thisthey have an AI.
What they've done is they'vetaken some video of mine and
they had an ai.
Do my voice saying things likeromantic things.
It's crazy.
So, please, you guys, I don'tdo that.
I don't do that.
I'm just this all the kind ofstuff you're hearing from me
(59:46):
today is the kind of stuff Italk about.
I'm not going to get romantic.
I love romance.
I love it.
I've always loved it since Icould.
Not going to get romantic.
I love romance.
I love it.
I've always loved it since Icould.
I was first allowed into thekingdom of romance.
I loved it.
I've loved it, but, uh, nottheoretically in some cyber
world, right, okay?
So anyway, um, isabella,nothing's attacking you, your
(01:00:08):
body's responding.
Okay.
Now the best thing you said is Idon, is you don't trust your
medical system and doctors.
It's not just there.
You don't have to qualify.
Okay, now you do juices everyday.
I don't know what that means, Idon't know what the juices are
and I don't know what you mean.
If you're drinking how much,what percentage of it of your
(01:00:29):
daily intake is juices?
But you should have done afteryou took care of your mouth and,
by the way, I hope you'relistening Is it, david?
Again with your mother with thebreast and the pelvic?
This is all relevant, david.
Is that it?
I hope I got everything right.
Oh, david, I'm sorry I forgot,but anyway, I hope you're
listening.
Okay, so now, after taking careof the mouth, then you did a
(01:00:51):
prolonged juice cleanse, right?
Minimum three weeks, freshvegetable juices with enough
fruit to make it delicious, butnot more than that.
And drinking three, four litersa day until you're peeing out
of all ends.
You're going to be peeing outof your ears, okay, because
you're changing the water in theaquarium.
You're changing the water inthe aquarium and if you don't
(01:01:12):
change the water in the aquarium, it doesn't matter how much
medicine you put on top, thefish are not going to make it.
You've got to change the waterin the aquarium.
Wait one more time.
You have to change the water inthe aquarium.
If you want to heal, you mustchange the water in the aquarium
.
It's a prerequisite.
It's like saying how can I?
(01:01:33):
You know, I want to take a swimin a fresh body of water, but
this is dirty.
How can I swim in a fresh bodyof water without cleaning it?
I want to swim in a fresh bodyof water, but I don't want to
clean it, right, right.
So if you realize, I reason, Iget these weird, bizarre,
bizarre metaphors or analogiesor whatever, whatever you call
(01:01:57):
it, because I want you torealize how bizarre it is that
you're thinking.
And we don't realize howbizarre we are.
We don't realize it.
We don't realize what we tellourselves.
We don't realize it because wenever say it out loud.
We just think it's good to saythings out loud.
Confession, remember you got asecret in you.
You got something you can'ttell anyone, or something
(01:02:19):
happened to you early on in lifeand you just can't talk about
it.
Talk about it, get on the roof,shout it out, get that out of
you, because the reason you'rehanging on to anything is why
you're still sick.
Your sickness is directlyrelated to the reason you're
hanging on to something.
You got to know that whateverhappened to you, whatever you
(01:02:42):
did, is well, you're number9,673,000,000 in the last 1,000
years.
Who's done that?
There's nothing new or nothingweird or nothing.
Whatever you did, it happenedto you.
Okay, like it's like women whofeel somehow, a woman who was
(01:03:08):
raped who feels that she almostfeels like she did something
wrong and sadly that's whathappens.
But you have to understand andI'm not saying that we can
control our feelings, but theonly way we can deal with our
feelings is to use the mind tohelp explain them, because
thoughts produce feelings andfeelings produce thoughts.
(01:03:31):
It's called the rationalemotive rollercoaster, the
rational emotive rollercoaster,the rational emotive
rollercoaster.
Albert Ellis was the spokesmanfor all this and he had rational
emotive therapy, but anyway.
So if someone was raped ormolested as a child, whatever
guilt or they have is isirrational and we have to.
You have to understand.
(01:03:51):
It'd be like saying I feelguilty for being born Italian.
It's my fault, I was bornItalian.
I should never have been bornItalian.
