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August 5, 2025 94 mins

Ever wondered why parasite cleanses fail despite your best efforts? The answer lies in understanding their remarkable survival strategies. Parasites can lay up to 200,000 eggs daily and hide deep within tissues, making short-term treatments virtually useless. Dr. Lodi reveals why effective parasite protocols must continue for months or even years using a three-weeks-on, one-week-off cycle with multiple medications targeting both worms and protozoa simultaneously.

The conversation takes a fascinating turn when examining cholesterol's critical role in human health. Far from being the villain portrayed by pharmaceutical companies, cholesterol forms the foundation of vitamin D production, hormone creation, and cell membrane integrity. Approximately 80% of your brain's white matter contains cholesterol-rich myelin, which explains why statin drugs might contribute to cognitive decline. This revelatory perspective challenges everything conventional medicine teaches about heart health and cholesterol management.

Perhaps most profound is Dr. Lodi's exploration of the true nature of healing. He dismantles the concept of "disease" itself, explaining that conditions like diabetes or cancer represent adaptive responses to suboptimal circumstances rather than entities to be fought. Real healing occurs when we restore proper biological function by removing harmful influences while providing optimal nutrition through approaches like juice cleansing. The mind plays a crucial role too—negative thoughts suppress immune function while mental stillness creates space for healing. As Dr. Lodi shares, "When we stop thinking, divinity shines and things heal."

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, great, so we're back.
We lost about 100 people there,though, anyway, so here we are.
So this is from Jeanette andit's please talk more about
statins.
I am following your parasiteprotocol and very amazed at the
effects.
I've been taking ivermectin andfendazole for two years, but
once I added niclosamide, itreally moved the needle.

(00:23):
Yeah, all right, so that's.
You can't hear me on Facebook.
Can people hear on Facebook?
You can hear on Facebook.
Is that correct?
Yes, okay, cool, okay, great.
Isn't this fun, incredible,incredible.
I can't.

(00:44):
I've never had so much funplaying with technology.
So you know, and anyway, okay,so let's go.
So the other question was aboutstatins and, um, I mean, the
second part of your question wasabout statins.
So, anyway, but, but, but let's, uh, let's stay a little bit
with the, with the uh parasiteprotocol.
You know, like I just found canyou believe it?
I just somebody, somebody fromuh the us, a doctor, I know,

(01:05):
sent me um, I think it's a drlodi's protocol and it's not me.
Somebody's selling stuff in myname and why, whatever.
So, um, but anyway, here's thething about parasites.
You know, there are parasitesbecause they have successfully,

(01:25):
they successfully avoid beingdetected and being eliminated,
and they have multiple, multiplemechanisms of doing that.
And then so what happens is,and you got to imagine, they
procreate rather quickly.
So, procreate rather quickly,so, and you know, I mean and,

(01:47):
and they're, I mean, can youimagine, they lay 2000 eggs a
day, or up to 200,000 eggs a day.
They, these worms, the worms,right?
So, remember, there's worms andthere's protozoa, which are
single-celled organisms likeamoebas and stuff like that,
right so?
But the worms, yeah, they canlay 100, 200,000 eggs a day and
each of those eggs can be 100,200,000 worms.

(02:08):
So when you realize that they'reincreasing in biomass, so when
you want to eliminate them, youneed to do it for a long period.
Why for a long period?
Because they're deep inside andthey're fine.
They're fine, they're not goingto be in your stool, you're not

(02:29):
going to necessarily see themin when you have a bowel
movement.
You're not going to necessarilysee them.
In fact, very few people seethem, and all you're going to
see are the mature ones.
But what about all the um, theones that are not mature?
That means they're microscopic,that means you can't see them,
right?
So we're talking about the eggsand we're talking about the
larva, and you know there'sdifferent stages.

(02:51):
So, even if you successfullyeliminated all of the adults,
you've got trillions of eggsthat are going to be hatching
next week and in three days, andin eight days, because they
have all different cycles, right.
So you've got to do, you know.
That's why we, we do it threeweeks on, one week off.
Well, how long?
As long as it takes, a year,two years, whatever it takes,

(03:17):
you know so.
So you have to get, and.
And then the other thing is toremember there's different drugs
for the worms and differentdrugs for the protozoa.
And so the worms, as we knowivermectin, any of the
benzimidazoles, albendazole,mebendazole, fenbendazole,
niclosamide, prosaquantel, andthere are a few others, but I

(03:43):
usually work with those.
And so you want three, three,and you can which three?
Well, at least I would say theivermectin and benzamidazole.
You know, because I mean,ivermectin is always.
Now, one of the problems that'shappened is when anything

(04:05):
becomes popular and they, whothey are, you know who they are,
you know who they are, you knowwho they are.
I hope you know that there's athey and they're not they.
Don't consider us part of them.
Yeah, it's an old.
Yeah, it's a John Wayne Western.
We're living in a John WayneWestern.
It's also against them, partner.

(04:26):
So, anyway, as soon as they knowthat we're going to be doing it
, we're going to be doingsomething, I'm afraid they're
going to poison it.
Nah, would they do such a thing?
They, you mean the people thatstart and fund all the wars.
You mean the people that plandemics.
You mean the people that, yeah,yeah, those are them, that's

(04:49):
them.
As soon as they know that, weright, because remember it was,
remember it was considered badby, wasn't there?
I forget his name, I think wasuh, anthony, fuck, she was that,
it fuck she.
Oh, fauci, uh, yeah, anthonyfauci.
He said Fauci, anthony Fauci.
He said Ivermectin was bad andit was.
Anyway, when it was bad, okay,then you had to try to find it

(05:12):
where you could find it, and nowit's becoming okay.
Now that's a problem.
The problem is why?
Because what are they going todo?
They're going to probably taintit with something.
So you can say, okay, I'm notgoing to do it with my erection.
You don't think they're goingto do it with fentanyl.
You think they're not going todo it with your food, with your
water?
How about with your air?
So the thing is, there's like noway out of unless you leave the

(05:37):
first world right.
The first world is they call it, they have these names for it
it's a civilized world andwhatever You've got to leave
that world and get to a placewhere you're actually directly
living, direct living.
What is direct living?
Direct living is living andmanipulating your environment
directly yourself in order tosatisfy your biological needs.

(06:02):
Ah, that means what.
To satisfy your biologicalneeds?
Ah, that means what?
Either searching for plants andfruit to eat or planting, or
somehow directly involved inobtaining your nourishment.
Anything that you need you'llfabricate somehow with the help
of others.
And this is living directly.

(06:23):
We live indirectly.
We live with 400 billionmiddlemen and middlewomen and
middle machines, middle robots.
We don't purchase our food.
We hand people paper orsomething similar to paper.
Now, we don't.
Now it's all digital.
Now we've gone beyond that.

(06:45):
So now we live in the world ofreally mythological stuff.
We're dealing with numbers andyou say, okay, you can have this
, anyway, so whatever.
But we're not living directly.
So we're obtaining our.
We're told this food in packagesand in fact, they have to put a
label on it to tell us what'sin there, because they're not

(07:07):
clear what's in there and it'snot even clear what it is.
We don't even know what it is.
So we have to read the labelright and we want to make sure
they don't put this and this andthis, but they can put all that
other stuff.
Wait a minute.
Food isn't like food likeapples and broccoli.
You don't need labels.
Do you need a minute?
Food isn't like foods like youknow, apples and broccoli, and
isn't that?
I mean, you don't need labels.

(07:28):
Do you need a label on it?
You don't need a label.
What's in it?
What's in it?
I mean, what is it right?
There's nothing in it, becauseit is an amalgamation of
multiple elements.
Anyway, I don't live directly,we live indirectly and we live
vicariously and we're screwed up.

