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April 15, 2025 108 mins

Dr. Thomas Lodi delivers a paradigm-shifting examination of health that challenges everything we've been taught about disease. Instead of viewing illnesses as external entities attacking our bodies, he reveals how what we call "diseases" are actually our bodies' adaptations to improper biological conditions. This perspective transforms health from fighting against symptoms to creating the optimal environment for natural healing.

At the heart of Dr. Lodi's message is a powerful truth: your body was designed to function optimally. When all biological requirements are met, health emerges naturally. It's only when these requirements aren't satisfied that adaptations occur – adaptations we've labeled as diseases. This applies to everything from chronic conditions to cancer, which Dr. Lodi explains as cells that have switched to permanent fermentation due to damaged mitochondria.

The conversation delves into practical applications of this philosophy, addressing gut dysbiosis underlying conditions like autism and IBS, proper removal of mercury fillings, and effective treatments for parasites. Dr. Lodi emphasizes that restoration of balance through proper nutrition, elimination of toxins, and psychological wellbeing creates an internal environment where chronic conditions cannot thrive.

Most compelling is Dr. Lodi's reminder of the miracle already working within us – our bodies conducting 37 sextillion chemical reacti

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Join Dr. Lodi’s informative
13th or 14th, depending on yourperspective, depending on what
side of the planet you're on.
Oh, that's right.
There's only two sides to theplanet right, the top and the
bottom, because the planet isflat.
It's a flat planet.
I forgot, yeah.
So anyway, I'm kind of old.

(00:22):
I guess you call it old schoolbecause it's just called physics
.
I was just trying to figure outthe physics.
I'm willing to accept anything.
I'll even accept the fact thatmen get pregnant.
Just tell me how.
I just need to know how.
How did they get pregnant?
What's the biology?
And then, for the flat planet,just give me the physics.
I'm trying to picture it.
We're still in Newtonian right.

(00:44):
Just give me the physics.
I'm trying to picture it.
We're still in Newtonian right.
There's Newtonian physics.
Good morning, donna.
Cheryl, cool People are justpopping up.
That's beautiful, all right.
So thank you, donna.
You know binders, the questionabout binders.
There's different kinds ofbinders, but I like humic and
fulvic acids because they don'tbind usually things that are

(01:09):
nutrients.
They pretty much grab the badstuff.
So there's a lot of places youcan get it, like Cellcor makes
it.
It's called biotoxin, so that'swhat I use, so it's good.
Fumic and colbic acid.

(01:32):
Okay, hey, by the way, goingback to the insanity that I have
an awesome for all to readcalled Breath.
Very good, hey, marley.
Good morning, good evening.
Uh, it's called breath by jamesnester.
It's got to be good.
That's a great title.
The breath is your life.
It's where god to live hangsout in your body.

(01:54):
If you have it, give it alocation anyway.
Uh, oh, my gosh, poor, poor,everybody.
All right, so let's get on withit.
So I just want to remindeveryone.
So I'm going to migrate over tojust doing X, because YouTube is
flagging me, for some reason,this stuff, whereas if I were
talking about I don't know,pedophilia, that would be fine.

(02:17):
I can talk about, I can talkabout or bestiality or something
weird, that's totally cool, buttalking about, like, health and

(02:37):
stuff, we're not into that, soanyway.
So eventually I'm going to becut off everything because I'm
not talking in the communitycenter, I'm not within the
community standards.
Believe me, if talking abouthealth and how to maintain it or
restore it, if that's not inthe community standards or
guidelines on legitimate,worthwhile conversation, then

(02:59):
I'm in the wrong communitybecause that's in my community.
That would be kind of likesomething to talk about, not
whether or not which.
Well, which bathroom shouldthey use?
Uh, well, doesn't it depend ontheir pronouns?
Yeah, that's important.
We got to think about that.
I'm going to focus on that.
I'm going to spend all weektrying to figure out what
bathroom people should use.

(03:19):
Um, and I think it is very muchpredicated on their pronouns.
I don't know, man, it'ssomething worth spending my time
on.
Health.
Let's not talk about health.
There's no such thing.
You're not going to be healthy,you're going to get sick.
You're going to die young.
I mean, that's what it's allabout, right?
So that's why you've got to goto a doctor from the beginning.

(03:44):
You're not going to be taken tothe doctor, you're going to be
born in the hospital.
The reason we're going to haveyou born in the hospital is
because we have decided we andthe Rockefeller crime family
have decided that pregnancy is adisease.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it'snot something, that something
gets into you.
What is it that gets into you?
It's called sperm.
Yeah, okay, anyway.

(04:06):
So, as soon as it's a diseaseand therefore it has to be
overseen by a doctor, aphysician needs to oversee your
pregnancy, okay, and then, whenthe baby comes out, we have to
immediately slap it on the assand then quickly start putting
stuff in its eyes and giving itinjections immediately.
So, wow, I just saw thiscoolest bird.

(04:30):
It looks like a wow, I don'teven know Anyway really big bird
just landed on the top of thatroof over there.
Jeez, you'd think I'm somewhereexotic, like, I don't know,
southeast Asia or something,looks like it Anyway.
So you're born in the hospitalbecause we don't want to asia or
something looks like it anyway.
So you're born in the hospitalbecause we don't want to have
you take the baby to the doctor.
We have the doctor to be therewhen it's born.

(04:52):
You immediately start and,mother, you better get some
insurance.
What is insurance?
Insurance is making sure thatthe hospital gets paid all.
Now, we're going to do that.
If, by some odd bizarre chance,your baby is relatively healthy
, you bring them in anyway.
We'll call it a health check,but we're going to make sure

(05:14):
that the baby gets sicker andsicker, and sicker.
That's right.
Then you get regular.
Do you realize that if you talkto someone, you're talking to
someone at work or whatever, andthey'll say so who's your
doctor?
As if someone says who's yourmother, or how's your mother?
I don't have a doctor, what?

(05:37):
You don't have a doctor?
What's wrong with you?
Yeah, so anyway.
So we have a great society here.
It's a society that ensuresthat we are not gonna are we
gonna get sick and we're gonnabe.
We're gonna be taking drugs andwe're gonna be dependent, we're
gonna be stupid the rest ourwhole lives and then we're gonna
die in the end, usually in anicu and all sorts of machines

(05:58):
swallowing us up.
So you'll be, you'll die, in anicu being swallowed up by
machines.
You, you're born.
And the minute you're born,what does the doctor do?
Hi, no, slap on the ass.
Hey, welcome to planet Earth.
Now we're going to get you andthat's it.
Now, ike.
But if I talk about another wayto live, then I'm like, totally

(06:18):
like I've got to be censored.
Oh, but you want to talk aboutpreteen transgenders.
Which bathroom should thepreteen transgenders use?
There's a good one for you.
You guys get back to me on thatone.
Anyway, I think I got off on thewrong stop here.
Is this really planet Earth?
Are we still on planet Earth,you guys?
Because I'm like, what Flat menget pregnant?

(06:42):
Pregnant children are changingtheir what?
Don't talk about health, talkabout, uh, your mind on when is
your website person?
And the question about thewebsite, it's um, I'm not part
of that whole thing, so, butit's very close, believe me.
It's very close to getting thatwet.

(07:03):
That together you're gonna have, you're gonna, we're going to
be able to get all thesemedications, all right.
So you have here this womansaying she has that's something
we can talk about.
I think we should talk aboutBRCA a little bit.
Yeah, yeah, truth on.
You know, the truth is notwithin the community guidelines.
So, anyway, as you all know,we're going to migrate over to X
because we have to, and so,know, we're going to migrate

(07:24):
over to x because, um, we haveto and um, so start watching it
on x.
And you know, I mean because Iknow instagram and facebook are
going to one day.
Just, I mean, youtube just sentus a notice saying that, um, one
more violation.
And I didn't know I was gettingviolated.
What did I get violated?
It got violated for, uh, it wasa video about.
Uh, oh, I was talking about thegerson diet or something.
I guess I was, I don't know.

(07:45):
I was answering a question, Idon't know what it was, but they
deleted the video and they gaveme a notice that I was talking
about the Gerson diet and that'snot community standards.
I've been talking about themoney.
You could what a deal, what adeal.
You can take the whole familyout for a Sunday night dinner,

(08:08):
probably for less than $10.
The whole family, kids,everybody at KFC or Burger King
and everybody will get full andit's delicious.
Yeah, yeah, now that I can talk, that would be fun.
So you see, the world we livein is.

(08:32):
We have two choices we eitherchange it or we got to get off
this planet.
We got to find a way out ofthis planet, off the planet
Because fantastic, ufo Everybody.
Hey, thank you guys.
So much Nipple discharge aftertaking Fanben Breast cysts
getting smaller, akinokakas, wow, okay, you know I want to let

(08:54):
me.
Okay, I got to try to say itlike at least on one line here.
So bear with me, you guys.
So I just want to remind youall that we're on all social
media, except for TikTok, tiktok, tiktok, because I violate the
community standards all the time.
And at DR Thomas Lodi, ofcourse, dr is Dr Thomas Lodi,

(09:17):
and except for X, formerly knownas Twitter, I'm at DR Thomas
Lodi, right, md, mythologydoctor, remember that, and then
that's it.
Or you can go to the websitedrthomaslodi, drlodicom, slash
live and then you can livestream from there.

(09:37):
Youtube, I'm out yeah, theydon't like me at all.
Even LinkedIn me, you know, uh,even, uh, linkedin and uh.
So now the groups, they'regetting cool, they're getting a
little bit bigger.
But you know, what's weird is,no matter how many people that
sign up, it's always like thesame.

(09:59):
Because I do like twice a week,I do zooms like this, this, but
it's just us and I can actuallysay things that are, I can say,
the unspeakable, theunthinkable.
It's called the truth, it'sunthinkable.
I don't want you to think aboutthe truth, but I do.
But anyway, what's weird isthat it's always the same, it's
like the same 10 people.

(10:19):
I don't understand, anyway.
So I don't understand very muchand you know, the longer I live
, the more I study, the more Irealize I know less today than I
did yesterday.
So, health and healing theparasite group and the CFC group
and the health and healinggroup, by the way, coming, I
think it's going to be May.