I wanted to not be born Italian, but I just couldn't help
myself.
You re, I'm trying to, I'mexaggerating, but I'm not.
I'm exaggerating because weneed to understand the how crazy
we are.
(01:04:12):
If you were hurt, damaged,beaten, are you going to say
they beat me, it was my fault, Imade them beat me.
Come on, whatever happened toyou, happened to you and talk
about it.
Get it out.
Don't let it kill you, becauseit will kill you.
(01:04:33):
And the reason you might feelguilt and all that is because
you're confused.
Why are you confused?
Because you haven't talkedabout it.
If you don't articulate yourfeelings, you have these
feelings and you haven't yetarticulated it or defined it
Then you've got just littlebubbles of thoughts.
You understand?
Just bubbles of thoughtspopping up.
(01:04:53):
I'm running out of how doesthis work?
I'm running out of, anyway,bubbles of thoughts.
You got an idea.
Your mind has a thought.
Whatever that thought is you.
Did that help?
No, didn't help.
I'm just trying to charge thisup before it dies.
Sorry, here, let's try this.
(01:05:14):
Does this help?
No, didn't help.
I'm just trying to charge thisup before it dies.
Sorry, here, let's try this.
Does this help?
Isn't this great?
Now, listen, normally I don'thave technical problems mid the
wrong thing.
All right, I see, yeah, yeah,yeah, this is pretty amazing.
This is pretty fantastic, right?
This is fantastic.
Are we having fun?
Yet'm having?
I can't believe how much funI'm having.
(01:05:35):
This is amazing.
And imagine I were born in.
If I were born 300 years ago, Icould never have had this much
fun, never.
I can only have this much funbecause I'm in the.
I was born in the 20th century.
What people being born in the21st century?
They have much more fun to me,but anyway, at least I had my
chance to have a little bit offun, anyway.
(01:05:56):
So where are we?
I'm talking about thoughts.
So if you have feelings thatyou haven't yet described or
defined, then you're going tohave thoughts that might be
right, that are irrelevant,thinking that it's my fault.
How do I know?
How do you know Lodi?
How do you know?
You know, I know everything.
And the reason I knoweverything is why?
Because I've experienced it all.
(01:06:16):
Not because I'm smart, but I'veexperienced it all.
I had something happen to me,yeah, when I was a kid.
Yeah, and guess what I did?
I talked to them and guess what?
It doesn't matter to me, man.
So, by the way, speaking of allthat, don't forget Kathy's
(01:06:39):
Corner.
Kathy's Corner is going to beavailable to members of the CFC
group and it'll be anopportunity for you to express
what you need to express, notregarding the physical situation
of what's going on, butregarding your response to it,
your reaction to it, yourfeelings.
It's a safe environment.
It's a therapeutic environment,confidential environment, but
in the end, I want you to say Idon't need confidentiality.
(01:07:01):
I want you to say we're notgoing to do it.
We're going to respect yourconfidentiality to the end, but
I want you to finally rip openyour shirt and say I'm
superwoman, man, whatever.
Okay, you don't need it.
I'm going to tell my story tothe world.
And you know what?
The more you tell your story,guess what happens In the
(01:07:22):
beginning before you tell yourstory.
It's my story, I can't talkabout it.
I can't talk about it.
No, I don't want to talk aboutit.
You tell it once, twice.
You keep telling it, it once,twice and you keep telling it.
Pretty soon, it's not your story.
It's the story, and once it'sthe story, it no longer has a
pull on you and you're freedfrom it.
It's not it.
You're freed from yourattachment to it.
(01:07:44):
Attachment to it.
Are we getting into Buddhismnow?
Nope, not getting into Buddhism.
Not getting into all thatEastern stuff Not here in
America.
We don't talk about nothing.
I don't know.
It turns out that there are somany people who have been
talking about the truth indifferent languages, from
different places, that all weneed to do is open our ears and
(01:08:04):
we'll hear it.
By the way, we're all the same,okay.
Now let's go on.
Um, so okay and listen.
You, isabella, you got to dosomething because your left
breast is getting bigger andit's hard and all that stuff.