(07:48):
We're screwed up, so we'reingesting stuff that is not food
.
Food is that which, wheningested, can be incorporated
into the body as either livingstructure or as energy has
energy, and this stuff doesn'tJust like.
If I ate tinfoil or saran wrap.
I could eat it, but it's notgoing to be incorporated into my

(08:14):
body, it's not going to produceany energy.
In fact, it's going to requireenergy to eliminate it.
All right, well, that's prettymuch what we're eating Saran
wrap and tinfoil.
Yeah, we call it differentother things, right, but that's
what we're eating.
I know everyone's got thesereally specific questions, but
the people that are alreadypoisoning the water and the food
, yes, at least they're there.
Anyway, best brand and place toget ivermectin or fembendazole?

(08:35):
Okay, so that's the thing.
This is a moving.
This subject we're talkingabout is continually moving and
morphing, and the reason it isis because of them.
Okay, so, so now they controleverything we get.
So as long as we have middlemenand middlewomen and middle
robots, as long as we have that,then they, then we, then we can

(08:57):
be assured that we're beingpoisoned.
We can be assured only when youare directly living, you are in
an environment Directly you,him for you.
And when you're living directly, then, and only then, do you
know what's happening.
Do you know that it's real?
Otherwise, we don't know.

(09:18):
Oh, no, actually, otherwise weknow that they're going to mess
with it.
All right, that's all I'msaying.
So, anyway, so Ivermectin isfantastic, and especially in
combination with benzimidazoleit does.
You know, mebendazole,fenbendazole, you know, when we
look at the studies, well,mebendazole does this, and
fenbendazole does this andalbendazole does this.

(09:39):
Well, here's the thing whenthey decided that fenbendazole
is for animals and mebendazoleis for humans, and so all the
research on fenbendazole waswith animals and all the
research with mebendazole was onhumans.
So when they say, well, there'sno studies to show that

(10:03):
fembenazole is a benefit, yeah,there are no studies, they don't
study it because it's not,they've decided it's not for
humans.
So I would like somebody to tryto explain that to Joe Tippins.
Yeah, tell him, listen, man,this is not for humans.
What are you doing here?
Because you know, and that's asif what humans are not animals.

(10:28):
Of course we're not animals.
What are you saying?
We're not animals, so we'replants.
I need to understand that one.
So if we're not animals, thenwe're plants.
Right, because we're certainlynot.
Rocks, animal, mineral,vegetable, remember that?
Yeah, so an animal is what it'sa living biological organism

(10:53):
that moves, walks, crawls, swims, flies.
Whatever it does, it moves.
Do we fit that category?
Yeah, we do.
We're not an animal.
Well, you know what?
I want you to take a look at agorilla and open the gorilla's
chest, and what you're going tofind?
You're going to find afour-chambered heart.
You're going to find two lungs.
You're going to find everythingyou can find in us.
Now go over to a dog and openup a dog's chest, what are you

(11:17):
going to find?
A four-chambered heart, twolungs, in fact, pretty standard,
in other words, yeah, yeah,yeah.
Kidneys, intestines, adrenalglands, thyroid.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.
So you know, unfortunately,people get confused by their

(11:39):
political parties.
You know their politicalparties and you know mostly
that's what.
When I think of religions.
You know religions, you knowthere's.
You know humans are so weird.
My God's better than your God,my God's better than yours, my
car is bigger than your car.
So, yeah, anyway.

(12:01):
So we get confused about that.
We're not animal, are sorry,yeah, and it's not even worth
talking about anymore, butanyway.
So ivermectin and abenzimidazole, and then, you
know, add in, like close in my,I like my close in my, because
it's also um powerful anti-cfc.
By the way, cfcs are, for thoseof you who don't know that

(12:22):
chronically fermenting cellshave been on purpose by them.
Rockefellers, to call it thecancer, right, which really only
is an astrological sign forpeople born between June 22nd
and July 21st, right, okay, now,there's no other meaning Now,

(12:48):
but that meaning has becomesynonymous with death.
So use that word.
What you're communicating isabsolute fear.
You're not communicating anyinformation, so we don't use
that word because it's useless,I mean unless you want to scare
someone, but other than that ithas no meaning.
So what are these things thatform a tumor and all that?

(13:08):
They're called chronicallyfermenting cells, so we're going
to call them that.
Those are the CFCs, okay, sohope you all know that now,
remember that.
Okay, all right, that's whatthey are, all right.
So, by the way, I just saw aquestion over there about I
think it was can I getprosaquantel?
I'm in the UK.
If you're in the UK, you can'tget anything.

(13:30):
It's not just prosaquantel.
You know you can't get anything.
You know, and you know I don'tknow about the rest of Europe,
but I remember back, I forget,when it was it was 20 or 30
years ago when they enforced the, they um enforced the uh, the
um codex alimentarius.
Remember the codex alimentarius?

(13:50):
I remember when that was goingto be right.
That was saying that is when um, the european union was
deciding whether or not to uhpass this.
Because in in for, for, for thesafety of the public, for the
safety of the public, we'regoing.
Safety of the public, we'regoing to make sure that they can
only get.
We're going to have thesupplement industry, which is
vitamins and minerals, etc.

(14:11):
Phytonutrients.
We're going to have thatcontrolled by the pharmaceutical
because we can trust them tocarry out the mission of
genocide.
Yes, we can trust them in that.
So they were going to say so.
They were going to makeavailable over the counter only
small amounts, like 50milligrams of vitamin C and

(14:31):
stuff like that.
So this was up for.
They call it voting and I got tosay about voting, for example,
if you're in the UK, you'regoing to vote, for you've got
two sides.
If you're in the US, you havetwo sides and they give you two
choices, both of which they own,both of whom they own,
tweedledum, the heads, and headsand tails.

(14:51):
It doesn't matter what it'sheads or tails, still the same
coin.
Okay, that's what they get.
So so I, I, I voted.
So that means you're not verysmart, right?
They gave you two choices, bothof which they control, to make
you think that you had some whatI don't know power.

(15:11):
You had some power in this, andthen we elected him or we
elected her, whatever it's ourchoice.
Okay, none of that's true.
So, anyway, the EU was going tovote, the parliament was going
to vote on whether or not toenact the Codex Elementarius,
and they gave the public, theEuropeans, an opportunity to
send in their comments on it.

(15:32):
And I don't remember thenumbers, but there were I don't
know, I don't know 10 million,20 million, a lot of protests, a
lot of protests.
There was that, you know, wasthe, the.
They didn't want the.
The people of europe did notwant it.
And guess what?
It was passed anyway, yeah, andit's been there.
Now, right, you all live withthat.

(15:52):
It's a bummer, it's a totalbummer.
And especially, you know, theuk is just.
You know, you know, I don'tknow what to say about that, but
you so, as far as getting anykind of medication like that, or
getting supplements or anythinglike that, if you're living in
the UK, I don't know what you'regoing to do.
You would have to leave andpurchase them somewhere else and

(16:15):
then come back in.
I don't know how it works,because I know you can't.
I don't think you can mail itin because they will stop it.
They won't let it get in.
No, they won't let it get in.
You know, we need to get backto being us.
Us is a much better group tobelong to than us and them.
Okay, we, there's only be we,anyway.

(16:38):
So, all right, so that's what.
I would take, those three, andthen I would take a for myself
and then would take a.
I can't tell anybody what to dobecause I can't, anyway, so you
take an antiprotozoa, such astenidazole or alinea nitrous
oxonide.

(16:58):
Yeah, you take that.
You take that, and then youmight want to take an antifungal
as well, because, remember, therole of the fungus is what the
reason we have?
You know, I get presumed to knowwhy anything is what it is.
Ok, that's, that's God knowswhy.
There's no way.
Why is the sky blue?
Why is there gravity?