(10:40):
Are we in it?
Yeah, we're April, right, Ithink it's May 1st Around.
That is when Vanessa and Darrenare going to start.
I hope you all had a chance toto see that when they were on on
a couple of weeks ago on ourSunday Night Live, but I had
them, like, introduce themselvesand all that I thought was

(11:01):
great.
So what I've asked the team todo is to extract that part of it
out of the live and startputting it out there so you guys
can see yeah, you're welcomefor broadcasting live.
I love it.
I mean, there's one more doc.
There's one more.
One more doc.
Hi, there, you're new, not tothe planet, you're just maybe

(11:25):
new to this group.
But that's fine, that's good.
Well, thank you, welcomeeveryone.
Uh, and you gail, you can'tafford cfc, if you're okay.
Well, do the cfc group.
I have the uh health and healinggroup.
Join the health and healinggroup because we will be able to
talk about anything.
No, anyway, join these groups.
And so darren and uh vanessaare going to be on there, and

(11:47):
then also Garfield for the rawchef to teach.
So we're going to have all thisstuff as just part of the
membership, in addition tohearing my madness right, and
interacting with me.
Now, what else are we doing?
So that's it Right.
Okay, turn off your VP, turn onsome lights.
That's the instructions.
Those are actually oldinstructions from last year,

(12:08):
when I was moretechno-illiterate in those days.
By the way, folks, I had toprepare for that lecture I gave
the other night.
For me it was night, for you itwas probably a Saturday morning
.
I don't know if you all had achance to see it.
What was that show?
What was that?
It going on.
It's the, and then next weekendI'm going to be on a panel for

(12:30):
that.
What's it called?
It's called the Truth AboutLife.
Are we back on now?
You're welcome, sue.
My absolute, real pleasure.
I'm not, by the way.
I don't just say things.
Are we back on now?
Because they told me that wewent off for a second, and I
trust I have no doubt thateverybody behind the scenes that

(12:52):
has evolved with our technologycares about us and they've got
our best interests in mind.
That's their intention.
Their intention is for us tohave a really safe, wonderful
and happy life, and that's whatour governments want.
I don't care what countryyou're in.
Our governments all want us tobe a really safe, wonderful and
happy life, and that's what ourgovernments want.
I don't care what countryyou're in Our governments all
want us to be happy and healthy,and you know, see, that I won't
get kicked off anything as longas I say stuff like that Can I

(13:14):
speak?
I found you and just saw youwere live.
Yay, can I speak about autism?
All right, so I'll do it.
Do it just so you all know, ifyou are new, the format for this
.
You go to the live websitedrlodycom and there's a place
and you can submit questions andthen I read them and then the

(13:35):
groups though could we?
It's, it's an interaction, youknow, when the question comes to
your mind, then you ask me andI can, we can go back and forth.
Classical music, that's it.
Oh, I gotta talk about thesethings.
I I've got to remember.
Ok, so, classical music, autismI'll tell you about the miracle
, julie, you guys have to remindme that.
Ok, I got to answer thesequestions.
But here let me just realquickly say did not exist when I

(13:57):
was a kid.
Neither did Alzheimer's,neither did HIV, and I don't
know there's so many of diseasesout there that they weren't
here.
And the truth is, the reason iseveryone is there, are they,
are they?
There are no diseases, theydon't.
There's no diseases, like thereare mountains over there,

(14:19):
there's an ocean over there,there's cars, but there's no
diseases anywhere, which is howwe think your body is going to
always adapt to.
First of all, if you're, ifyou're living a life that is
providing all of your biologicalrequirements and psychological
requirements, then your bodywill function optimally, it'll
just, and that optimalfunctioning is called health.

(14:41):
Now, if you're providing, ifyou're not satisfying all your
biological requirements and orpsychological requirements, your
body will have to adapt, andthose adaptations are called
diseases.
But the point is this nothinghappened got into you.
It's your body adapting, sowhat we call autism.

(15:03):
And now there's autism spectrumdisorder, which means they
weren't you know.
Oh, you didn't fit thedefinition, so we're going to
broaden the definition.
We'll call it a spectrumdisorder.
Right, it's a rainbow.
You know what the color you'retalking about?
It's in the rainbow.
Anyway, there's no such thingas autism.
What happened to your child isyour child has been poisoned,

(15:25):
and I'm not sure what, but it'susually these injections that
children get when they're bornin either the last century or
this century, in an institution,or even if they're born at home
.
They have to quickly be takento an institution where they
start to be injected with allkinds of things to protect them,

(15:46):
and so I'm not sure whathappened in your case.
So how would you deal with it?
Well, first of all, there'ssome substances that are in
those injections, that are onthe metallic side, and you can
do.
There's a the Greek word forclaw or grab is like chile.

(16:07):
How come the keeps going?
Your device unexpectedlystopped, my device unexpectedly
stopped.
Don't blame it on the device.
Are we back on you guys?
Hello, can you tell me?
Are we back on Hello?
Somebody on Facebook or X, orare we back on Hello?
Are we back on hello?
Are we back on?

(16:28):
You're still on?
Great, okay, so it went off,okay.
So, anyway, the thing aboutautism.
So we're talking about autismand, um, you know, just think
about the word auto.
It's a country, the word autoself, right, it's autism.
So it's saying that you're,you're, your, your perspective
on your, your, your ability torelate to the world is very
limited and you're pretty muchliving within your own mind.

(16:51):
Well, the truth is, if that'sit, then we're all autistic
because everybody lives in theirown world.
Right, and what?
Ok, youtube as well.
Like, for example, what I'mexperiencing and, and let's say,
you're next to me and we're atthe same event, we're having the
same input.
We're having two differentperceptual perceptions.

(17:13):
So my reality is thatperception.
Your reality is that perception.
We're not talking about thereality of reality.
What is real?
That that doesn't matter toeach individual, because the
schizophrenic who's having anargument with someone that we
can't see and is, you know,really angry, and keeps hearing
this, this voice keeps talkingto them.
That's real for them.
They're, they're, they're angry, they're in anguish, they're

(17:36):
going through.
That's real for them.
That's reality.
It's not my reality, it's yourreality.
But that's their reality, right, so, anyway, I'm just so.
It's our perceptions, all right.
So, which the truth is?
We are all actually.
That's what we are.
We're living within our.

(17:58):
In psychology there's a termcalled perceptual set.
In other words, your body, yourmind is actually tuned to
perceive the two things.
There's sensation, which meansany energy, whether it's sound,
light, mechanical, heat, doesn'tmatter.

(18:19):
Whatever the chemical thatenergy when it impacts your body
.
We have chemical that energywhen it impacts your body.
We have sensory receptors eyesfor light, ears for sound,
chemical receptors in our noseand our tongue for chemicals.
And then heat.
And then we have proprioception.
We have a sense of balance, wehave a sense of gravity, all

(18:41):
these senses.
So it's the environmentimpacting us.
Those are called sensations.
They get turned into anelectrical impulse which goes
into our brain and they go todifferent parts of our brain and
then it goes through of CarlSagan, billions and billions of
synapses with neurons and in theend is a consequence of the

(19:05):
sensory input, plus your history, your current physical
condition, if you're well or notwell, your motivation and your
experiences and your culture,and so all those things will

(19:25):
take that sensory input and youcome up with an eye, you come up
with a perception, and that'swhat we call reality.
And the truth is we never knowwhat's really out there, because
all I know is that I can, Ihave light about.
Light is is, uh, reflecting offof whatever is out there,
hitting my retina, going aroundto the optic nerve, going into
the occipital part of my brain,electrical.
I mean that's you have torealize.

(19:46):
We're not really.
We don't know what's out there.
All we Going around to theoptic nerve, going into the
occipital part of my brain,electrical, I mean that's what
you have to realize.
We're not really.
We don't know what's out there.
All we know is what's going onhere?
So autism, anyway, your son ifit was a son, I think it was a
son has been poisoned and youhave to get rid of the poison
and make sure there's no morepoison for this beautiful child.
No more poison.
And how do you not poison them?

(20:08):
You give them food that has nothad any chemicals used in
raising it, growing it, okay,and you give it human food.
And, by the way, humans arewhat?
We are pluckers and we areplanters and we are artists and
we are planters and we areartists and we are lovers,

(20:32):
caress, and we are, but we'renot killers.
You got to really work hard tokill someone or kill something.
And I mean, how would I kill acow with my hands?
Could I kill a cow with myhands and tell me something?
Can you imagine?
Here I'm walking down a nicebeautiful road and I see a cow
with my hands.
Could I kill a cow with myhands and tell me something?
Can you imagine I'm here, I'mgoing to walk, I'm walking down
a nice beautiful road and I seea cow drinking, eating gas, the
grass.
So I look at the cow eatinggrass and I go, wow, that looks

(20:56):
delicious.
Huh, and he would ever behelped.
Like, okay, I get so distractedreading these things.
There's this autism.
Other people are, so autism isa very it's an important subject
, only because you have torealize there's no such thing.
And now we're calling itspectrum disorder, which means

(21:20):
that doesn't means that doesn't.
Anyway, you got someone.
Every time you're not feelinggreat and wonderful or you're
not functioning great andwonderful perfectly, it's
because a by a law of biologyhas been violated, you're not
getting what you need or you'regetting what you don't need and
that your body's trying to dealwith it.

(21:42):
That's the only thing thathappens, because if your body
gets what it needs and you're uh, and it doesn't get what it
doesn't need, it's trying todeal with it.
That's the only thing thathappens, because if your body
gets what it needs and itdoesn't get what it doesn't need
, it's going to functionoptimally.
That's just the law of.
That's the gift.
By the way, someone earliermentioned that they're looking
for a miracle.
We've got the miracle.
The miracle is that we arealive.
The miracle is that there are aminimum of 37 sextillion

(22:02):
chemical reactions going on inyour body, my body, everyone's
body, every second.
We're making anywhere from 37trillion, a million to maybe 80
million new cells every second.
So we are a dynamic process.
We are not something thathappened, we are something that
is happening.

(22:23):
So we're a happening and thishappening is changing.
And what we are right now wewill not be next week.
And what we were last weekwe're not that now.
In other words, we're dynamic.
And if you understand that we'redynamic and you understand that
the body is adapting, then allyou got to do is work on the
environment in which your body,your cells are living.

(22:47):
If you can work in thatenvironment so that it provides
everything your body needs andnothing that it doesn't need,
guess what's going to happen?
It's going to optimalfunctioning.
You understand, optimalfunctioning is health.
Humans.
We don't even know what optimalfunctioning is, and the reason
I say that is because the CIAand the KGB during the Cold War

(23:11):
had a program that involvedremote viewing, where they would
take their agents and put themthrough training and they would
learn how to do remote viewingand that is basically to quiet
their bodies down and then theywould leave.
They would leave and go travel.
They were part of the spy.
You know, soviet, americanespionage programs.

(23:36):
So, but here's a guy lying inSan Francisco, in whatever,
wherever doing it, the program,and he would come back and say,
hey, you know, there's a Sovietsub at this latitude and this
longitude off the coast of Maineand they would find it there.
And the Soviets, the KGB, woulddo the same thing.

(23:56):
Okay, so, remote viewing, theyspent a lot of money, the
program was probably still going.
So here's the thing why didn'twe all grow up learning that?
Why didn't we grow up learninghow to do that?
Because that wouldn't be likereally, really beyond convenient
.
It's very convenient if youpress this button and you can

(24:19):
turn the air condition on.
That's convenient, I mean.
So what's really convenient isum being able to make use of, to
understand the capabilities ofthis incredible gift.
So the miracle is that we havean unmiraculous, we have a
miraculous, incredible earthsuit and the immune system, the

(24:39):
protective.
You understand, the immunesystem of different uh organisms
, for example.
The immune system of differentorganisms, for example, the
immune system of cabbage,cauliflower, bok choy, broccoli.
Their immune system is a littledifferent.
They produce these chemicalsand enzymes and so when an
insect is going to, becausethat's one of their big enemies,

(24:59):
and it takes a bite out of itand it mixes that enzyme with
that chemical, it turns intoanother chemical reaction and it
kills a bite out of it.
And it mixes that enzyme withthat chemical, it turns into
another.
It's a chemical reaction, uh,and it kills the insect.
For us, though, if we eat that,it stimulates it up, regulates
phase two detoxification of ourliver, it helps our, our
hormones metabolize in a healthymanner.