So you have not taken care ofthe toxicities.
You've got to deal with that,all right.
So we're talking about a juicecleanse, three, four, six weeks,
whatever you need to do.
Eating healthy I don't knowwhat you mean by that.
(01:08:25):
There's only one type of foodto eat and that's the food that
was designed for humans, andthat stuff grows right.
The red lights what red lights?
I don't know what you mean byred lights.
Are you using methylene blue?
And, as we know, uh, methyleneblue can be toxic and there are.
There's a way, uh, there's away around.
I didn't really think that we'dbe talking about this today,
(01:08:46):
but, uh, what do you call it?
Um, uh, the thing, the thething, uh, of the methylene blue
is that there is, anyway, itcan be toxic.
We've known that for a longtime.
In fact, when they do autopsieson people, they find that their
brain has been stained, blueand stuff like that.
There are toxicities from it,right, but something that is in
(01:09:12):
the same spectrum, fundamentallythe same spectrum of light, of
UV light.
It's called phycocyanin, right,and it comes from blue spirulina
, and if you can get that,you're basically getting the.
You're getting the same benefitthat you would get from
methylene blue, without anypossible toxicity.
(01:09:33):
It's called blue spirulina,right, and so that's very, it's
very important, okay, becausethe phycocyanin, which is the
pigment in the blue spirulina,as it over the pigments, in
other words, the, the, the rangeof uv that it absorbs, overlaps
with methylene blue, just inthe right place.
(01:09:55):
So you're going to get thebenefits.
Then you can use the red lighttherapies.
If that's how you're doing it,right, if that's how you're
doing it, I'm not sure howyou're using the red light,
because you can use red lighttherapy with and without the
methylene blue, okay, so if youare, I just want to let you know
I can't get this.
Let me try this for a while.
(01:10:15):
Good, so we're charging alittle bit.
Okay, there we go.
Okay, good, we're charging, allright.
So, anyway, I don't know how todo this, but am I okay?
Yeah, kind of Okay.
Anyway, whoops, come on overhere, you guys.
I'm talking to this machinehere.
Yeah, I have a relationshipwith the machine, you know.
So that's okay.
So, anyway, here's a questionfrom Judy.
(01:10:35):
She says I have colon CFC,stage four.
I also have low iron.
I understand certain types ofiron feed CFCs.
Which type of iron or brandshould I take?
Refuse an IV for ITON, becausenot sure if it would feed my
cfcs.
Okay, anyway.
(01:10:56):
So iron is.
There's no fundamental.
Well, reality, there's two.
Iron is iron.
It's one of the elements on theperiodic table of elements,
fundamental elements, and itcomes in two basic valences or
two basic conditions withregards to the amount of
(01:11:16):
electrons in its outer orbit.
That's all all elements do.
Right, hydrogen, helium heliumis balanced, but hydrogen,
lithium, oxygen, nitrogen,carbon, they're all.
So they are.
They're a bunch of protons andneutrons with electrons, and
when we talk about them beingplus or negative, we're talking
(01:11:40):
about electrons either beingextra or not enough.
Right, there we go.
All right, so that's it.
So iron comes in a three plus,which is called ferric, and a
two plus which is called ferrousokay, which is called ferric,
and a two plus, which is calledferrous Okay, and the ferric is
a storage form.
So that's what we're going tofind.
(01:12:00):
That's in plants.
When you're eating a plant,like spinach, like Popeye,
you're eating a plant and you'regoing to get ferric.
When it hits your stomach acid,it turns into ferrous.
Why is that important?
Because we can absorb ferrous.
We cannot absorb ferric.
We can't absorb the three plus,but we can absorb ferrous.
We cannot absorb ferric.
We can't absorb the 3+, but wecan absorb the 2+.
Why?
Because we have specificreceptors in our duodenum that
(01:12:23):
are called divalent cationreceptors.
Imagine that what's a cation?
An ion with a positive charge?
What's divalent?
I mean 2, so that's ferrous.
2 pluses oh my gosh, thatfits's.
Divalent mean Two, so that'sferrous.
Two pluses.