(17:20):
Why?
You know there's no, there'sirrelevant question.
It doesn't matter why it is.
Does it matter why?
You know there's no, there'sirrelevant question, it doesn't
matter why it is.
Does it matter?
Okay, so what have you foundout?
Why?
So, when we're asking thequestion why we're really wet,
we're really asking how, but why?
Why?
Whatever, because, okay, anyway, that forgot what I was going

(17:41):
to say.
Anyway, we'll leave it at that.
So do you poop with your eyesclosed?
Somebody's asking that you guysare you?
Wow, okay, so, anyway, oh,funguses, that's okay.
So, funguses, their role, one oftheir roles in this great drama
of life is to take a deadmatter and restore it so that it

(18:04):
can now be part of the world oflife, support life.
What I mean by that is it'lltake a corpse and turn that
corpse into really wonderfulsoil to grow new life.
So funguses are not part of thefood chain.
The food chain, right, foodchain starts with.
Where's the food chain start?
Everybody, you know, right.
Where does it all begin?

(18:30):
Can I get some answers here?
We've got a good number here.
We've got 108 people.
You know 108 is a veryimportant number.
You know that, right, 108,there's 108 beads on your mala
beads.
Yeah, it's a very importantnumber.
Where does the food chain start?
Anybody, anybody, know what isthe food chain.
When we say food chain, what arewe talking about?
So if you didn't get anopportunity to watch my, yeah,
it's very important, Absolutely,it's incredible.

(18:51):
So, anyway, remember that ifyou didn't get a chance to see
that first part of the food, bythe way, that first part that I
did was not good.
It didn't cover everything.
So what I'm going to do is I'mgoing to redo, I'm going to add
extra what I, I'm going tocomplete it, um, and I'll do it

(19:12):
after.
So after number four, whichwill be uh on the myths, the
next one will be a new uh one.
For for what nature?
Uh, what nature says about us.
But anyway, just as a quickreminder, the whole dance of the
universe is energy exchange.
That's it.
We have supernova producinggalaxies, they're exploding and

(19:35):
considering, what is it?
In our Milky Way galaxy, whichhas about 200 billion stars,
there is a supernova.
They say, well, every 100 yearsor every 50 years, they're not
sure that.
And then considering that thereare, we don't know, 200, 500
billion galaxies, and remember,we're just medium sized.

(19:58):
So anyway, it turns out thatthe estimate is somewhere
between 10 and 100 supernovaevery second in the universe.
And they're producing right.
So creation is not somethingthat happened, it's happening,
and that means energy and stuffis being made.
Remember, in a supernova you'vegot nuclear fusion right, and

(20:22):
in nuclear fusion you'reactually making new elements.
That's hard to do because theforce within a nucleus is
extremely powerful.
You know how powerful the forcewithin a nucleus is because you
know what happens when we openup a nucleus.
We have Hiroshima, we haveNagasaki.
That's what we have in thatlittle nucleus.

(20:43):
Those are the forces that keepthose stuff together.
So to change one like, forexample, helium, which is two,
uh, two protons, two neutrons,to even lithium, which is three
and three, you need a ton ofenergy.
So that's what these these uh,these, uh, supernova are.
And then and then, anyway, sothey produce it, it, and then we

(21:03):
know, in the middle of everymedium to large size galaxy
there's at least one black hole,and a black hole sucks things
out of existence.
So you've got energy exchange,things being made and created
and not destroyed, but uncreated, undone, they're undone Anyway.

(21:25):
That's the cycle.
So that cycle, that energyexchange cycle, is going on here
in the biosphere, where we allhang out, where we have
biological organisms, all right,so in that biosphere.
So how does that energyexchange get into the biosphere?
How, how, how, how, and someonehad it right it's plants.
Plants are where it all begins,it all begins, it all begins.
They take white because they'rethe.
They.

(21:46):
Plants are the only mechanismby which light can enter into
biological organisms.
So the light, which is notsubstance, it has no mass, has
some children, and the childrenof light are called electrons.
And these electrons are whatget into the plants and that is

(22:08):
what makes biological lifepossible.
So the exchange of these.
So how do we exchange it?
By eating, right?
So that's the thing.
Anyway, funguses are not in thatAfter the life the electrons
have left, the funguses getprepared.
I mean the.
In other words, it's not thatthere's no electrons, because

(22:28):
anything that exists, is made ofhas electrons.
I mean anything physical thatexists.
But what I'm saying is it's notflowing.
So when you're able to takefrom the environment and uh in
the form of solid liquid air andget the energy from it and keep
that, have that energy flowingwithin you, then you're alive.

(22:50):
And when you can no longer dothat, you're not alive.
And so the funguses do that.
They take the dead matter andmake it into.
I don't know how, I don't knowthe proper word, I mean the most
descriptive word, but they mayget turned into soil, All right.
And the reason I'm saying thisis because when you're doing
antiparasitics, you're takinglots of antiparasitics and

(23:12):
you're successful in there andthere you're going to have a lot
of parasite corpses around andyou need someone to recycle
those, and so there will be alot of those.
So the question is why take anantifungal then?
Because of those.
So the question is, why take anantifungal then, because I want
those funguses to do that, andthat's a very good point.
I'm glad you brought that up.
And so the point is this you'dwant that to right, you want

(23:36):
that in that context and youwant to just make sure that it
doesn't get go too far.
So what I would suggest is youdon't do those antifungals all
the time, all right.
Now, how often do you do them?
There's stuff that you'll know,you'll know.
You'll know how you know,because you'll well, one thing

(23:57):
about fungus is that it's itchyUsually.
It's usually itchy, but if it'sinside you, you might not know.
So let's just say let's give ita rule.
Then.
How about every three weeks?
One week off is one cycle, okay.
So how about every other cycle?
Do the antifungals?
Okay?
So, anyway, let's leave that atthat.
Now, what are your thoughts oncoffee enemas?
We'll talk about that in asecond.
The other part of that questionwas statins.

(24:18):
Statins are it's apharmaceutical poison that
blocks HMG-CoA reductase, whichis an enzyme involved in the
production of cholesterol.
What's cholesterol?
Cholesterol is an extremelypowerful and necessary component
of biological organisms, ourlevel of organisms.

(24:41):
So, including on mammals, right?
You look at cholesterol.
If you look at the molecularstructure.
It's got like these four ringsand it's, you know, it's anyway
it becomes.
It's the okay.
So cholesterol, our body makesit.
So again, they, they, they, who,rocky Rocky and his gang are

(25:03):
telling us that this stuff thatour body makes is bad.
It's bad.
Also, you know what else is bad?
The sun, the source of allbiological life in this solar
system, is bad.
It's bad and you got to avoidit.
So instead of going out, and ifyou do have to go out in the
sun, take this poison and put itall over your skin.

(25:24):
So any benefit you you mightget from the sun I don't know
what we call vitamin D andthere's other benefits but any
benefit you might get from thesun will be completely negated
because you're wiping thispoison stuff on your skin.
It's that they've got usconvinced that.
I can't believe it.
Do you know that?

(25:44):
They have got they've also.
They kind of go back and forth,but they get one generation of
women thinking thatbreastfeeding is bad.
You should only use formula and, and, and, and and people.
They believe it.
It's bad.
And, by the way, I just wantedyou all to know that getting

(26:05):
pregnant, pregnancy, is adisease.
So as soon as God forbid youfind out you're pregnant, oh my
God, quickly go to the doctor.
Go to the doctor, because thedoctor's going to say, well, got
to get this thing out of here.
So the doctor will take care ofyour pregnancy, don't worry.
And as soon as the newborncomes out, let's put some stuff

(26:30):
in its eye, let's give it someshots Quickly, let's take it
away from the mother.
Let's not have any bonding orskin-to-skin stuff like that.
None of that stuff here in thishospital.
Let's put him over here in thisplastic container.
You understand it's insane, doyou understand it's insane?
So the baby's in the plasticcontainer.
You understand it's insane, doyou understand it's insane?
So the baby's in the plasticand they're all over there and

(26:50):
then they get okay, mother canhave the baby now for an hour or
whatever it is.
How did we institutionalize?
How did we institutionalizepregnancy and pregnancy, so
we're born in hospitals.
Then what happens?
Well then you know what mybaby's healthy in hospitals.
Then what happens?
Well then you know what.
My baby's healthy.
Oh my God, your baby's healthy.
Better, take it for a well babycheck.
Take it for a well baby, yeah,yeah.