(25:22):
It's all kinds of amazing,amazing.
So so you know.
So the point is this if we areliving According to the
biological laws that define ourparticular Biology species, then

(25:46):
we're going to be optimallyfunctioning.
We were designed to beoptimally functioning.
All right, this immune system,if it's fully operational, you
cannot have CFCs.
Parasites don't have a chance.
I mean on and on.
And if you do have CFCs and youwere to get your system
functioning optimally, within aweek at most it would all be
gone.
That's how fantastic.

(26:08):
So we've all been given thismiracle.
The problem is we're blockingit.
We're blocking the miracle andwe're blocking it fundamentally.
I mean, yes, the way we liveour lives is to health.
We live in a way that is notcompatible with optimal
functioning.

(26:28):
That's how we live, but morefundamental than that is our
mind, fear and doubt and anger,regret.
Those are the big ones, butthey're all pivoting on it.
That blocks the miracle.
It is the most powerfulimmunosuppressive period,
nothing more powerful, maybefive years.

(26:51):
So we got some pretty coolimmune suppressing things going
on in our world.
And, by the way, I just want toremind you something.
Listen, we've never had it sogood.
We're living longer than allthe generations of humans before
.
And we've never had it so good.
Huh, really.

(27:11):
Oh, but didn't you wait?
Then you say that like 80.
I know it's underestimate, butthen you say like 85% of all our
illnesses are due to lifestyle,right?
So 150 years ago our lifestyleswere not like this, so all
those elements in that lifestyleand our lifestyle didn't exist,
but we were living longer.

(27:33):
Now, anyway, whenever they tellyou something that just doesn't
make sense for example, soy isbad for you and then you look
over and you say, wait a minute,these Japanese people here.
They live 10 years longer thanus and they eat soy all day long
.
It's bad and testosteronecauses prostate CFCs.
But how come that guy at Gold'sGym who has an erection morning

(27:57):
to night doesn't have it, butthis poor guy over here who
can't get an erection anymoreand his muscles are getting thin
, atrophying.
He gets it.
So you're saying to like sowhenever they say things.
That doesn't make sense,believe me, it's wrong.
Don't believe what they say.
Believe what you see.
Believe your eyes.
Okay, now I can see yourquestions.

(28:19):
You're all listen.
Would you guys listen to thisfor a minute?
I know you're not going tolisten.
I know you're not going tolisten.
Try to listen to this.
Read your questions.
Read everybody else's questions.
You're going to see thateverybody's saying what about
this?
Can I do this?
Will this get rid of theproblem?
Or what can I do?

(28:43):
What can I do?
What can I get?
What tool, what weapon can Iget to get rid of this problem?
So that's what we're lookingfor.
That is our perspective and it'sa military perspective, but it
was carefully woven into ourculture, and when I say our
culture, it started with Americaand then it went to spread

(29:05):
around all the whole world, uh,and it's called the disease
model, the idea that there arediseases, all right, and if
there are diseases, then you gotto get rid of them because
they're foreign.
They're things that I don'twant it.
I don't need this.
This concept has nothing to dowith reality.
Diabetes is not over there.

(29:28):
That I get High blood pressureis not something over there.
And I get it and I got to getrid of it.
But if I go to the sorcererwhether it's male or female, and
they're wearing their longwhite cape and they tell me that
I have a disease and here's myweapons to get rid of it, you
see, I understand.
So that's the whole thing.
Stop looking for that.

(29:50):
What I'm telling you is thisFirst of all, your mind.
By you asking that question,you're in that you've succumbed
to their story.
Their story is that there arediseases, diseases, and they're
going to get you and you got toget rid of them.
That's their story.
You bought it.
And here's Mellie.

(30:10):
Okay so, mellie, we got to,we'll talk.
Okay, so CFCs again.
That's part of the way that.
That's how they want us tothink.
All right, let me just clarifythat.
Cfcs, they're probably all overwhen they started to develop.
By the way, everyone thatyou've ever met and you ever

(30:32):
will meet has got CFCs, one gramor more.
And then it becomes a tumor.
It's considered clinicalSagittarius or clinical Leo or I
don't know what.
Is it Clinical Scorpio, one ofthose astrologicals?
Anyway, it becomes.

(30:53):
I'm not going to use that wordand you guys stop using it.
Don't use it, sally.
You just said it.
How can I get rid of my, sally?
You guys listen, don't just askquestions.
Don't just ask questions.
Don't just ask questions.
Be open to learning, okay?
You don't have vibrate.

(31:13):
Don't use their word.
Can you tell me what?
Can someone tell me what doesthe word cancer mean?
If I asked you what does theword bookshelf mean, you could
tell me, right.
You could tell me what it means, right.
What does the word food, foodmean?
So let me ask you what does theword cancer mean, other than
people born between june 21stand july 22nd?
What else does it mean?
Nothing, nothing, nothing, whatit keep getting shut off.

(31:37):
Are we back on again, you guys?
Are we back on?
Say yes, back on, yes, this isas an astrological sign, okay.
So what happened?
Okay, now are we back on?
Say yes, back on, yes, that'san astrological sign, okay.
So what happened?
Okay, now are we back oneverybody?
Yes, I guess so.
So we all have these going on.
Why?
Because the natural responsethat cells go through if they

(31:58):
lose, if anything compromisestheir ability to make energy.
Cells have to make energy astheir number one job.
Thank you, everybody.
The reason they have to makeenergy is because they need the
energy.
55% of the energy that theyderive from the environment is

(32:19):
used just to sodium potassiumpumps and other such mechanisms.
So that the cell is viable,it's, it exists.
So 55 of the energy that isproduced by a cell is just to
make sure, is to give it it's,it's for to exist.
The rest of the energy that thecell is making is for cellular
work.
So if it's a liver cell that'sdoing liver stuff, kidneys so if
something messes with theability of the cell to make

(32:43):
energy, it that becomes numberone, because without it there's
no it.
So it's got to make energyright.
And how much does it need?
Well, kind of figured it outsomewhere between 53 and 50 and
61 or something.
Uh, kilo, kilo joules.
Kilo joules, which is a um, ameasurement of energy per mole.

(33:04):
What the hell does that mean?
It doesn't matter what it means, it's a unit of measure.
So, whatever it is, call itounces or meters, whatever, it
doesn't matter.
So the average is 57.
Every cell needs what is calledminus 57 kilojoules per mole,
and that doesn't matter if thatcell is a heartbeat, you know
you're running really fast andyour heart beating at 120, 130,

(33:25):
or your elbow, which is justhanging out.
They both need all cells andwhether it's a CFC or it's a CFC
cell, it needs minus average,minus 57 kilojoules per mole
period just to operate.
So if it once it's that abilityto make the energy gets
compromised, it has to do itanother way, and we it's in that

(33:49):
way, so that we have aka,fermentation is fundamental to
all, and what it is is basicallyjust the of a more.
Actually, there are otherthings you can.
There's, there's, there'sfructose, glucose, galactose,

(34:10):
and then there's a glutamine,which is an amino acid.
You can also do that, all right.
So, anyway, now, when youferment it, you only get a
little bit of energy.
When you go through themitochondria, you get a lot of
energy.
So our mitochondria, which arevery vulnerable to living in the
21st century toxic world, thatthey get knocked down a lot, and

(34:31):
when they do to some point, ourcell has to switch over to
fermentation for a while andthen things get better and they
go back.
Well, when you have CFCs,you've knocked out too many of
them, that's all it is.
You've knocked out too many ofthe mitochondria and it can't go
back to relying on them.
So it has to become apermanently fermenting cell and
that's what it is.
The chronically fermenting,that's what it is.

(34:52):
So we understand that, allright.
But all of us have micrograms,milligrams or one gram or more,
all right.
So if you think it's in yourliver or your bone or anything
else, it's already everywhere.
It took at least eight yearsfrom the time a cell started to
become a fermenting cell forthat to get large enough to be

(35:14):
detected either a lump in thebreast or prostate or whatever
to be detectable Small it's atleast eight years to get that
either a lump in the breast orprostate or whatever to be
detectable.
Small, it's at least eightyears to get that to become that
All right.
So during that time the littlemicroscopic satellites went down
the lymphatics, went into theblood and they're everywhere.
So everybody who thinks they'restage one according to their

(35:34):
ridiculous staging thing, isalready microscopically staged
before.
So that whole staging thing hasno value to you, to them.
It allows them to have theappropriate nomenclature to
stick your, to put into thesales algorithm, and so they
know exactly what products andservices they can sell you.

(35:56):
That's the value of staging,because staging is ridiculous,
and I will do that another time,but I'm just telling you it has
no value for you, just for them.
So don't think that it's gonethere.
It's good, it's traveling, it'salready everywhere, all right.
Now, if you've got a bunch ofseeds all over, right, they're

(36:19):
in the backyard, the front yard,the side yard.
Now, if you've got a bunch ofseeds all over, right, they're
in the backyard, the front yard,the side yard, they're in that
field over there.
You've got all these seeds andyou're worried that they're
going to turn into thesemonsters.
These are seeds that, when theygrow into trees, they're
monsters.
What am I going to do aboutthat?
Every time one comes up, I'mgoing to go clobber it.
I could do that, or I could dowhat.

(36:40):
I could make sure that theydon't get watered.
They don't get proper nutrientsand fertilizer.
That's what I could do.
That way, I don't have to worryabout it.
All right, anyway, and that'sreally what we do.
So you have these seeds aroundand these seeds need good soil.
So you make sure that you'renot good soil for these seeds

(37:03):
and don't water them and don'tgive them any fertilizer.
Metaphorically, you get it.
Okay, the CA protozoa eatingyour red blood cell and the
infiltrating tissues is adisease.
So you're talking about thegerm theory.
The germ theory is saying thatthe germ theory by the way, he
lived around the same time asLouis Pasteur and Beauchamp and

(37:26):
he had this postulance.
He said, okay, if you're goingto meet these criteria, then we
can say, ah, this infectiousagent caused this condition.
Well, we haven't been able todo that with anything except
parasites.
Parasites pretty much fall intothat.
So if a protozoa is in you, orhow about a tapeworm?
Or how about a strong aloidesor any of these worms, they get

(37:52):
in and they're your dinner.
It's not a disease, it's a wormor it's a protozoa.
What's a disease?
What's a disease?
It's a protozoa.
Right, you got a bunch ofprotozoa in there and they're
colonizing.
All right, we don't use theirword.
If you want to use their word,I'm telling you, then their
program is your death.
That's their program.

(38:12):
How do I know that?
Because I grew up in thehospitals.
I was an intern and a residentin New York City.
All right, I was in thehospitals.
A short week was 120 hours.
Do you know how many hoursthere are in one week?
Well, if you're an intern, youlearn very quickly that there
are 168 hours in a week and ifI'm spending a minimum of 120, I

(38:36):
don't have a lot of time to doanything else.
I have to get back and forth tothe hospital, got to sleep, I
mean, there's not much left.
The reason they call us internsand residents is because we
reside there, so I know what wedo in those hospitals.
I know it has nothing to dowith health, anyway.

(38:57):
So the colonization of our bodyby different organisms is
happening all the time.
We've got hundreds of trillionsof organisms.
A lot of them are like on ourside and without them we'd be
dead.
Right, they're in our skin, inall of our cavities, in our gut,
and if they're in the rightproportion they're like going to

(39:17):
make us really healthy becauseour relationship with them is
extremely intimate, to say theleast.
Without them we're dead.
So I don't know if you want tocall them them or just expand
the definition of us Anyway.
So if you've got an overgrowthof something that means like
protozoa, worms and stuff likethat, are they there?
They found something to eat.