Oh my gosh, that fits, sodivalent.
So that's how that works.
Now, if you're also takingenough ascorbate, which is also
(01:12:44):
known as vitamin C, then thatsodium ascorbate, when it's in
your duodenum, if it finds anyof the ferrics, it'll turn them
into ferrices and they can getabsorbed.
Now, in terms of feeding CFCs,yes, cfcs have like 15 times
more receptors for iron thannon-CFC cells, 15 times more
(01:13:08):
transferrin receptors.
Transferrin is the moleculethat transfers iron around.
It's kind of like the what dothey call that in the US?
The something transit authority, the transit authority?
I don't know.
I know they have one in NewYork and LA.
Anyway, the transit authorityin iron in our blood is called
transferrin.
Imagine that, anyway, we havetransferrin receptors, in other
(01:13:31):
words, that's the bus station.
So the iron jumps on thetransferrin, gets transferred
over to any cell and it stops atthe transferrin receptor, which
is the bus station, and thenthe iron gets off.
Well, cfcs have 15 times moreof these bus stations because
they need iron.
Why?
Because you need iron to divideand they're dividing quickly.
(01:13:51):
That's it Okay, simple why?
Because you need iron to divideand they're dividing quickly.
That's it Okay, simple.
So now, whenever you eat iron,ingest iron.
However you get it, it's goingto be attracted more to the CFCs
just because it has morereceptors.
(01:14:12):
There's no way for that not tobe true.
Therefore, you have tounderstand that you need it,
otherwise you'll die.
And part of the problem withCFCs is they're going to grab it
.
You're going to get seconds.
Instead of first dibs on thefood, you're going to get second
dibs.
Now there's a way around it, andthat is you have to have a
cooperative, pitiful what do wecall it?
Pitiful, controlled, confinedphysician.
(01:14:34):
It used to be a pitifullyconfined physician If they have
them cooperative and order foryou erythropoietin.
So erythropoietin is a hormoneproduced by the kidneys that
stimulates, tells the bonemarrow to grab and start making
hemoglobin red blood cells.
That start making hemoglobinred blood cells.
(01:14:56):
All right, in order to do thathemoglobin has, right in the
middle of every porphyrin ringis a big juicy iron ferrous.
Therefore, if the bone marrowis going feed me, feed me, feed
me, feed me, and we know thatthe CFCs are saying feed me,
feed me, feed me, you're goingto have a little bit more
support if you can give someextra erythropoietin.
(01:15:19):
So you give that extraerythropoietin, then you do an
IV of iron.
So you give the erythropoietin,you give 40,000 units IV.
Normally it's givensubcutaneous, so your doctor's
going to say right, richard, wedon't do that, we do do that.
Yeah, we do that, and underthis circumstance.
What circumstance?
This circumstance, by the way,we were doing that for a few
(01:15:43):
years.
Right, I came from New York toArizona.
I was already doing that.
And then the rep from what wasit?
Genentech I don't know Whateverthe pharmaceutical company is
that promotes Procrit Procrit isbasically a Rutherford point
Said hey, we've come up with anew protocol, let's give the IV
(01:16:04):
first, followed by the greatidea you guys?
So, anyway, that was the idea,that's what we've been doing.
It works.
Iv, procrit, epigen, or howeveryou want to call it, iv,
procreate epigen, or how are youwith 40 000 units?
Now you've given it, now it'spriming, now the bone marrow are
saying iron, iron, iron.
What do you do?
You give an iron.
(01:16:24):
So then you give iv venifer.
Venifer is the leastpotentially problematic way of
giving intravenous iron and youcan give milligrams the first
time if you're worried, or 100.
Normally, what we do Depends upto the physician's discretion.
If they have any discretionleft, or if they're just
(01:16:48):
algorithmic maniacs, then theycan't have discretion, because
algorithmic maniacs are onlyalgorithmical.
You can't ask them anythingother than algorithmical.
I can't expect anything otherthan an algorithmical response,
however.
So the idea is you prime thebone marrow to grab the iron and
(01:17:10):
then you give the iron IV.