(27:12):
So we're going to make sureit's not well.
So bring it for the well babycheck and we're going to make
sure it will make.
I'll show you it won't be well,anyway.
So you get into the system,you're born in a hospital and
you go through it and you're,and then you get it.
Who's your doctor?
What's wrong?
How do you right?
They look at you as if you just, uh, you know, I don't know, uh
, it's madness.

(27:32):
So you don't have a doctor, I'ma knight, and so, um, okay, so
you're in the, my nose isrunning.
Go to the doctor, I have anitch.
Go to the doctor.
So, anyway, that's what happens.
And, uh, what happened?
So we're born in hospitals,then we die in the hospitals.
Usually, when we die in thehospitals, we're getting
swallowed up by machines in theICU.
I don't know if you've everseen that, but people are

(27:53):
getting eaten by machines at theend in the ICU, all right.
So this is it.
So this is that.
So, statins, cholesterol is badnews, all right, and I know the
body makes it.
So what is it used for?
Cholesterol, actually, when thesunlight, that terrible, that
horrible stuff called sun, whenyou get out in the sun and it

(28:13):
goes and it penetrates your skinand all the cholesterol.
It turns it, it modifies again.
Here's another thing, amazing.
That's a photosynthetic things,photo light synthesis.
It's changing, um, themolecular structure of
cholesterol into what we callvitamin D, or the first part of
vitamin D, and then it goesthrough several of our, our, our

(28:35):
organs and gets modified to thefinal product.
But yeah, it is also forms thebackbone of bile, and bile is
made by liver and it's necessaryin order to digest fat.
Now remember why we need fat.
Because there are threemacronutrients, right, macro

(28:58):
meaning, not micro Amino acids,carbohydrates and fats.
Amino acids are theconstituents of what's called
protein.
So you can say, well, protein,starch and fats is how people
know it, but really it's aminoacids and there's only nine of
them that we need, only nineamino acids that we need, and

(29:20):
then we can make all the rest.
We're done with the proteinthing.
Protein is the easiest thing totake care of.
It's the easiest.
You don't have to worry aboutprotein.
You cannot not get enoughprotein if you're eating.
The only way you don't getprotein is if you don't eat,
you'll get enough.
That whole misdirected,distracted thing about protein,

(29:41):
protein got to have protein,protein, protein, anyway.
So fats, what do we need.
Why do we need fats?
Because every one of our 100trillion approximately 100
trillion cells in our body has amembrane around it that that
gives it up, keeps it as aseparate entity.
Uh is made of 50 of it is madeof fat, and inside the cell, the

(30:03):
mitochondria, the nucleus, allof the other organelles have a
membrane too against that.
That's one reason.
There are other.
You don't need whey protein forvegetarian.
You don't need whey protein.
You know what you need Chiaseeds.
Chia seeds have 18 amino acidsnine all of the essential amino

(30:26):
acids and nine of thenon-essential.
It's only missing two of the ofthe for the non-essential.
But anything, any substancethat provides the nine essential
amino acids is considered acomplete protein.
So, yes, chia seed, there'smany, many, many.
So, yeah, you don't need whey.
Now remember what?
What whey whey is.
There are two main proteins inmilk whey and casein, and these

(30:50):
are necessary for newborns tobecome viable.
They have to grow quickly.
Casein is the main one.
Anyway, whey is also involvedin making cheese and stuff like
that.
Anyway, bile is how we digestfats.
We need fats, right.
Omega-3s right your brain, dha,epa, right, all this stuff that

(31:10):
everybody's freaked out about.
So we got to eat fish oil.
Without fish oil, you know, welive Again.
Another brilliant, brilliantRockefeller Rocky and his boys.
So now cholesterol also is howwe make all of our sex hormones
testosterone, estrogen,progesterone right, which allow

(31:34):
us to procreate.
How about cortisol?
How about aldosterone Cortisol?
We all know we think of it asbad because everything has to be
good or bad right.
And the truth is there is nogood or bad anywhere.
There's that which is.
And what are you going to say?
Why is it?
It doesn't matter, it is badbecause everything has to be
good or bad right.
And the truth is there is nogood or bad anywhere.
There's that which is.
And what are you going to say?
Why is it?
It doesn't matter, it is.
What are you going to do?
If I know why?
Whatever that means why?

(31:55):
Why?
Because it's necessary.
It's what?
Because it's necessary.
What do you mean?
You mean to tell me that SaddamHussein or bin Laden are
necessary, I guess so I didn'twrite the script here.
But why do I say that they'renecessary?
Because they are, they exist,what they did?
Anything that is obviouslyneeded to be because it is.

(32:19):
And whatever isn't wasn'tnecessary.
So is necessary whatever isn'tnecessary.
And if anyone has a problem withthat, you gotta go talk to god.
God, okay, uh, go talk to the.
You know dark energy and darkmatter.
What we're left with when youtake away the dark energy and
dark matter, less than fivepercent of of it all.

(32:40):
But that dark energy and darkmatter are how this little five
percent, less than five percent,um move, and but we're gonna
get to call it dark energy anddark matter again.
How this little 5%, less than5%, move, but we're going to get
to go all in dark energy anddark matter.
It ain't no God.
Anyways, I hope you are alljust as blown away by the BS
that we're taught.
I mean, it's such BS it's noteven, it's not even, it's not

(33:03):
even.
You can't even, you can't takeit seriously, you can't take
anything they say seriously.
Right, anyway, so, anyway.
So the statins prevent theproduction of.
Okay, that's what another thingthe cholesterol does.
What else cholesterol did?
It's also extremely important.
It's it's it's situated in ourcell membranes.
Remember the cell membranes, uh, in in a certain intervals to
maintain the fluidity andstructure, to keep the structure

(33:26):
of our cells appropriate sothat they can function, and also
, while they're in the membrane.
They serve as protection.
They protect against lipidperoxidation, in other words,
they protect against the cellmembranes getting oxidized by
poisons.
Okay, so they protect and infact, if you went out to

(33:49):
fukushima, where they're havingthe famous fukushima right, uh,
with the nuclear leaks and allthat stuff, so you go out there
and you spent the weekend withfukushima and then you go back
home in two weeks take a bloodtest and get your cholesterol.
It'll probably probably be 400.
Oh, my God, that's why becauseyou need it's protecting.
We make extra to protect usbecause it's got to be more,

(34:12):
it's got to be incorporated intoour cell membranes.
Remember something like vitaminC?
To protect is going toneutralize free radicals and
acids in your blood, but not inthe membrane itself.
That's what vitamin E is, andthe vitamin A and cholesterol.
Now, anyways, so they convincedus when, right after the I think

(34:33):
it was the Korean conflict, wedidn't call it the Korean War.
When America was at war, itwasn't war.
Oh, by the way, I made amistake.
I said when America was at warbecause, as it turns out,
america has never not been atwar with someone somewhere,
never, never, never, unless itmight have been a year or two,
six months somewhere in there,but pretty much I'm getting lots

(34:57):
of interruptions on my site.
Help me out here, hammy, is thistrue?
Amy?
I mean anyway, um, we got to goon rumble, you guys.
We got to get out of this.
We got to go on Rumble, youguys, we got to get out of this.
We got to go on Rumble and juststay on Rumble and forget all
these other platforms.
I don't care how cool they areand my friends or whatever,
let's go on Rumble.
We need to get on Rumble.
We need to get off of this.