(39:38):
You've got to restore yourbalance and everything, so, and
you get rid of it.
But you've got to takemedications.
We grew up now, unfortunately,in a world where our immune
systems have been systematicallycompromised.
We are not the same people aswe were, as our ancestors were.

(39:58):
In the year 1900.
We had much stronger immunesystems, so now we don't, and so
that's why a lot of times,herbs don't work as well for us
and we need drugs, and this isone situation.
With parasites, it's not adisease, it's a worm.
There's no such thing as adisease.
What is a disease so isdiabetes and a protozoa.
Are we gonna?
They're both diseases.
No, this doesn't mean.
It doesn't mean anything.

(40:19):
Don't use their word, please.
If you use their word becauseremember something, their word
they're going to give you apathological, histological
diagnosis.
Aha, you've got adenocarcinomaof the colon or pancreas or
whatever.
That's their diagnosis, but allit is is a description of the,
of the, of the, of the tissue.

(40:40):
Adenoma means it came from.
It came from a, um, a gland.
Carcinoma means it's uh, ororiginated from the ectoderm of
the embryo.
Yeah, that's all it means.
It doesn't tell you how you gotit and how to get rid of it, so
it's really useless.
You can call it anything youwant.
All right, now, that's what theycall a diagnosis, and then what

(41:01):
they figure out is then theywant to stage it.
And if, once, they stage it nowthey know because of their data
when you're going to die, andthey're going to and they're
getting the doctor, of course isgoing to be very forthcoming.
Today, you know, yeah, you know, wait, wait, it's not curable.
But, uh, what is it not curable?
Yeah, so we're just going topoison you for a couple of years
.
Why are you going to poison me?

(41:23):
Well, because if we don'tpoison you, you're going to die.
Well, what's going to happen ifyou do poison me?
Well, you're going to dieanyway.
So, remember, 93% of humancommunication is nonverbal,
which means, when you're in thehospital house of horrors, or
you're around these doc, thesewitches and warlocks, they,
because they all have the samethey know, ah, she has stage

(41:46):
three.
So they're all telling youyou're gonna die, you're gonna
die.
So you're in that environment,I'm telling you that's poisoning
you and that is going to wipeout your immune system, because
you're.
I mean, when you're told you'regonna die, what does what else
matters, right, nothing mattersanymore.
Whatever your plans were,forget, it doesn't matter,

(42:07):
you're gonna die.
So that's not.
You want to.
You want to get off the deathtrain people.
So if you want to use theirwords, great, but just realize
their words are they're on thedeath train and they're taking
you to the morgue.
Get off that train, jump ontothe train, go into health, the
paradise of health.
We're all on that.
We're all looking to restoreour health.
We've all had our healthcompromised.

(42:29):
And how do you get?
Where do you obtain health?
It's like a big secret, but byliving healthy.
There's not another way.
You can't buy it, you can'tnegotiate it, you can't demand
it.
You can earn it.
So I'm just saying you got touse their work.
Why do you keep saying deviceunexpectedly stopped?
Yeah, I know, I listen.

(42:50):
I don't trust the minds behindtechnology.
All right, I'm sorry, I didn'teven get to your questions.
I'm going to get to yourquestions now.
I just wanted to and I'manswering these questions here.
But I want you to understandsomething, and somebody was
there saying it's diet, alkaline.
Yes, diet and alkalinity.
All of those things are reallyimportant, but it's not to get

(43:13):
rid of anything.
It's to restore harmony andbalance.
That's what we're looking to do, and if we remember that we're
not here to get rid of anything.
We're here to restore balance,and balance means that there
won't be any negative things.
And I told this story before andI'm going to tell it again and
I'll probably tell it even again.

(43:34):
And that's this I had a fellowat Oasis in Arizona with stage
four.
According to their meaning, itwas in other organs, colon CFCs.
It was in his liver, stage four.
It took about six months.
They were gone and they wereundetected, clean scan.

(43:56):
So he should have been reallyhappy, right, but he wasn't.
You know why he wasn't happy?
Because he had heart failureand his heart failure was so
severe that he needed oxygen anda wheelchair just to go to the
bathroom.
Why does it keep stopping?
Can it keeps going?
Can I ask everyone, are youseeing?
Does it might?
Does it go off and on?

(44:17):
Tell me somebody say right, yes, goes off and on.
I and that's like the, it'slike almost once a minute.
Now.
That's weird.
How come it keeps?
This yellow thing comes on,your device unexpectedly stopped
.
We're trying to get back on.
Now.
Who's you?
You think it's mark.
What's his name?
Mark, uh, what's his name?
Mark, what's his name?
You know the guy, mark.

(44:38):
He used to look like a clone.
Now he's got bushy, blondehairdo.
So he's now a Californianliving in Malibu, right, bushy,
and you probably don't knowthose songs.
You don't remember those songs.
Anyway, broadcast is smooth,amazing.
Yeah, fuckerberg, that's it,mark Fuckerberg.
Uh, yeah, fuckerberg, that's it, mark fucker.
Anyway.
Um, I don't trust this guyanyway.

(44:59):
So you got to live healthy.
Yeah, I get my z's and my f'smixed up.
You know what I mean.
I'm never sure if that's a z oran f, but that's pretty with
him.
We'll stick with the f, right?
So, yeah, we need to restore, weneed to do all these things,
but don't get lost in thosedetails, because you're not
going to be.
You don't want your whole bodyto be alkaline because you'll be

(45:20):
dead.
Yeah, that's it, 2.0, right,because your stomach has to be
extremely acidic.
It's got to be 1.5 pH.
Your colon 6.8.
That's acidic.
The distal part of your ileum,again, 6.7, 6.
Different you're.
You do a data.
We need to be very outgoing.
So this, all, every, thedifferent cells in the body we

(45:43):
have, there's a different ph inthere and that's the purpose.
The purpose is ph andtemperature are the two physical
characteristics of the, of thephenomenal universe, that,
especially in biologicalentities, but in the bios
universe, that, especially inbiological entities, but in the
biosphere that determinechemical function, all right.

(46:05):
So in a high pH, like, forexample, you've all heard of the
probiotic acidophilus, right,and there's all kinds of species
of acidophilus.
The reason it's acidophilus,right, and there's all kinds of
species of acidophilus.
The reason it's acidophilus isbecause it produces acid and it
keeps the pH a little bit low,because if it didn't, you'd have

(46:26):
an overgrowth of these guys.
So the acidophilus chemicallythey keep things in balance
wherever they're located andwithout them you're in trouble.
But what does have to bealkaline are blood and the
interstitial fluid.
That's the part of the blood,the non-cellular part, meaning
non-red blood cell, non-whitecell, the serum part that

(46:47):
diffuses through the capillarymembrane into the area called
the interstitium where all thecells are hanging out, and it's
the fluid.
So it's like an aquarium andthe fish are the cells of our
body.
That's the aquarium they livein.
That has to be between pH 7.35to 7.45.
On either side you're introuble.

(47:09):
There's all sorts of mechanismsto keep it right there.
So, yes, when we're talkingabout alkalinity, that's what
has to be alkaline, but noteverything else.
And the body.
Don't worry, you have to figureit out.
The body will figure it out.
The body already figured it out.
All you have to do is eat humanfood and remember that we are
diurnal, we're not nocturnal.

(47:31):
Oh, he's a night owl.
No, no, it's a human.
Night owls are over there.
It's a human Maybe that'll looklike one but really a human and
diurnal.
She'll go to sleep right afterthe sun goes down.
I can't do that.
Okay, you can't do it.
Then you won't get the benefit.

(47:51):
There's not a I mean okay, Iwon't do it.
I can't do it.
I have to do it.
Okay, all right, you won't doit.
I can't do it.
I have to do it.
Okay, all right, you won't doit.
You can't do it, so you won'tget the benefit of it.
That's all I can say.
All right, so, um, so there'scertain things.
If we live according to ourbiological requirements, we're
going to.
That's all right.
So you don't have to worryabout alkaline asthma.

(48:12):
Just eat what we're supposed toeat.
Yeah, but what are we supposedto eat?
Because this guy says there'sthe price, because we've got so
many freaks out there telling usthat they got to eat.
Uh, whatever, I don't know.
People with the right for yourblood type and you have to uh,
and so we'll get into that atanother time.
I better answer some questions,otherwise people would say what
the hell is.
So here's the question.
This is from kelsey.

(48:34):
I am only 33 and a mother offour.
Wow, I was diagnosed withanemia at age 10, hypothyroid at
12, and IBS at 17.
I have had diarrhea since I waspregnant with my second son
about seven years ago.
It's gotten to the point that Igo to the bathroom more than 20

(48:56):
times a day.
It's gotten to the point that Igo to the bathroom more than 20
times a day.
So last summer I elected to geta colonoscopy and I found that
I have celiac, but my colon isfine.
I didn't find any parasites,but I'm sure that I have them.
My doctors don't agree andtheir suggestions are not enough
.
I'd like to have a consultationwith you, you and so I can set

(49:20):
up a treatment plan and finallyheal myself.
All right, kelsey, wow, andunfortunately your story there
is like not unusual Now, if youwere diagnosed with anemia at
age 10, because when we think ofanemia, we know that what's
happening is their blood countis low.

(49:40):
What do I know about colloidalsilver, blue.
Okay, remind me again.
Where was I?
Anemia means you don't haveenough blood.
Your blood is, the amount ofblood is low.
We look at either what theycall hemoglobin or hematocrit.
It carries oxygen, oxygen.
So usually if you don't haveenough, if your blood count is
low, your red blood cell countis low, you're either losing it

(50:02):
too quickly or not making itenough.
Oops, your device unexpectedlystopped.
You guys didn't see that, right.
Say no, yes, no, it didn't juststop.
No, yes, no, yes, no, no, no,yes, no, great, okay, thank you,
then for me it stops.
I know they're just trying tokeep me.

(50:25):
It's fucker work.
He wants to keep me on edge.
What was that song by Eminem?
Was it the Real Mark?
Please stand up.
Are you a clone or are you acool dude from California?
Anyway, now, if you had it atage 10, that means we know that,
because a lot of women theymight have heavy menses and that

(50:47):
would be one way of losing it.
So, 10, you weren't having yourmenses yet.
So we know you weren't losingit.
But if you had it at 10, now,if you had it at 10 and you, you
, now, if you had it as solidthe only condition that I know
of that is really uh.
It means that you've beenanemic, for um is basically it's
one of the few uh inheritedthings we can get and it's

(51:08):
called thalassemia and it'd bethalassemia minor right, which
means you just don't.
You don't have the enzymes tomake the protein, the uh
hemoglobin, uh are uhcompromised and you don't make
enough hemoglobin and so youhave a low hemoglobin which
carries oxygen.
And one of the problems is iswhen a doctor finds out, when a

(51:30):
sorcerer finds out, that youhave anemia, most of the time
they don't try to figure outwhat kind.
Yet with a real mark that arepleased and pleased.
So I was gonna do a great videobetween Eminem and the Beach
Boys and I about the real mark,but if I never had a chance to
do um, they usually give iron,and if you give iron to someone

(51:53):
with thalassemia, they're gonnaget iron overload.
So you don't just give ironRight now.
So if you had it at 10, I'mwondering if you have
thalassemia.
And if you have thalassemia,they're going to get iron
overload.
So you don't just give ironright Now.
So if you had it at 10, I'mwondering if you have
thalassemia, and if you havethalassemia, then maybe your
normal hemoglobin is two orthree points lower than what is
considered healthy, but yourbody has adjusted to it over
your life so I don't know.