You're going to get if you justgave 40,000, you're probably
going to get no one's measuredit, unmeasurable but you're
probably going to get greaterthan 50% going there, 60% and
you're going to see some redblood cell production and less
to the CFCs.
So the idea is, if we want toend that whole, cfc has
(01:17:31):
predominance over that iron.
Got to get rid of the cfcs andthat's what our whole program
would do.
Right, got to do that, so wegot to remember that.
All right.
So now, so you can get the iviron, but you got to get the
erythropoietin first.
Okay, judy natalie, can I street?
Can I treat stage four cfcpatient with ititic proof?
(01:17:51):
He's on morphine, six tabs aday plus other painkillers.
Tried seven rounds of chemowith no success Oral cavity
chemo, so lots of pain andissues with opening the mouth
and eating solids.
Currently very weak and stomachburns all the time.
Can I start the anti-parasitictreatment for 21 days?
(01:18:12):
Will the medication have sideeffects in regards to the other
pain meds being taken?
What will some of the otherside effects be.
I need assistance to ensure,when I start this treatment,
that the patient's conditionwon't get worse or serious side
effects resulting in having togo to the hospital.
Wow, I hear you, natalie, inhaving to go to the hospital.
(01:18:36):
Wow, I hear you, natalie.
So when you say an oral CFC, soit's called nasopharyngeal, so
it either started on the tongueor in the back of the throat
somewhere, and it's a bummerplace for this to start because
it has to do with eating anddrinking and breathing.
So that's the problem, you know, you know, and then, and so any
(01:18:58):
growth or pain or anything likethat is going to could
potentially impact your abilityto eat, breathe and drink.
So very, very difficult to do,very difficult to do.
And uh, now, so he's on painmedicines and the stomach's
(01:19:19):
burning all the time.
So well, let's deal withdifferent situations.
If the stomach's burning, um,now, contrary to what you're
probably going to be told, thatit's acid, that it's the lack of
acid, and what happens is thestomach becomes less and less
acidic and becomes more and moreovergrown, likely to be
overgrown by fungus, by yeast.
(01:19:39):
And I don't know if his wife'sgetting his mouth is getting
white now, but it might not be,because if he's got CFCs in
there, they're producing lacticacid and it's going to not allow
the funguses to.
It'll keep them at bay.
So I don't know if that's it.
But there's something callednystatin.
They just swish and swallow andit's an antifungal and it
sounds like I'd have to be.
(01:20:00):
I'm not telling you what to do,I'm just saying that for this
person that you're talking about, the, the continual stomach
burning could very well berelated to fungus or fungal
overgrowth in both the esophagusand stomach.
Antacids and proton pumpinhibitors are the opposite of
what you need.
You would need hydrochloricacid capsules and antifungals or
(01:20:27):
nystatin oral.
You got to find a willingdoctor or nurse practitioner or
physician's assistant ornaturopath to help you, excuse
me.
So the pain is due to the lesionin the mouth and that lesion in
the mouth is probablycompressing things and the
(01:20:49):
fundamental last process that'sgoing on, that's causing the
pain, is called inflammation.
However, when you're in thetongue, in the mouth, like that,
there's also access to orthere's easily.
Easily you could be affectingsome of the nerves, especially
the cranial nerves, like cranialnerve 11, which comes to the
tongue, the nasopharyngeal, andthere are other.
(01:21:10):
You know there's number five,cranial nerve, number five and
number seven, so these nerves.
If the tumor eroded some ofthat area and you touch the
nerves, then you're having nervepain.
So nerve pain is different thaninflammatory pain, even though
it's basically the same thinggoing on in nerve tissue versus
(01:21:33):
other tissue.
And that is when you damage atissue of any kind, its response
is inflammation to heal.
So an inflamed nerve versus aninflamed bone or gum, gum or
tongue.
So the pains are a littledifferent.
But nonetheless, the ibuprofenas long as there's no
(01:21:53):
contraindications to ibuprofen,which is not a drug that makes
you high, it's not an opiate.
And the reason I'm saying thatis because you want to get them
off opiates, because opiateseventually, as soon as you can.