(35:17):
What's his name?
What's that guy's name?
Okay, zoe, you know what's hisname Fuckerberg.
So we don't want him telling uswhat to do Anyway.
So God, I love this.
So, anyway, so cholesterol, sonow taking statins.
So they convinced us after theKorean War.

(35:38):
Because what did they do?
The Korean War, when Americawas fighting Korea, they found
that the 18-year-old deadKoreans and the 18-year-old dead
Americans, 18-year-old deadKoreans and the 18-year-old dead
Americans.
And then, when they didautopsies, they found that the
arteries in the Koreans werereally clean, whereas the
arteries in the Americans werenot clean.
They were full of what we nowcall atheromas atherosclerosis

(36:04):
at 18.
And they figured out itprobably had something to do
with diet, I don't know.
I mean, they started the studyin Framingham, massachusetts,
and it was a long I don't knowif it's still going on a
longitudinal study where theyjust, they, just they look at
people over generations and theylook at all this stuff.
Yeah, so that's it Anyway.
So during that process they cameto tell us that cholesterol is

(36:25):
bad, bad, bad, bad.
You got to get rid of it, okay.
So now that we've accepted it'sbad, when they do a test with
the statin, they don't have to.
All they need to do is say ifyou take this drug, ah, look,
we've shown that the cholesterolcame down 30 or whatever.
Okay, that's what they prove.
That's the studies.
All the studies show that thecholesterol comes down.
What the studies don't show,what they don't measure, is the
person.
Did they have a better qualityor did they live of life or did

(36:48):
they live longer?
Irrelevant, does it prevent?
You mean so if I take thestatin, I won't get a heart
attack or I won't, we'll haveless of a risk?
Um, and if I do, I won't haveto?
I, I don't know what.
They've got people convinced.
I forgot.
I forgot all of the, the lies.
What do they say?

(37:08):
Anyway, they don't have toprove that taking this drug is
going to make you have a betterquality of life or live longer.
They're just going to provethat it's going to lower this
something in your body and he,oh good, okay, so we're good.
So anyway, as it turns out, 80,80, 70, 80 percent of our white
matter.
What is white matter?
What is white matter, whitematter?

(37:29):
You know the brain is graymatter and white matter, right?
So the gray matter are theactual neurons that are firing.
It's called myelin.
There's a myelin sheath aroundnerves, especially as they leave

(37:53):
the central nervous system andthey go up.
This myelin sheath is kind oflike when you have a, if you're
going to plug in your computeror whatever.
So you have a wire plug.
Well, that plastic thatprotects you from getting
shocked if you touch it also isnecessary to ensure that there's

(38:15):
a rapid propagation of theelectrical charge.
The same thing around ournerves.
So, for example, in multiplesclerosis, ms, what happens is
they get little chunks of thatmyelin taken out here and here
and here.
So the nerve is going to fire.
The nerve conduction will bemuch slower just because of a

(38:36):
few kinks out.
So we need that myelin sheathin order to function or live.
It turns out that Alzheimer's ispretty much that's what happens
with Alzheimer's.
You're losing that white matterand I just can't remember, I
can't think.
Well, guess what it's?
Just listen, it's just acoincidence that when statins

(39:00):
were introduced to the publicfor their benefit, so let's say,
let's take the year whatever,whatever year it was, but I
don't know the year 80s, 90s,and then statins have been in
use here.
It parallels Alzheimer's.
No, listen, I don't want you todraw any conclusions from that.

(39:21):
This is just.
My idea about statins is don'ttake them, and I know it's part
of the repurposed drug.
It's part of the repurposed,but of all the repurposed drugs
I wouldn't take it.
Why wouldn't I take it?
Because of what I just said,right, because if you're going
to be alive and well, don't youwant to know that you're alive
and well?
Take statins.
You might not know you're there, you won't know you made it,

(39:43):
hey.
So anyway, by the way,someone's asking about coffee
enemas and I can't do too muchon it right now.
But listen, if you guys jointhe inner circle, what I'm going
to do is can you tell us aboutHD.
On LDO, yeah, I will.
Okay, that's a good point.
At the inner circle, you know wehave these three groups, but

(40:03):
anyway, these kinds of thingslike coffee, and I'm gonna make
short, like 10 minute videosthat'll be available on all
these little subjects.
There's little subjects,there's all kinds of small stuff
hdl, ldl, so the cholesterol,so right that, and so so, for
example, if you believed thatcholesterol is bad, bad bad

(40:23):
Because we can't what we foundis that you lower the
cholesterol.
It does not decrease your riskof heart attacks.
It does not decrease your riskof anything.
Anyway, ldl is the moleculethat carries the cholesterol
produced in your liver to whereit belongs, wherever it's going

(40:46):
to, which is all over the body,and the HDL is takes the brings
it back to the liver.
So they say that the HDL isgood because it's taking it out
of your arteries and the and theLDA is bad.
Ldl is bad.
There is no good in badanywhere in the universe
universe, but particularly withcholesterol, okay, okay, the

(41:07):
reason we have LDL and HDL isbecause they there needs to be
transported.
Same thing with, you know,vitamin D needs to be
transported, as the liver makesthe vitamin D binding protein
and testosterone and needs to betransported.
So the body, the liver, makessex hormone.
Binding Albumin is atransporter.
Everything needs to betransported.
So this whole idea of it?

(41:28):
So HDL?
Yeah, don't.
If you're looking at that, thatmeans you've accepted that
cholesterol is bad.
It's not bad, it's necessary.
So what in the?
But?
If what you'd want to do is say, why don't we?
Just, I got an idea.
Since your body makescholesterol, your liver, since

(41:50):
your body makes cholesterol,your liver, it's not a vitamin,
it's not a vitamin you make it,it's not a vitamin.
A vitamin is a nutrient thatyou need that your body doesn't
produce.
So you've got to get it Right.
A, B, c.
Cholesterol is not a vitamin.
You make it.
Therefore, you don't need toeat it.
You don't need to eat it.
So you don't need to eat corpsesto be healthy.
I know that's a hard thing toswallow.

(42:10):
You mean I don't need to eat adead animal in order to be a
healthy, live human being?
Nah, yeah, yeah, that's exactlywhat I mean.
So, anyway, if you're eating adead animal, you're going to get
its cholesterol.
You're not going to get it froma plant.
Plants don't have cholesterol.
So you're going to eat the deadanimal, you're going to get its
cholesterol.
You're not going to get it froma plant.
Plants don't have cholesterol,so you're going to eat the dead
animal and you're going to gettheir cholesterol.
So one way is, if you areconcerned about your cholesterol

(42:33):
, then stop eating it.
Easy, that's easy, okay.
During recent blood work,physician told me he was
concerned because my goodcholesterol was very high.
So there's no such thing asgood and bad.
And he was concerned.
What does that mean?
Does that mean your physicianwas like, before you came into

(42:53):
the office, he or she weresitting there.
Is that what concerned is?
I don't know.
Your liver is functioning.
As long as your liver has somefunction, it's going to be doing
all of it.
It's going to be engaging inall of its functions, which is,
you know, neutralizing thingsand making cholesterol.
Yeah, so it's going to beengaging in all of its functions
, which is, you know,neutralizing things and it and
making cholesterol.
Yeah, so it's through there.
So, but, but once, what?
If there's rcfc's in the liver,it's usually it has to take up

(43:18):
enough mass of the liver so thatthe liver is no longer able to
take care of the body now,anyway, um, so, if you?
If so, anyway, first of all,you don't worry about
cholesterol, and there's no.
And why would somebody beconcerned that you had too much
good If there was good and bad?
There is no good and bad.
Anyway, the whole thing isabsurd.
The fact that we even spendtime talking about things that

(43:39):
are that are irrelevant is mindblowing.
Okay, so anyway, history ofsuggested Lipitor Tell your
doctor to take the lipitor.
I'm telling you don't, you don'tneed statins.
Listen, I can, I, I need to doa video on that, but you know, I
, I'm tired, I, I know I have to.