(52:13):
We'd have to figure that out.
So you had anemia at age 10.
I know you weren't bleeding andyou probably weren't exposed to
any heavy chemicals thatprevented your bone marrow from
making it, so I'm not sure whathappened there.
Then at 10, hypothyroid Well,that's you diagnosed.
That means see, that means inorder to get diagnosed with
hypothyroid, that means you haveto diagnose is getting, is

(52:33):
having a spell put on you?
Is having a spell put on you.
It's called medical spellcasting.
That means your thyroid wasreally in trouble.
So in order for it to show upon tests, we all have pretty
much what you call it froze.
Briefly for a second, we allhave what's called subclinical

(52:55):
hypothyroidism.
Subclinical means we don't haveclinical.
Clinical hypothyroidism isyou're really in trouble.
I mean you're lethargic, youcan't think much, you sleep a
lot, you can't lose weight, nomatter what you're gaining
weight.
So clinical hypothyroidism,everything's kind of slow and
sluggish.
That's clinical hypothyroidismbecause you can experience it

(53:17):
and see it.
It subclinical is you thinkyou're fine, except that your
thyroid's not.
So if they found it in yourblood and then they probably
started you on something likesynthroid, which is t4 synthetic
t4 and then anemia, 10, 12, yougot the hypothyroid and then at
17 you had, uh, ibs irritablebowel syndrome isn't that

(53:40):
ridiculous?
They talk about it as if it's.
I got this thing, yeah, what'sit called irritable bowel
syndrome?
Now, what if a kind of personthat I'm irritable, what you
want, what if I'm kind of likethat, do I have a disease called
irritable personality syndrome?
You realize how insane it is.
That's not a disease, all right,but what does it mean?

(54:02):
It means you don't have theright microorganisms inside of
your body, in your gut, and nowthey're calling it celiac,
meaning that you have a problemwith wheat and things like that.
Nah, you have a dysbiosis.
So does the person with Crohn's, so does the person with

(54:22):
ulcerative colitis.
So does the person with SIBOsmall intestinal bacterial
overgrowth, it's all the same.
So does the person who doesn'teven think they have a problem?
Yeah, yeah, I agree.
Yeah, so we have a dysbiosis.
So, really, what you need to do,kelsey, is restore your or

(54:48):
maybe you never had it a healthygut biome, and the way you do
that is we talk about this everyweek you do a thorough juice
cleanse, fresh vegetable juicecleanse, and you do it for three
weeks, four weeks as long,without eating solid food, and
you'll have plenty of energy.
You'll feel great.
You're just going to be wantingto swallow, smell, taste you

(55:10):
and swallow, smell, taste you.
Gotta do the smell, taste you.
That's what we live, because,nutrient wise, you'll be getting
all nutrients except for fatand fiber.
But because you need to cleaneverything out, get rid of
everything and let it.
Let it start to heal, and youcan take some things like like
glutamine, glutamine which youcan get from.
I think so, for it's acombination of glutamine and

(55:33):
aloe glutamine.
You can get some acromantia,which is this probiotic that
repairs leaky gut, and then,when you start eating again,
then you'll eat only food thatis alive.
So you probably won't be eatingcows or pigs, because alive cows
and live pigs, first of all,it'd be pretty difficult.

(55:56):
Can you imagine trying to eat acow while it's alive?
Or a pig, even a frog?
Who'd want to eat a frog if itwas alive?
So why are you guys sayingeating live food?
Because if you're eating a livefood and it happens to be
plants, right, things that don'twalk or fly or crawl.

(56:18):
They're called plants.
The stuff that flies, crawls,walks, slithers, those are
animated.
And then there are plants thatare not animated, they're just
there and we eat them live.
Guess what?
The bacteria, microorganismslike that are the ones we need.
It just turns out I don't knowwhat a coincidence.

(56:38):
Yeah, I don't know what a Imean coincidence, you know?
Yeah, I will make that video.
I'm also going to make the juicediet for the carnivore.
I'm a carnivore.
I'm a carnivore.
I don't eat any animals alive.
I'm a corpse of war.
I eat corpses.
Great, okay, yeah, if youchange, you've done your cleanse
and now you're going to eatnothing but uncooked plant food.

(56:59):
Now, the microorganisms thatlike that are the ones you need
and you're going to be restoredto health.
Everything's going to getbetter, everything, everything,
not.
There's not one thing thatwon't get better if you can
restore your bio and diarrhea.
Now, what does diarrhea mean?
The definition of diarrheareally is a very vague.

(57:20):
For example, the person who hasa bowel movement every three
days.
If they start having two bowelmovements a day, that's for them
diarrhea.
But most people considerdiarrhea when it's watery or
loose Twice a day, compared toevery three days, is loose for
them anyway.
So usually it's water, not notformed.

(57:41):
Did we just have a blackout?
What do you mean?
Oops, how do I feel aboutmultivitamins?
Make fresh juice.
You've got more multivitamins,more my.
You've got biologicallyavailable vitamins,
phytonutrients, minerals yeah,what's this?
No, how do you feel about dailyvitamins?

(58:01):
What I'm saying is that when youget, imagine, one liter, one
quart of fresh vegetable juiceis like a handful of vegetables.
You couldn't have eaten thatmuch.
So if you're eating two oryou're drinking two, let's say
two quarts a day, right, oryou're not fasting, you're not
doing a juice feast, so you justhave one quart a day.

(58:23):
You're getting more nutrientsthan the average person gets in
six months in that one day.
And if you're drinking, ifyou're doing a juice cleanse,
you're like you're getting twoto three quarts a day.
It's like super nutrition.
So you're getting more.
Because the multi-mineralvitamins are just based on their
standards right, and theirstandards are the recommended

(58:44):
daily allowance.
You only need 50 milligrams ofascorbate, which is vitamin C,
50 milligrams.
You need 50 milligrams so thatyou don't have end stage scurvy.
That's what that is, but it'snot enough for optimal
functioning.
They don't talk about optimalfunction.
They want to know how much youtake before you suffer from a
deficiency syndrome.

(59:05):
That's all.
There's nothing, they say istrue, nothing.
Um, now, so we got a straight.
We got to straighten out yourbio, your biosis.
I would like to know what'sgoing on with if you have
thalassemia or not.
Um, they didn't find parasiteswith me yet.
They're not gonna find them.
Listen, everyone, keep in mindthat they're not.

(59:25):
Everyone has parasites, by theway, just they're not gonna find
them.
This is why they're calledparasites, because they have
learned to successfully avoidbeing detected and killed.
Right, if they weren't good atit and you could find them
easily and kill them, then theywouldn't be parasites, all right
.
But I think you're probablythinking that you have parasites

(59:46):
, therefore you have thediarrhea and stuff like that.
It's all happening at the sametime.
You've had a problem since youwere young and it's because you
were born into what?
If you're unfortunate enough,like me, to be American, you
grew up in this greatest countryin the world.
What world is that?
Where we grew up?
On Wonder Bread?
It was a Wonder Bread.

(01:00:07):
I forget the commercial.
It builds bodies.
It helps bodies in 12 ways.
I forget the madness, madness,but anyway.
So we grew up in a world wherewe're you know.
So we start with your.
You start with the middle, thecenter.

(01:00:27):
Clean that out, clean it out,restore its health, get that
balanced and everything else,and then, if you're eating human
food, you'll actually start tobe a functioning human.
It's crazy, it can't be that.
Bologna and white bread.
Yeah, there you go.
I remember as a kid, I rememberthe bologna and the bread.
I loved it.

(01:00:48):
I had mustard on it.
I remember taking the whitebread and I would bunch it up
into a real hard and I thoughthow cool is that?
For some reason I thought thatwas cool.
Oh, why are they seeing?
Why they see?
Because they do see in the.
You can see them on autopsy.
You can see, you can find themlike that.
But just understand somethingthey're microscopic when we're

(01:01:09):
talking.
First of all, protozoa aremicroscopic.
You can't see them.
The worms the only thing you'regoing to see is an adult worm,
right, and the tapeworm can bebig, but all the other worms are
not more than a couple inchesat most.
But unless you have adults andyou can see pinworms, these
little white guys, unless youhave adult forms in your bowels,

(01:01:34):
you won't know.
So if you've got, for example,strong alloides in your lung,
you're not going to know thatyou might be wheezing and all
that, but you won't know thatyou've got a parasite.
And what are they going to do atest to find out?
No, there's no way.
And a protozoa, do you know?
You have protozoa in your mouthright now.
You do probably in your jawsand all that.

(01:01:55):
Proto and temiba trichomonas,right, probably got trichomonas,
um, uh, and you're, if you gettrichomonas, vaginal trichomonas
, um, that is one you can telland you don't really need to go
to a doctor to figure that oneout, because if you have
trichomonas it will smell likefish and you'll know you have it

(01:02:15):
here.
Here's the thing abouttrichobotan.
That's the protozoa.
Here's the thing about it.
The men you got it from a guy,it's really when they do studies
.
There's two subpopulations ofwomen who don't get any of this
stuff.
They don't get cervicals, cfcs,they don't get.
That's Catholics or or anyother religious sector.

(01:02:40):
The women are truly celibate,they really do it.
And pure lesbians, lesbians,lesbians who've never had a male
they don't have all thisproblem.
So the problem is men.
Hey, what can I say?
I'm just glad I'm a man, Idon't have to deal with men.
My heart goes out to all thewomen out there who like men,

(01:03:02):
because wow, anyway, and ifyou're a guy, don't get mad at
me, because you know, you know,anyway.
So, but anyway, the problemwith this yes, I agree, jen,
that's fantastic, not that Jen,whatever, I'll just call you jen

(01:03:23):
.
Um, the trigger motors that theman doesn't know they have, that
they gave to the woman.
If the man doesn't treat it, itcan develop into prostate cfcs.
If the woman doesn't treat it,it can turn into cervical cfcs.
Right, so you gotta get rid ofthese guys now.
So we all have protozoa, we allthat.
So most of them are microscopic.
It's the point I was trying tomake.

(01:03:43):
And so, unless they get to theeven even the larva, so they go
from worms to larva, you're notgoing to see them.
And they could.
You could be.
You know, if you're takinganti-parasitic medication, they
could be coming out.
You won't know it.
Do I prescribe medications?
Yes, I do, but the problem isthe is is uh, in in the us,

(01:04:07):
unlike other countries.
In another country, when youfinish your training, you get
licensed by the country andanywhere in that country, you
can practice right.
So if it's italy and now inthat country, you can practice
right.
So if it's Italy and now inEurope?
Now you have it's the EU.
So if you're licensed in the EU, you can practice in France,

(01:04:28):
italy, germany, it doesn'tmatter.
But, like Japan, you get it forlife and you can be in Kyushu,
hokkaido.
It doesn't matter where you are, you're going to be able to
practice.
Same with Korea.
In the US, you get licensedstate by state.
So I'm licensed in New York andArizona, but not in Florida and

(01:04:48):
not in Nebraska, so I can't.
And then in America, too, theysaid if I wrote a prescription
for somebody that I did notexamine with my hands and my
ears, I'll lose my license.
I mean even high blood pressuremedicine or anything.
And then the great hoax of 2020came, and we all know the great

(01:05:10):
hoax of 2020.
And then there was thelockdowns brought to you by the
World Economic Forum and theyallowed telemedicine.
It became okay now, and in orderto do it, you had to do a
virtual physical exam, which isbizarre.
So I was doing those right.