You want to get them offopiates because opiates not only
lower the pain threshold,meaning that which was painful,
(01:22:16):
that which wasn't painfulyesterday, is painful today.
So the threshold for pain keepsgetting less and less and less.
Now everything's painful.
So in that regard it doesn'thelp.
The best thing that they canhope for with opiates is to make
you not care about the pain.
It doesn't get rid of it, itmakes you not care about it.
Now, the other thing it does,though, is it paralyzes your gut
(01:22:37):
.
That's most notable withconstipation.
We notice it because we'reconstipated worse than normal,
which can be deadly.
But we have to understand whenthe opiates are paralyzing the
gut, they're not just paralyzingthe lower part of the gut,
they're paralyzing the upperpart of the gut as well, which
means your ability to digest andassimilate and absorb is
(01:23:00):
impaired as well.
So we're talking aboutmalnourishment and digestion and
constipation, which is thecontinual reabsorption of toxins
, which is none of it is good,healthy.
And then, finally, if thatweren't enough, the opiates
directly suppress natural killercells.
So we want to wean him off it.
So we want to use non-steroidalanti-inflammatory agents such
(01:23:22):
as ibuprofen, and then Ketorolacor Endor.
You can use rectal depositoriesof high doses of cannabis, with
the THC to CBD ratio being fourto one, and you want to do a
total of at least 500 milligrams.
Small enough depository so thatit stays at the deeper end of
(01:23:46):
the rectum because that partwill be absorbed.
I'm sorry, you don't want it tobe at the outer, you want it to
be small enough so it remainsin the outer two-thirds, because
the outer two-thirds of therectum will absorb into the
systemic circulation, the venacava, but the inner two-thirds,
which you don't inner one-third,which you don't want, will
(01:24:07):
absorb through the portal veininto the liver where it'll get
turned into a psychoactivesubstance.
You don't want it to get turnedin because you have to take 500
milligrams.
So you don't want to get 500milligrams high because it's not
high, it's very low.
You don't want to be like that.
No one does, not even Cheechand Chong, that don't want that.
(01:24:30):
So rectal suppositories in theouter two-thirds of the rectum,
put them in.
You lie down and put them inand wait about 30 minutes.
It should be absorbed.
Then you can walk around andthen do one at night when you go
to sleep.
But you might have to do threeat the beginning to get off of
the narcotics so you can get thegood pain-relieving effect of
(01:24:53):
it, the analgesic effect,without getting high
psychoactive, which is great.
And then you take a little bitof non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory agents likeibuprofen, keto.
You can take care of this painwhile you're trying to eliminate
it, while you're eliminatingthe tumor.
And yes, the antiparasitics arefine as long as the liver is.
You only have to adjust thedosages.
If the liver enzymes are high,that's all so.
(01:25:15):
But if he's having trouble withuh opening the mouth and eating
solids, I don't know how you'regoing to do that unless you
have a compounding pharmacist.
Turn these uh medications intoliquids and then you can put
them as a liquid.
Or perhaps you can, if he canswallow, like thicker, soupy
things.
You could blend them in withsomething like a spinach avocado
(01:25:41):
soup and you blend it in withthat within a small amount,
because he probably won't beable to eat that much.
A small amount half a cup.
So there are ways of doing it.
But unless the liver enzymesare not, they're elevated.
You have to adjust the dosagesof frequency.
But other than that, if they'renot elevated, then you could
just go all right.
Now where is it okay?
(01:26:04):
So so this is okay.
This is a Brian Brent.
I'm a 72-year-old male.
I was having CFC treatment foran aggressive prostate bone you
mean nuclear, okay.
I had a heart attackmid-November and had to stop my
whatever Tervecto treatments for17 weeks.
(01:26:24):
During that time my PSA markerswent up in value.
Now my oncologist is refusingto resume the Tervecto treatment
.
My family wants me to pursueivermectin and other repurposed
medications.
What is your advice?
Well, brandt, sounds likeyou're just getting on the train
and you missed about the last47 stops where we had really
(01:26:48):
great discussions.