(43:59):
I know I have to make thesequick two minute videos because
we live in a world with uh, whatdo they call them?
What should I?
I'm going to call them mindlessdrooling scrollers.
Mindless drooling scrollers,right, they just scroll.

(44:19):
And what are they scrolling?
And let's get it, let's keepthe jargon right.
They're scrolling their feed inpublic.
Yeah, they're mindless droolingscrollers who can't anything
more than 15 seconds.
I don't know, this is confusing.
I don't know, come on, man,right, anything more than 15
seconds is just too much for me,come on, anyway.

(44:41):
So, and I've got to do those sothat I can.
I don't know why.
I don't like it, so I'm goingto make longer ones.
What do they call them?
Reels or whatever.
I've got to make longer onesthat give you information.
I can't teach anything Realquick.
Coffee enemas.
There's two kinds of enemasEnemas are cleansing enemas and
the other ones are retentionenemas.

(45:01):
Cleansing enemas are cleansingenemas, okay, and you use salt,
salt water, and you make itabout the same salt salinity as
your blood, which is what?
0.9 percent.
So, uh, how do I do that?
I'm not a chemist, okay.
So, uh, in about every onequart or one liter, put half to

(45:22):
a teaspoon and then taste it.
Does it taste like blood?
I don't know how.
How should I know a blood?
Everybody had once in theirlife licked the blood and tasted
it.
So it's not just mildly salty.
Why?
Because if it's less salt thanyour blood, right.
Then what will happen?
It will be drawn into thetissues and it won't come out.

(45:46):
And if it's more salt in thewater, then your blood is going
to pull the water out of yourcell, out of your body, right?
So that's a cleansing animal,right.
Now.
If you're going to do a coffeeanimal, which is a retention
animal, so are wheatgrassanimals, so are many kinds of
animals.
Coffee enema, which is aretention enema, so are
wheatgrass enemas, so are manykinds of enemas, are retention.

(46:11):
That means you have to cleanout first, because if you don't
clean out the rectum, if youdon't clean that area out, and
there are feces in there, whenyou put the coffee in, the
coffee is going to be allwrapped up in the feces.
It's not going to get to theborder of the lining of your
colon and be absorbed into thevascular system and going up
through the portal vein to theliver, which is the purpose.
The purpose is to get thesepalmitates, cowahol and cathecol

(46:33):
that are in coffee up to yourliver, because they will
stimulate glutathioneS-transferase, which is
necessary for detoxification.
So it's very important.
Okay, that's important, butguess what else you can do?
You cannot even do it and makesure you got two handfuls of
broccoli sprouts and you juiceit or you put it in your
smoothie or whatever a day, andthen you'll be doing it.

(46:57):
So anyway, let's go back to Ionly answered one question.
You know what?
Um you, the words there.
You guys, I heard that X wasgood for fighting.
We're not fighting.
There's no war here.
Okay, between us and our bodies.
Okay, we're not fighting.
What are we doing?
How to unclog your arteries?
You cannot unclog your arteries.
They will unclog themselves ifyou stop clogging them.

(47:18):
Imagine that that's how itworks.
I don't know if you all realizethis, but I said it many times
and that is that the best thingto do about anything is nothing.
What the hell does he mean?
Who is this guy?
Are you a real doctor?
No, I'm not, unfortunately, Iam, unfortunately, I am,
unfortunately I went through.
No, actually, it's good,because now it gives me now
people believe me.
Well, some believe me.

(47:41):
Right, the best thing to doabout anything is nothing, right
?
You want to win an argument?
You don't want to win it?
Just stop talking.
Anyway, when you stop talking,there's no more argument, it's
over.
It's like one hand clapping.
Now you want to get, you'resick, you want to get healthy,
you stop eating.
So usually stopping is there'spower in not doing so.
When we're not eating our bodyremember our body.

(48:02):
Ok, what's that?
When you're eating, your bodymust, because it's being forced
to break down, digest andassimilate and absorb and
process this stuff that you putinto it.
All right, that's what it hasto do now.
And a little there's, there's,there's some amount of energy

(48:23):
left over.
Remember there's X amount ofenergy at any second in the body
.
There's some amount of energyleft over.
Remember, there's X amount ofenergy At any second in the body
.
There's X amount of energy.
So if you're feeding it, it'susing a lot of its energy for
that and less of its energy forcleaning up, because that's what
it is.
Part of the cycle of life isbringing in and utilizing and

(48:44):
eliminating waste.
That's what it is, and thateliminating of waste and
cleaning up is the cleansingpart.
So the body cleansing is anatural process.
So I'm going to go detox, youdon't.
It's not a do.
When you stop toxing is whenyou, your body, will detox.
So what are you going to do todetox?
I'm going to do nothing andthen my body will detox.
I want my arteries to be clear.

(49:06):
Okay, stop eating, because youknow what your body's going to
do.
It's going to get rid of allthe junk.
That's the way it was made, orit came to be, or whatever,
however we view the universe andreality.
So, anyway, retention, enema,cleansing, enema first, but
you're going to eat broccoli andyou're going to be fine.
Fine, now let's find anotherquestion.

(49:27):
Otherwise people are going tohate me.
I shouldn't have my questions.
He didn't.
Okay, so I'm going to do it IfI can find it.
Remember, if you had anaquarium and the fish were sick,
the veterinarian would not saybring me a fish.
The veterinarian would say,give me a cup of the water and
I'll tell you what's wrong withthose fish.

(49:48):
And if you don't change thewater in the aquarium, doesn't
matter how much medicine.
Where is that paper I waslooking for?
Come on the questions.
There it is.
Jeez, I got to put it up here.
Okay, good, and then you guysare over here.
Yeah, so now that was Jeanette.

(50:08):
I'm glad you added the nightclose to my Jeanette.
That's fantastic.
Okay, so here you are.
This is Bernadette.
And can hepatitis C be curedwith a parasite cleanse?
If not, what is the cure?
And may I get the protocol?
Protocol please, protocol for I.
So the parasite cleanse we'vetalked about I just talked about
right a lot.

(50:28):
So I hope, bernadette, you were.
You got that, you know, and,depending on your situation, if
you have an obvious problem withparasites, you know, because I
believe listen would probably beblown away, like I was, to find
out how serious, how pervasivethis parasite problem is.

(50:52):
I get communications frompeople on every continent and
island of situations withparasites that are coming out of
the top of their head, comingout of a scar.
Several women in differentparts of the world had them
coming out of the vagina duringmenses, so when they had their

(51:14):
period.
I can't, if I were a woman andI saw that it'd be really hard
to, I don't know, it'd be reallyhard to deal with.
So, anyway, it's really a bigdeal.
And then when we were talkingabout parasites we're only
talking about the parasites thatwe see and remember there are
now.
And now we know, finally, since1972, when they they found the

(51:35):
cpm, that's calcium producingmicroorganism that seems to be
sitting in the middle of everyatherosclerotic plaque, every
atheroma, those plaques in yourartery.
So they found out that right inthe center of it, that which
started it, initiated it, thenidus out of which it arose, it

(51:56):
was a little nano-sized bacteriawhich we didn't think they
existed.
Right, we thought bacteria weremicro-sized and even though
Royal Raymond, reif and Weber inMunich and all these people
were telling us that they werenano-sized, no, we know.
And then we found this.