(01:05:31):
So you know we'd do a Zoom calland then I have you touch
yourself and take your bloodpressure and all that, and
that's considered a virtualphysical exam.
It's kind of weird.
I always felt like just oddtelling someone okay, now touch
yourself here, what's it feellike?
Do you feel that it's justridiculous?
Because, regardless of how goodit is, I won't know what the

(01:05:54):
heart sounds like or the lungssound like, and I can't you know
, and that's so, I can't do that.
So now, for a while, I could dovirtuals, and now I can't.
I think it depends.
So it's really so.
But regarding all thesemedications, they're only you
only need prescription for them.
In the greatest country in theworld and there are other ones
like Europe and stuff like thatyou need to have prescriptions,

(01:06:18):
but in some of those reallythird world, yeah, they can walk
into the store and just buythem, but we're free, they're
not, Anyway.
So what I've done is I'mworking on something so you
won't have to get.
There's going to be a website.
I'm working out where you canjust get all those that you need
and they'll be mailed to you.
All right, so that's coming upquickly, but in the meantime,

(01:06:41):
you guys should join our groupthe group because we have all
these resources of places to get.
I don't have them all, you know, I can think of them right
there.
But where to get ivermectin,where to get fenbendazole, where
to get niclosamide?
So remember, so remember thebig three.

(01:07:01):
Ivermectin, then bend is alland like close a lot, all right.
And then for the protozoa youwant, night does oxidize, also
called a linear, but it's thenight is oxygen.
And then the antifungal you canuse, die flu.
Now flagell, the person I saw,someone was a for a trick of
honest.
Yeah, flagell is flagell.
Works of mitra.
Night is all.
And but so does tininnidazoleor nitrozoxane, because it gives
a lot of personal informationto the monster overloads.

(01:07:24):
You guys, I don't know who youare.
Jab, don't use their word Jab.
Okay, everybody rememberlinguistic manipulation.
First of all, there was no pan,there was a hoax, there was no
scam damage.
So what?
Don't use the word.
And then you don't use that Vword either, because there was
no V's.
There were what?
Bioweapons?

(01:07:45):
And as soon as it becamemandated, suddenly BBC, cnn, fox
, whatever, started to say jab,jab, jab.
Did you get jab?
I got jab.
Why did the word jab come out?
The word jab came out becauseif you're like joking with your

(01:08:06):
friend, you jab them right, oryou walk outside and a branch
jabs you.
So the word jab in Englishimplies a benign event, either
jocularly, or a mild abrasion,so they use this word to
psychologically lower it.
You get jabbed.
Yeah, hi, jab, jab, jab.

(01:08:27):
Don't use the word, it's not ajab.
I can't really be honestbecause we're going to go to X
so I can, but anyway, it's not ajab, that's a jab.
All right, so don't use their.
All right, so they use theirwords.
You can't use their words.
If you use their words, you'rein their video game.
You don't want to play theirvideo game.
Good, you guys are going tohelp each other when to get

(01:08:47):
these things for that?
All right, beautiful, beautiful, okay, so, anyway.
So, kelsey, I hope you get it.
So what I'm saying is, insteadof a consultation with me, join
the groups, join, uh, the healthand healing group.
That's the, the.
We interact, you get, we caninteract, just like the same as
if you get in consultation.

(01:09:08):
But when I was doing theconsultations, I could only do
six a day, right, because I Idon't stop talking, obviously,
so they're usually two or three.
They were really long, and thenI send you recommendations and
we wind up.
It just takes.
That's all I do, I can't doanything else.
And that's the whole world.

(01:09:28):
That's just a small amount ofpeople.
So in these groups we can dothat, I can interact and you can
get.
This person's question wasapplicable to your situation, so
it's really much better.
Join the groups and we can dothat.
Okay, now, this is from Pete.
I'm having mercury fillingremoved, two at a time.
Should I wait to start parasitecleanse until my mercury

(01:09:49):
filling removal is completed,taking chlorellis, viralina, nac
, garlic, milk, thistle duringmercury filling removal?
Should I add anything else,such as cilantro?
All right, okay.
So pete, good, you're gettingremoved and I hope you've gone.
You, you you have a biologicaldentist and the dentist was

(01:10:11):
certified by iaomt and that thedentist was trained with SMART,
which is Safe Mercury AmalgamRemoval Treatment.
Anyway, it's a specific way ofdoing it Because if they're
removed the wrong way,nitoxanide, not nitrox,

(01:10:31):
nitoxanide, n-i-t-o-x, z,n-i-t-o-x-z,
n-i-t-o-z-o-x-a-n-i-d-e Stupidword Anyway, nitazoxalate, but
it also goes by the brand nameAlinea, a-l-i-n-i-a, so it's

(01:10:53):
easier to find.
Anyway, so if the mercury isremoved the wrong way, in other
other words, if they just go inand start drilling and take it
out, that mercury will willaerosolize, vaporize and you'll
inhale it and you'll beswallowing it.
You'll get large doses ofmercury.
People that have had themercury taken out the wrong way

(01:11:15):
have it's changed their lives,because remember what they call
autism is usually due to toomuch mercury from the these.
So I'm glad you're getting themout.
I hope you got a biologicaldentist.
Two at a time you can usuallydo.
If you had a bunch up here theycan do the whole point.
But but being done the rightway, they have a really heavy

(01:11:35):
suction.
They have a mouth guardPrevents you from swallowing it.
Heavy suction they usually havethese.
I forget what you call it again, but it's in the air in it.
So for any mercury thatvaporizes in it, it's a cult
Anyway.
And then the dentist is wearingit looks like a moon suit,

(01:11:55):
because you know they can'tinhale it either.
All right, so there you go.
Night Tazoxanide Good, greatWendy.
All day chemist Okay, great.
So I hope you're doing thatright.
Is there anything else youshould know?
You don't have to wait to takethe parasites Anti-parasitic.
You don't have to wait tillthey're all up.
You can take them.
You can take them.

(01:12:19):
The only thing you would holdoff on when you're having your
mercury removed is any chelatingagent.
So if you still have mercury inyour mouth, it's advisable not
to use chelating agents untilit's out, because you might just
move it from your mouth anddeposit it in your brain.
That's the idea.
So I'm glad you're getting themout and I hope your biological
dentist already did a 3D conebeam and they now CT so they

(01:12:40):
know if you have cavitations,they know if you have any other
problems.
But what you're taking is fine.
I hope you're taking vitamin C,vitamin D, vitamin A, melatonin
and your iodine's good and allthat.
But in addition you're takingspirulina and milk thistle and I
see garlic.
That's great for your liver.
Yeah, you're doing good.

(01:13:01):
I don't know if you got theright amounts.
Most people don't know becausedoctors don't know what is the
right amount to take.
Now garlic are you eating wholegarlic?
Are you getting the capsules?
Whatever you're taking, do theresearch Go online?
Go to PubMed, for example, milkthistle.
Do the research go online?

(01:13:22):
Go to pub med, for example,milk this.
Go to pub med and say dosingfor milk thistle and then, for
whatever reason, so like if youhad uh liver protection, if it
was for yeah, that's about all,and then just see and you'll see
.
It'll bring you to articles andyou can see if you ever, if you
don't have a, if you toarticles and you can see.
If you don't have anyone youcan ask that you can trust,

(01:13:42):
right?
So no EDTA before all amalgamsare removed, correct?
Or DMSA or DMPS, and the idea isthatating agents work like EDTA
or DMSA is, for example, edta,ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid.

(01:14:05):
Edta, it's a man-made, awoman-made, a person-made amino
acid that's non-metabolizable.
It doesn't get metabolized, soit just goes in and out.
Your body doesn't use it.
So anyway, tetraacetic acidthat's tetra is four Acetic acid
.
It comes in the form of acetate, so acetate has a negative

(01:14:35):
charge.
So here's this molecule withfour negative charges, like that
, and you got a metal mercury orlead or whatever.
They have a positive charge.
So those four negatives in thatpositive it grabs it, and
that's why they call itchelation, grab, claw, grab.
So now the chelating agentshave different affinities for
different metals, for examplethe DMSA and the DMPS, which are

(01:14:59):
very similar.
The DMPS is IV and DMSA, you canthink of it.
Their favorite is mercury andthen lead, and it goes down.
The EDDA, its favorite is lead,and, and so that's all.
That's all.
That means?
Which means what?
Which means if that edda iscarrying a piece of mercury and

(01:15:23):
taking, kicking it out and itsees lead, it just drops that.
Mercury grabs the lead.
Got a higher affinity for thelead.
So that's the not so dmsa,dimer cap to succinic acid.
Uh, so that's the thing.
So it will drop one.
So you don't want to do ituntil you're it's out that.
That's.
That's the whole idea that mydentist says what?

(01:15:46):
It's only a very small amountif mercury, so not harmful,
uh-huh, okay, uh, zoe, this isamazing.
You're a dentist.
Now listen, I want you tounderstand something.
When the, when the mercury isbrought to the dental offices,
it's brought in hazardouscontainers, right, biohazard.
Contain is brought to them inbiohazard.

(01:16:06):
Now the scraps.
You know when they, theleftover mercury is picked up in
biohazardous containers.
So the only safe place is yourmouth.
Dentists are still doing that.
They're still doing that.
They're still saying it's okay.
Do you know that there arewarnings on tuna fish cans for

(01:16:29):
pregnant women because of themercury in tuna fish?
But it's okay in your mouth.
Mercury has no physiologicalfunction.
It's not like zinc or magnesium.
So your dentist needs to be inyour history column.
You got to.
This was my dentist.
This is not my desk, it was mydentist.

(01:16:51):
Go to.
I'm going to find it.
See, if you guys were in thegroup and this was just Zoom I
could share a screen with you,but let me just find this here.
It's I-A-O-M-T.
So go to I-A-O-M-T and it saysthe International Academy of
Oral Medicine and Toxicology,and they will give you a list of

(01:17:12):
dentists that have gone forthat training and like, for
example, your dentist probablyuses fluoride when they, their
hygienists do, when they'recleaning your teeth, which is
insane.
Look here, this is on the IAOMTInternational Academy of Oral
Medicine and Toxicology.
All right, they'll tell andthey'll have all this stuff

(01:17:33):
there about, for example,fluoride.
It's smart, mercury facts, it'sa great.
And make sure your doctor, yourdentist, is certified, not just
a member, okay, but read thatand you'll understand.
They've got a lot of goodresearch.