So, brandt, now you're a youngman, you're younger than me,
okay, younger than me, okay,anyway, brand, first of all,
when you know nuclear medicine,I mean it's crazy, like we've
come to accept it.
But you know, nuclear nuclearmedicine is, especially when it
comes to prostate, uh, it's uh,the radium 223 and the Pluvicto,
(01:27:10):
which is lutein 177.
Anyway, so the radium one is analpha-emitting
radiopharmaceutical.
Can you imagine that's a wordradiopharmaceutical?
It's an alpha-emittingradiopharmaceutical which mimics
calcium, so it gets pulled intothe bone and then it irradiates
(01:27:32):
wherever those are.
It's pulled into the bone andthen it irradiates wherever
those are.
So it's going to irradiate thelittle cells in our body that
are making bone, calledosteoblasts, and it blasts the
osteoblasts.
They can't do it, which is whyit's partially effective.
And then the other one, thePluvicto, gets both soft tissue
and hard tissue, so both boneand so together.
(01:27:55):
This is the nuclear medicine'sanswer to prostate.
Cfcs Again, it's the militaryapproach and all that sort of
stuff.
There's many other things youcan be doing many, many other
things.
Right, because there areestrogen receptors in bone and
CFCs in the prostate are growingbecause of being watered by
estrogen, not testosterone.
Excuse me, I slept sort ofanyway.
(01:28:18):
So what we need to understandis see, here's the thing just
what you with.
The message I got from you isthat I really liked doing this
conventional stuff and I wasreally happy with it.
And then I had a heart attack.
You, the reason you had a heartattack was the same reason you
have the prostate cfcs.
Heart attack the reason you hada heart attack was the same
reason you have the prostateCFCs.
One more time the reason youhad the heart attack is the same
reason you have the prostateCFCs.
(01:28:39):
How can that be true?
Because the heart problem andthe CFC problem are different
apples on the same tree.
The tree is called toxemia.
Toxemia is the toxins in theblood being transported, coming
from everywhere you can think of, including, and probably most
(01:29:00):
proportionally wise, the mouth.
There's an old expression thatwe dig our graves with our teeth
.
So the reason this is allhappening so it sounds like to
me and you're saying so now he'srefusing to poison me and
irradiate me because I think Iwas getting good results.
Now my family's come up withsome weird stuff about
ivermectin.
I hope you can change your mind?
(01:29:21):
I hope that's not.
I hope I'm reading you wrong.
I'm hoping that you realizethat you're not going to kill
the cancer, because that's notwhat's happening.
Your body is doing what itneeds to do under the
circumstances, and you need tochange those circumstances so it
doesn't need to do that anymore.
All right, so, yeah, anyway,you've got a lot of work to do.
(01:29:45):
We've got a lot to do with you,brent, because you've got to
understand that many, manythings.
So, brent, you have got to jointhe cfc group.
Okay, just join the cfc group,because we'll give you all the
answers and this will give youprotocols to follow, ways to a
basic way on a basic program, onhow you can take care of
(01:30:07):
yourself and get through this.
All right, because I can thistoo.
It's too extremely detailed forme to do that here.
That's why I have these groups,so we can do that.
Okay, everybody.
So sawadikap namaste, namaskaraloha.
And uh, you know, remember, thetwo-legged parasites are
(01:30:28):
cowards because they live in thecyber land.
They don't come out and say,hey man, all man, All right.
So, anyway, avoid those guys,all right.
And I remember, I don't doanything except these live
stream those three groups,that's it, and I post some stuff
, all right.
So I just don't want people todo things and think I
recommended it because I don'twant you to be harmed because
(01:30:50):
you will.
I don't know what people aresaying is suggesting Anyway, you
to be harmed because you will.
I don't know what people aresaying is suggesting anyway.
So the process you got to join.
Okay, don't Brant, just jointhe CFC group.
Go to drlodycom, get on thereand join the CFC group so we can
help you.
I expect to be talking to youtomorrow on it.
Right, we're going to have aconversation tomorrow, you and I
, brant, all right, you guysnext week, where are we?
(01:31:12):
Oh, my, we are, and shall we go?
Yeah, let's go, hello.