(52:16):
So these littlecalcium-producing micro or
nano-organisms, they call themCPN.
Can you hear me now?
Can you hear me now?
Can't hear me now.
Can't hear me now?
Huh, hello, hello, hello, hello.
You can hear it's okay now,unbelievable.
Listen, you guys, you mustwatch other these kinds of.

(52:36):
Does anyone have the problems Ihave?
Have you ever have you?
Has anyone ever had theproblems that I have?
All right, cool, everybody hasthis level of problems.
Great, okay, good.
But does anybody, when you'rewatching other people doing
lives or whatever, do they havethese kinds of problems that I
always have?
Every you can hear me.

(52:58):
Great, okay, let's go.
So here.
The question was can hepatitis Cbe cured and all that?
First of all, we got to fixthis language here.
Question was can hepatitis c becured and all that?
First of all, we got to fixthis language here.
Okay, we got to help you withyour language.
Remember linguistics, rememberthe our language is.
It forms the framework of ourperceptions, right?
Uh, if you change your language, you change what you.

(53:18):
You change your world.
You change your language, youchange your world.
It's a different world.
I know, yeah, I think they doso now.
So, if you, so, you use the wordcure.
So, first of all, by using theword cure.
What can you cure in term andwhen we're talking about medical
stuff, what can you cure?
You can only cure somethingthat's called a disease.

(53:38):
You cure diseases right, whichI guess means you get rid of the
disease, you've eliminated it,so so.
So the problem there is thatthere are no diseases, there are
no other than parasites, and Imean, you know there's not like
diabetes, high blood pressure,cfcs, arthritis, gastritis,

(54:04):
alzheimer's, whatever.
These are not things that getinto you that you have to get
rid of.
They're not third party,separate from you, things that
get into you.
I got a disease, I've got toget rid of it.
Okay, you have to understandthat.
What is happening is that ourbody is adapting.
Our body will functionperfectly.
It's called health, it's ourbirthright and it functions.

(54:29):
It will function optimally andperfectly if it has all that it
requires, all of its biologicalneeds are being satisfied and
it's not getting anything that'sgoing to disturb its
functioning.
Now, when it doesn't get whatit needs and or it's getting
exposed to things that arecausing problems, ie poisons and

(54:52):
toxins, then the body, in orderto survive, must adapt to this
situation, and those adaptationsare what are referred to as
diseases.
They're not diseases, they'rethe body adapting.
So all we have to do is makesure that that adaptation is no
longer necessary by satisfyingthe needs.
So what our goal always is isto restore biology, to restore

(55:13):
physiology, to restore or tobring about, for the first time
maybe, a healthy physiology.
Always our goal, our goal isnever to get rid of anything,
because there's nothing in thereto get rid of except those
things that are blocking ourbody's ability to function
optimally.
All right, there's no, it's amyth.
Disease is a myth, right, andthat's why you know, for example

(55:38):
, I went to medical school and Inow am an MD.
What does MD mean?
It means mythology doctor.
So anybody who went to medicalschool is now a doctor of
mythology.
We know all the myths.
We can name the myths and wecan tell you all about the myths
.
And then we can tell you aboutthe mythological white knights
that come in and kill thosedragons, right, and they're

(56:00):
called drugs, anyways.
And you know what?
When in doubt, just cut it out,that's right.
Heal with steel, that's right,anyway.
So now, now that we know whatyou're really saying is can?

(56:21):
My liver is in trouble.
They put a name on it, they'recalling it hepatitis C and it's
in trouble.
It's there.
They put a name on it, they'recalling it hepatitis C and it's
in trouble.
Is that really parasites?
Would that help if I do aparasite cleanse?
And then the second part of thequestion is that, I think, is
if, yeah, it is so.
If not, what is the cure?
So how can we eliminatehepatitis C?
Now, parasites are, we all havethem and undoubtedly playing

(56:46):
some role.
And if you've got a majorproblem somewhere in your body,
you know, I'm sure theenvironment that is kind of like
the micro environment of thatparticular problem if you had a
kidney here, in this case it'sliver is going to be either a
place that parasites like tohang out or that they or they

(57:09):
helped produce.
So somehow they're going to beinvolved in there.
So, yeah, eliminating willalways be helpful.
Now, is that what they'recalling hepatitis C?
No, not really.
Now, hepatitis C is one ofthose.
It makes one wonder what thehell they've done.
They, they, they, they, they,rocky and the gang.

(57:32):
You see, in the beginning therewas hepatitis A and hepatitis B,
meaning that there washepatitis A was called by caused
by a virus that is contractedby the oral fecal route.
What does that mean?
That meant that, let's say, theguy in your bakery in your town
had hepatitis A and he wasmaking the bread Maybe he
drooled or breathed on it, whoknows whatever.
And then people in town got it.

(57:54):
So you get it from oral fecal.
And then hepatitis B wasthrough the through, either
intimate interactions, such assex, so sex and blood.
So addicts, intravenous drugaddicts who shared needles would
get it.
And also through intimatecontact.

(58:17):
This was the story they told us.
And then somehow they convincedthe world that newborns, before
they leave the hospital, shouldget the hepatitis B shot.
And so I don't know whoaccepted that.
How could anybody accept that?
How could anybody accept thefact that newborns do not have

(58:37):
unprotected sex and newborns donot share needles with anyone?
It's you know.
I think the more absurdsomething is, the more likely
it's going to happen.
Anyway, the madness, anyway.
So here's the thing abouthepatitis C.
So then if you had elevatedliver enzymes and it wasn't due

(58:59):
to alcohol or anything else, soyou had an itis Hepa is liver,
itis is inflammation.
So you had inflammation of yourliver and it wasn't caused by
any.
The thing then it was non-a,non-b.
You know what you have you, youdon't have this or that.
That's what you have, not thisor that.
It's absurd anyway.
Then then they found out.
Oh, they found it.

(59:19):
They called it it's hepatitis c.
Now, Now, first of all, virusesdon't exist, are not what we
think they are.
So how did they make this?
This is an exosome.
So, anyway, because they cameout with a drug, by the way,
bernadette, they came out with adrug that and I've seen it work

(59:40):
with everybody that's used it.
It's take one pill a day for 90days and if you no longer test
positive for hepatitis C andyour liver enzymes are normal, I
don't know, cannot explain it,because that implies that there
is a thing, there is a.
I don't know.
I'm trying to think of the name.
What was the name of that drug?
Let me see if I can find thename of that drug.

(01:00:01):
I haven't been in it.
Oh, oh God.
Ai, you guys.
Harvoni, that was the one.
Well, there are several now,but whatever, and of course
Harvoni is for Dino, type one.
You know that was not so good.
So, anyway, there's these thingsyou take one pill a day for 12
weeks.
It's crazy.
And now there's Vosevi.

(01:00:23):
It's crazy, and now there'svosevi, which is anyway so
hepatitis c is, can go away,whatever it is, whatever's going
on?
Yes, you are.
How does it look?
Huh, no, so what a virus isbasically is an exosome.
We'll talk about that someother day because I've got to
answer some more questions.
Um, so, by the way, so I woulddo that if you, uh, harvoni or

(01:00:47):
whatever they, whatever one youknow, ask someone, a doctor that
you know, and you can get itand the protocol for parasites,
as you know, we've discussedmany times.
But other than that, all youreally need to do, what's really
really very essential is thatget restored to health.
That means do a good thoroughcleanse juice, cleanse colonics

(01:01:13):
and or enemas lymphatics.
Go to sleep early when youstart eating again after your
12-week cleanse juice.
Cleanse juice, only then you'llbe eating within a six-hour
window and stop eating fivehours before sleep, and you're
going to make sure that whatyou're eating is human food.
Sean, wow, so anyway, sean, I'mnot offering to you See, seo,

(01:01:33):
sean, I'm not sure what you'retalking about, but why don't you
contact us?
Is it hello at drlodycom so wecan talk about this?
I'm not sure what you do.
All right, sean, here's Joshua,parasites.
What if parasites have embeddedin your brain and heart.
How do we get rid of them?
Tapworm, oh, tapeworm Wrappedaround the heart, yeah, okay, so

(01:01:56):
they can do all that, and theydo, and the eggs get into the
brain and you're going to havethese cysts.
So, again, you do the threeweeks on, one week off, but
you've got to keep it up.
You can't in other words, it'snot like you know one go around.
And what's bizarre?
Is that the bizarre to beexpected?