(01:17:54):
They have their members andprofessionals.
What's a profession?
What does it mean to saysomeone's a profession?
If you get paid what?
Unable, never off, everything,ok.
Can you hear me now?
Hello, can you hear me?
Hello, good, all right.
So All right, good, good, I'mglad you're getting the mercury

(01:18:15):
out.
That's fantastic, but you gotto do it there.
I hope you don't have anytitanium implants or you don't
have any.
Uh, what do you call it?
What they call it gold.
They don't remember.
They don't put any metals inyour mouth, they put alloys.
So gold is like when they sayyou get a gold crown or gold
filling or inlay or outlay, it's40% gold.
And then there's other thingslike aluminum, so they're alloys

(01:18:36):
.
And when you have more than onemetal in a saline solution,
which is your saliva, you havewhat's called a battery.
Sing us a Neil Diamond song.
I can't sing anything.
What song I sing, you'll know.
You won't recognize the song,so all right.
So bird mite infection.

(01:18:57):
You you said the question here.
Let me see.
So I found all right.
So, pete, you're doing great.
Um, hope you can escalate myquestion for today or tomorrow.
Thomas, your name is thomas, myname thomas.
How to lower or get rid of Ecoli, e facalis, klebsiella,
pneumonia in urine, prostate andgut?

(01:19:20):
I have dealt with these forover a year and tried multiple
antibiotics.
All right, it's very good.
E facis, e coli and Klebsiella.
First of all, e coli is a partof your normal flora.
Now there are different strainsof E coli that have been

(01:19:41):
developed because of our amazingagricultural and farming
practices and things like thatuse of antibiotics and all that.
But now you're finding these inthe urine, prostate and what
else.
And gut, okay, now it's not.
Oh, sweet Caroline.
Yeah, oh, I wish I could singthat.

(01:20:03):
That's a great song, caroline.
Oh, thank you about thecolloidal blue.
In fact, this is a good time todo it.
Hang on there, okay Now, okay,first of all, the Klebsiella,
the E coli and the E faecalisare it's not like they got into
you and you got to get rid ofthem.
They are actually normalinhabitants of our bodies, but

(01:20:25):
in much less of a proportion.
There are other ones.
So in a healthy, when you havea healthy biome, that means you
have all of the organisms in ahealthy relative proportion,
more of these, and they arethere.
The relative proportions thatyou have are there because of

(01:20:47):
what they're eating, right.
So, for example, if you atenothing but fast food, you would
have a whole different.
You'd have more of this one andless of this one.
You'd have a whole differentbiosis.
It'd be a dysbiosis.
And then, if you ate nothingbut home-cooked food, no fast
food, you'd have a differentdysbiosis.

(01:21:08):
And then, if you ate,vegetarian or vegan, it changes
it.
And then, finally, when you eatan uncooked plant one, the
animals or the organisms thatthrive are the ones we need.
So now the blue I don't knowwhat you're saying.
Blue colloidal silver, colloidal, silveroidal silver everyone is

(01:21:31):
amazing stuff, but the onlyplace that I ever get it from is
natural immunogenics.
They make something calledargentin 23 and sovereign silver
, because it's so.
It's just, it's okay.
Colloidal silver means that thesilver, which is a, a metal

(01:21:53):
that's got a positive charge,has been sequestered in a little
small package or envelope,almost like a liposomal, and
these are called colloids.
So people have actuallycolloidal silver machines that
they make it back in their attheir home, the garage or
wherever.
The problem is it's not stableand then those colloids break

(01:22:15):
apart and you wind up gettinglarge areas of coalescent silver
.
And if you start taking that,you wind up getting something
called argoria, and argoria iswhere your face turns blue, your
head blue, and the big problemwith it is that it's permanent.
So you don't want to getcolloidal silver that is not in

(01:22:37):
a stable form.
So the Argentin 23 is 23 partsper million, which is nobody can
do that, and it's stable.
In fact it's so good, you cangive it IV, we give it IV.
Now, the nice thing about silveris that silver is antimicrobial
, but only the guys we know, theones that aren't on our side.
All right, that is amazing.

(01:22:58):
So if you so for example, let'ssay you have H pylori in your
gut Instead of taking all theseantibiotics you take a couple
tablespoons of the Argentin 23five times a day.
You know what?
Methylene blue?
I don't know, I can't.
You know what I mean I'mgetting too.
I gotta stay on these questions.

(01:23:20):
So what I'm telling you, thomas, is this You've been on
multiple antibiotics, which iswhy you still have it, because
the antibiotics are killing thegood guys they're eliminating.
Do you realize that if I got touse I can't use that word,
because that word right isconsidered, what do you call it?
I can't use the word K-I-L-L orI can't right, otherwise they

(01:23:42):
kick me off.
What you want to do is restore ahealthy biome, thomas, and when
you take antibiotics youfurther disturb the biome, the
relative proportions.
So instead, you do a good,thorough cleanse, like I was
talking about earlier.
You do two, three, four week,as long as you can go, juice
cleanse, get colon hydrotherapy,go to sleep early, move around

(01:24:04):
all day.
After three, four, five weeksof the juice cleanse, then go
eat just healthy, organic,uncooked plants for a while.
Don't do forever and you willhave a healthy.
Everything will be back tonormal.
Why?
Because you've got at least asmall colony of every

(01:24:27):
microorganism in your bodysomewhere.
The reason there's only a fewof them and a lot of them is
because of what you're eating.
You change your diet andthey'll change.
So yeah, you can takeprobiotics.
But what's interesting?
When you look at the researchwith probiotics, it's more
effective to take prebiotics andprebiotics.
I love these terms.
Prebiotic is the food for thebiotic, for the microorganism.

(01:24:50):
It's their food.
So if they're saying if takingtheir food is more effective
than taking them, it means thatas long as you're eating right,
they're already there.
That's what that means.
But a prebiotic is food.
So in other words, why aprebiotic?
That's like pre-boarding.
Right, here you are sitting inthe airport and at the gate now

(01:25:16):
you're not boarding yet, right?
You're not boarding.
You're sitting in the waitingroom.
So you're pre-boarding, right?
No, you're not pre-boardinguntil they announce it.
I thought we're allpre-boarding anyway.
They're terms.
So a prebioticbiotic means themicroorganisms will eat this
stuff and then it turns into abiotic, so it's a prebiotic.

(01:25:37):
So my food, my apple, is aprebiotic.
It's a prehuman.
It's so stupid, anyway.
And what they use in theprebiotics is stuff like inulin.
They use the prebiotics andstuff like inulin.
Basically, it's what we wouldcall like an undigestible or an
insoluble fiber, one that youcan't digest, or even one that

(01:26:00):
you can Soluble fibers as well,but anyway, that's their food.
So do that, restore your biomeand then don't take any more
antibiotics.
All right Now.
So understand that.
I hope you got that, thomas.
And in your prostates and yoururine and your colon Well,

(01:26:22):
they're all connected.
They're all connected.
The prostate, you want toremember.
If you want your prostate toget to its healthier size, a
healthier volume, one thingyou've got to do is make sure
that it's being drained properly, and the way prostates drain is
through ejaculation so mostpeople are.

(01:26:45):
I mean, the studies show thatit's 21 times a month keeps your
prostate in a healthy volume.
So keep that in mind too.
Drainage, all right, let's seeNow.
This is Debbie.
My family and I have bird mitesinfestation.
We've moved out of our home andwe're living in our RV.

(01:27:07):
We are trying to get rid, getthe bird mites off of our hair
and our bodies.
We have tried ozone, neem oil,bird mite spray.
There are thousands of peopleexperiencing the same problem
that we are having right now.
They cannot get rid of them.
They have them two, have themtwo, three, four, five years.

(01:27:31):
In some ways, it is a hiddenepidemic, as it is worldwide.
The government turns a blindeye.
Do you have any suggestions ofwhat we can do to get rid of
them?
Well, yes, now one of the bestmedications for ectoparasites,

(01:27:53):
which are parasites that liveoutside of us, including scabies
, right, which is horriblebecause, like in your, they get,
like just under your skin.
You can't see them and theycause extreme, severe itching,
is ivermectin.
So that you know ivermectin.
But the other thing is you haveto remember these, the mites,

(01:28:13):
now Mites.
There are mites and ticks andyou know mosquitoes, fleas,
right.
So they live actually outsideof the body, on the what do you
call it, on the skin, and they,so they're eating.
What they live on is our sebum,the oils that we're secreting,

(01:28:36):
and they're eating the dead skinand things like that, right, so
you've got to get rid of thesource.
Now I wonder why you don't have.
Clearly, you would havementioned that you don't have
birds in your house, right, I'mimagining Right?
So if you don't have birds, howdo you know they're bird mites?

(01:28:57):
Can you see them?
And are you and you have themexamined with a, with someone
that knows what they're doing,with a microscope?
Huh, I don't know.
Is that what happened?
So you moved out of your home,but now you're in your, you're
in your RV and you still havethem, and your whole family has
them, so that means they'rethere as well.
So what you might want to do is,like you know, you can get a

(01:29:21):
strong ozone machine, one that'sstrong, where you put it in
your RV and you lock the doorsand you leave.
You can't be there and you gotto leave, and you leave, you
can't be there, and you leave iton for a day or two or three
and it'll kill them all.
It's really strong.
If you breathe it, you die.
You can't have it.
So you have to be able to getthat.
That would do it, and meanwhileyou go somewhere else.

(01:29:44):
But you've got to change your.
It's just like having scabies.
You've got to change yourclothes every day, and you
should, instead of using thosepoisons that they put on the
skin.
You know ivermectin will do it,and you can get topical
ivermectin too.
You can get it in a paste form,right, and orally.
So I imagine the I imagine yourbiggest problem is you're

(01:30:04):
itching, but I don't know.
Do you have them?
Who told you that that's whatit is Right and are you using?
You know people use insectrepellent, which is I don't know
.
I want to know how you knowthat you have them.

(01:30:26):
Let me find this again yes,itching, you saw under a
microscope, you saw that and yousaid that's a bird mite, right,
I mean, so your sister did so.
Your sister, like, she's like abiologist, she knows for sure
that was a bird mite, all right.
So no birds, no nests, nothingaround, huh, all right.

(01:30:48):
And now are they all over thebody or in certain areas.
Anyway, the point is thisIvermectin orally.
Her friend infected her, allright.
So you've got to in your wholefamily.
So you understand, you've gotto completely ozonate that your
RV and the friend got it from anest, okay, but here's the thing

(01:31:09):
you, you gotta, you do that and, uh, ivermectin.
And you can use ivermectintopically as well, but this
would be a perfect thing for anozone sauna.
If you had an ozone sauna, ifyou and you could do that where
it comes up to here and you'rein there, that that would be
fantastic.
Otherwise you can't.
But but if it's in certainparts of your body, can you?

(01:31:30):
Just because hydrogen peroxidethree percent, six percent
hydrogen peroxide anywhere youknow, that's where is it?
What part of your body, hair,head, anyway, you want to try.
You got to treat it locally andand the only, the only the, the
best one I know of is um isivermectin, because we use it

(01:31:52):
for scabies, right, and I don'tknow what they use, insecticides
like permethrin.
Yeah, these are terrible stuff.
So one thing that is, and thisis good for many conditions, so
keep this in mind.
One thing that is, and this isgood for many conditions, so

(01:32:14):
keep this in mind If you can get, when I was in the US, in
Arizona, I would order 35%food-grade hydrogen peroxide Now
35%.
You know when I used to put itin my pool right, five gallons
once a week.
It didn't need any chlorine oranything like that.
The pool was beautiful, so I'dcarry the buckets and little

(01:32:35):
drops would go onto my leg rightand it was like getting stung
by beetroot.
So 35%, you can't deal with it.
However, you can dilute it.
So if I had 35% and I took out,let's say, for example, I took
out, let's say, for example, 10cc's of the hydrogen peroxide
and 10 cc's of distilled waterand I mix them Now I've cut it

(01:32:59):
in half, I have 17.5.
If I do that again, I'll have8.75%.
So you can keep this.
So you can keep this.
You know it's but anyway, onecup of 35% in a big full bathtub
and you just get in there anddo that daily for a while.
First of all it'll take off,you'll.

(01:33:19):
You'll find you in brush, dosome skin brushing.
You'll get rid of all the youknow, all of the dead skin that
we're not aware of will come off, of the exfoliated.
There'll be a lot in yourbathtub.
It's a good.
We should all do it once a weekanyway.
It's good to do that.
It just gets rid of old, messystuff that needs to come off
anyway.
But those guys can't handle it.

(01:33:41):
Now, if they're in certainareas, then you can get the food
grade hydrogen peroxide 6% andput that on different areas.
I have 6%.
What I do is I take a mouthfulin the morning because you don't
want to swallow in the morningbecause you've been growing all
sorts of things all night.

(01:34:02):
So you just spit it out and getrid of those guys.
Anyway, I don't know where theyare or anything like that, but
do what I'm talking about and itwill help.
I don't know what kind of ozonemachines they use for air

(01:34:24):
fresheners, but the standardones that you get are not strong
enough.
Ones that you get are notstrong enough.
When we were making Oasis,building it, we had paint that
was not toxic.
Anyway, we still ozonated theplace.

(01:34:45):
So at night I mean we hadn'tmoved in yet but we'd put on
this ozone and close everything,everything up, and then you had
to open it up and you can't goin there for a while until, uh,
it's dissipated.
But that ozone will really.
It's really good.
And what I love about ozone too, is that it also it will

(01:35:06):
neutralize other all kinds ofchemicals in the air.
So what you know everyone'shouse once a week you should do
you put chemicals in the air.
So you know everyone's houseonce a week you should do it.
You put it on in the morningand come back at night and let
it just work.
So, but anyway, you got to geta strong one.
Do that in your RV.
No naughty jokes, please.
Did I say a naughty joke?

(01:35:26):
That's pretty amazing.
I didn't even know it.
I'm going to say this one moretime.
One more time because you'retelling about bird mites.
I woke up a week ago my leftbreast felt bruised.
Now this week it is so sore tothe touch.
I did a breast exam.
There's no nodule knots oranything, nothing oozing out

(01:35:47):
anywhere.
There is a small discolorationon the left side of my breast
and some inflammation.
Do not want to get a mammogram,would like to go straight to
ultrasound or something Scaredto death.
Thoughts, opinions, options,all right, since we're talking
about bird minds, I don't seethe connection there, but I'm
going to go with this.
Your left breast felt bruised,sort of the touch discoloration.

(01:36:11):
So if there's no mass, there'sno lump, there's no discharge,
nothing like that, it's sort ofa touch and it's discolored.
That sounds like physicaltrauma, that sounds like a
bruise or uh, something.
You may not be aware that you,you, but it does.
First of all, don't presentlike that so that you don't have

(01:36:31):
to think about that.
That's not even so.
You would not get a mammogram.
But if you have, sort of thetouch is discolored, there's no
masses, then you have some sortof trauma that you're just not
aware of.
I'm going to say this one moretime because I don't understand,
but anyway, I didn't hear yousay it the first time.
It felt bruised.
Now this week, week, it is sosort of the touch.

(01:36:52):
So okay, you, you, it gottraumatized.
There's something that happenedto it.
Now, when you say discoloration,does that mean it's like the
same when you have a bruise andit looks kind of bluish and then
it turns green and yellow, itgoes away.
Is that what you're talkingabout?
But uh, so clearly don't.
Uh, if you, if you, if youdon't have to, don't wear bras

(01:37:14):
for a while, just let it.
I, I don't know what to sayabout it.
But uh, it sounds like you weresaying you don't want to get a
mammogram.
There'd be no reason to get amammogram, ever, ever, anybody,
ever, never, ever.
There's never a reason.
Ultrasound, yes, thermography,yes, but never do irradiate your

(01:37:34):
breast.
But this is how.
This is a traumatic event.
Pain, discoloration, no mass,means some sort of abrasion, uh,
bruise, trauma.
So you've got it.
We've got to figure that out.
You've got to.
We've got to figure that out.
You've got to figure that out,all right.
So, anyway, heidi.
So though you're scared thatthey're right, that's what they

(01:37:56):
do, standard of scare.
Don't, don't even do that.
By the way, those are not CFCs.
That that's not how they are.
They don't present like that.
So don't, don't even get rid ofthat thought.
All right, they don't do thatand, plus, you're living a
really healthy life, so you'renot gonna get them anyway.
Right?
What spit, especially made frommight still not working.
What is no, no naughty jokes.

(01:38:18):
What is naughty jokes?
They have ozonated with specialmachines.
It Corroded wires.
They ozone the car, all right.
Well, I don't know.
I've always hated things.
I've never seen that.
So you haven't hit it.
It's a pinkish color and youhaven't.
You don't realize any trauma.

(01:38:40):
You say pinkish.
Does it look like little spiderlike that?
Or is it just a big discoloredlike an area of pink?
Or is it little?
It looks like wiry and it's tothe touch.
That's not anyway, it's notcfc's.
That's not what they do.
The reason I'm saying that isthat if you have, if you have
what's called, it's called,there's like they're called

(01:39:01):
spider angiomas, it's wherelittle, small blood vessels.
Um, it almost looks like alittle cobweb or something like
that.
You see little lines and it'spink, red pink, and you know
it's that because you press onit it'll blanch and then when
you take your finger off itfills up again.
So that's that.

(01:39:22):
Anyway, you know, if thiswasn't, if you could join, well,
take a picture of it.
You know you can take a pictureof it without exposing your
whole breast, but anyway itdoesn't listen.
It should go away real soon,and if it doesn't, then I would
recommend getting an ultrasoundif you want to know.

(01:39:42):
But I'm just telling you, cfcsdo not present that way Peroxide
and mouthwash not to beswallowed in the morning.
So you're taking the six percent.
You don't want to, you're notgoing to swallow it because
you're rinsing and you, youdon't.
You, you want, you don't wantto swallow those microorganisms,
you want to spit them out.
Last week I asked about puregum spirits, your thoughts and

(01:40:04):
advice, okay, uh, for uh,turpentine, yeah, I mean again,
I think that probably worked inthe 19th century when we had
strong immune systems, but we'rejust not able now.
I think, right now, in thiscentury especially, we're all
exposed to the tower, thoseweapons, right?

(01:40:26):
Ha-ji, ha-ji.
You know, in Thai the way yousay, the number five is ha nun
song, sam si, ha ha, so, ha ji.
So think about ha ji all overthe place.
We don't have strong immunesystem, so I'm not sure how well

(01:40:47):
it would work at this point,but it has been used for a long
time.
But I wouldn't rely on it atthis point.
I would be more if I didn'twant to use any medications.
I would go with hold theclark's formulas.
But so anyway, you've got thisdiscoloration over here, right?
I'm assuming that you'vechecked your armpit and there's
no lumps there and you just saidthere's no discharge renewable.

(01:41:10):
It's just one area thatsuddenly appeared a week ago.
You don't remember hitting itor hurting it, but it may have
happened, because pain is one ofthe four cardinal signs of
inflammation.
Red, hot, swollen and painfulare the cardinal signs of acute
inflammation.
So pain means inflammation fromsome reason.

(01:41:32):
Inflammation is a healingprocess because there was some
damage, whether that damage wasfrom inside, it was related to
colonization by microorganismsor whatever.
So, anyway, and then you canget an ultrasound if you really.
But if you're not feeling it,you know the most sensitive and

(01:41:58):
best screening tests for breastsis self-exam, because you're
familiar with your breasts, anychange anywhere you'll know,
whereas somebody else, like adoctor examining you, is not
familiar with with your breasts,the way they feel, right, and
so they could miss it, whereasyou won't, because you're you
know.
So women should be in the habitof examining every day when you

(01:42:23):
take a shower.
Just get familiar.
Get familiar with your breastsand know everything.
We should don't.
We should know all about ourbodies, right, so we don't, you
know.
Can you imagine I'm going to gosee a guy that I don't know and
say, hey, how am I doing?
That's when we go to a doctor,right, I don't know you, but can
you tell me how I am?

(01:42:43):
We should know.
In other words, we have to be intouch with who we are, all
right, so, anyway, listen, to becontinued, you know we've got
to talk about this.
They're deep inside thefurniture and fumigation will
not work.
I've been doing this for a verylong time, All right.
So if the ozone doesn't work,then and you've got an, now wait

(01:43:08):
a minute.
So you were in your house, youmoved out into the RV, but they
weren't in the RV, but now theyare.
Listen, if you ozonate the roomwith the heavy ozone, it'll
penetrate and you leave that onfor a week.
We're not talking about alittle ozonator, we're talking

(01:43:32):
about a heavy-duty ozone whereyou would die if you breathed
the level of ozone I don't knowanything else that you can
penetrate everything.
Otherwise you have to justthrow everything out and start
all over again.
You know buying furniture andclothing.
Heidi, let's talk next week.
Join the group so we can go.
You know you guys join thegroups.
One of them.

(01:43:53):
I deserve that answer.
My sis had.
Let me see what this is.
My sis has done all that andstill have bird mites under her
skin.
They still have bird mitesunder their skin and scalp
itching to death.
For a year it has ruined theirlives, cannot go anywhere for
fear of Okay, so wait a minute,sherry.
They year it has ruined theirlives, cannot go anywhere for

(01:44:15):
fear, okay, so wait a minute,sherry.
They've tried ivermectin orallyand topically.
Ivermectin works with scabies.
Scabies is nasty.
These guys are in your skin andI'm not seeing a response, but
they don't.
Oh, thailand, we're not open.
The people's I, I, they took myknowledge and my protocols and I
trained the doctor and thenthey decided to do it another

(01:44:39):
way.
So I am in the process ofsetting up a healing center and
I need to.
I'm not quite there yet, butsadly the whole thing that I've
been working on for almost twoyears just fell apart.
So it happens the groups arecalled health and healing or the
parasite group or the cfc group.

(01:44:59):
So just go to drlodycom the uh,my website and you'll see
there's three groups and you canjoin them and then we can talk,
right, because we're gonna liketomorrow morning for me, it'll
be tomorrow after evening foryou, we we have a Zoom meeting
with the members and we talk.
So you just go to drlodycom andthen, right, there will be the

(01:45:22):
groups you can join the healthand I have a neurological
balance issue with the sun.
Oh well, so you guys have to doit so we can do this, because
I'm supposed to all these peoplethat sent in there yeah, yeah,
you're right, garlic is.
Yeah, what do you call it?
You know, live garlic Corey.
Oh, no, how irritating andnon-ethical.

(01:45:42):
What is?
I almost know what you guys aretalking about.
All right, you guys?
Wow, almost 930.
Okay, see you next week ortomorrow if you join the groups.
All right, bye-bye.

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