(01:02:17):
The on the label of the drug,when you get the label, it's
going to say take this once aday for five days.
It's true, it's the same as nottaking it.
So, yes, you've got to do that.
So for tapeworms, what do wehave?
There's a lot of them.
Prasequantel is one fortapeworm, but actually most of

(01:02:39):
them do get tapeworms.
But that's what you, that'swhat you're talking about.
Tapeworms, I think right, butthat's what you, that's what
you're talking about.
Tapeworms, I think right, thatis embedded in your brain and
heart.
So how do you know this?
I'm you're saying that you knowfor sure.
I don't know.
So if you know for sure, thenyeah, because you know the thing

(01:02:59):
is their larva and their cystsand all that they get into the
work, into the brain.
But Prasequantel has beenconsidered the best way to start
, right, but interesting enough,is that albendazole right,
because they've tested it.
Would mebendazole do it?
Yeah, but they say albendazoleand they also say nidazoxonide,
which we remember.

(01:03:20):
Nidazoxonide is a linea whichis what we would recommend for
protozoa, but, as I've mentionedbefore, nitroxonide also gets
some of the worms, and one isthe tapeworm, right?
So albendazole, so thecombination of albendazole and
prosaquantel will help with thecysts in the brain, you know,

(01:03:42):
but those are a good combination, you do them.
So I'm imagining.
You know, but those are a goodcombination, you do them.
So I'm imagining, you know, youknow that this is happening,
right, you, somehow I'mimagining that.
Anyway, so that's it.
You know, the albendazole,prostatitone is, you know,
recommended, but three weeks onwhen we go, but I would also add
in the glycosamide, remember,and I would, and the
prostatitone and thenitroxananide, and then you've

(01:04:04):
got it.
You've got it, just three weekson when we go up.
For how long?
Until you've taken care of theproblem, right?
Uh, so you're gonna.
You know, uh, fiona, thereyou've got to.
Uh, you know, for all of youpeople who are living in the
prisons.
They haven't locked the doorsyet.
So get out while you can, youknow, uh, but anyway, at least
leave, go get it and come backin, or something.

(01:04:26):
You've got to figure out a way,okay, uh, who?
So trish, hello at dr lodicom.
Or, to make sure it doesn't getlost, you can just, uh, let me
give you my email, what I know.
I have email now I don't't know.
I think it's thomas atdrlodycom.

(01:04:47):
Is that what it is?
Is that what our thing is?
Is it at drlodycom, anyway?
Or at least no one's answeringme, anyway, so do that.
Thomas at drlodycom, is itdrlodycom?
Is it?
Hear me, is that what it is?
Anybody?
All right?
Or hello at drlodycom, allright, whatever, I'm not going

(01:05:10):
to get the answer.
I'm pretty sure that's what itis right.
Wait, here we go.
It's thomas at drlodycom.
That's it Thomas at drlodycom?
Okay, cool, that's it Thomas atdrlodycom.
Okay, cool, that's it.
And then I'll get it done.
Thank you very much.
All right, so let's get back towhere we were.

(01:05:33):
Next question was so this isLarissa and she's saying I've
heard from someone I know who isa nutritionist say that vitamin
C should be consumed from awhole food source, such as Alma
fruit, and that ascorbic acid isthe synthetic form of vitamin C
and is garbage.
What are your thoughts on thetype of vitamin C to take?

(01:05:55):
All right, so vitamin C is amolecule called ascorbate and
the ascorbate is the active part.
And if the ascorbate has ahydrogen on it, it's ascorbic
acid.
And if the ascorbate has sodiumor potassium or magnesium

(01:06:15):
attached, then it's a salt.
So the difference between asalt and an acid is basically
the positively charged cation,right?
So sodium, chloride.
Sodium is Na and it's a plussign.
Chloride is a negative sign,right?
It means it has an extraelectron.

(01:06:36):
This is lacking electron and itcomes together.
It's sodium chloride, it's salt.
If I take the sodium off and Iput a hydrogen there, it's
hydrochloric acid.
That's what it is.
So the question is what's goingon here?
So this ascorbate part isessential to life.
There's only a couple oforganisms that don't like

(01:06:58):
zooplankton, don't make it.
All organisms make it, exceptfor a few of us mammals the
primates, guinea pigs, fruitbats.
Well, they're not, are they?
Yeah, they're mammals.
So we don't make it.
So now we need to get it.
Uh, and, and, and, and.
We would normally if we wereeating lots of fruits and
vegetables, because that's whatwould be a, because, um, chimps

(01:07:21):
and gorillas, who also don'tmake it and need to get it,
don't have a problem with itbecause they're getting it the
way they're eating, so we justdon't do that.
You'd have to eat a lot.
So now, but if we study it, wefind out that, by the way, you
guys, there's a lot of questionsgoing on here, and I want you
to understand something If youjoin the groups, then we have

(01:07:44):
these private Zooms, large Zoommeetings with all the members of
the group, but we can interactweekly, so it's like we can have
weekly consultations.
So it's really worth it, andit's not just me, Remember.
You get Vanessa, darren, donnaand a CFC group.
You get Kathy.
What are we talking about?
We're talking about Vanessa isa nutritionist and life coach,

(01:08:08):
and Darren is a kinesiologist,teaches us how to move and
exercise, and all that.
Donna is a raw chef, and Kathyis a psychotherapist.
All these things are available.
They're part of the group.
And then what I recommend,though, is that you, in order to
individualize your particularprogram, is just get some
private sessions with those,with those people, and try to

(01:08:32):
customize for you.
So, yeah, anyway.
So all these you could haveweekly.
We could have weeklyinteractions where you ask a
question, I answer and then Isay wait a minute, I'm not clear
on this.
And we can have otherwise,because otherwise I can't.
You got the point.
So now it turns out that ourcells in our body can absorb the

(01:08:52):
ascorbate which is necessaryfor life.
There's two kinds of there'stwo.
Each cell either has SVCT1 orSVCT2, but that is
sodium-dependent vitamin Ctransporter systems.
So in other words, it has to bein the sodium ascorbate form in
order to get through and intothe cell.

(01:09:14):
So if you had an ascorbic acidwhich is a hydrogen instead of a
sodium, it would have to dropthat hydrogen and grab a sodium,
because the sodium gets itthrough the door.
So I recommend taking andsodium ascorbic and you can take
it very easy, easily if you um,I mean if you make the whole

(01:09:34):
process easier if you get theliposomal, liposomal sodium
ascorbic make sure it's sodiumascorbic, a lot of it is
liposomal ascorbic acid get, getliposomal sodium ascorbate and
take about two grams four timesa day.
So now, whoops, why Okay,here's from Dawn why are so many
health advocates against eatingkale and chard and broccoli?

(01:09:58):
Because they're not healthadvocates.
They don't know about health,what they're doing.
They've jumped on some sort ofbizarre popular train.
We used to be called alternativemedicine, right, when we did
the way we people like me do,right, we're called alternative
medicine or what.
What was the other name?

(01:10:19):
But I called it metabolicmedicine.
Because metabolic medicine,what I by it is that, uh, we're
working with the metabolism, howthe body works.
So that's what we we're lookingat.
We're metabolic.
We're looking at, um, how do weaugment and make sure that the
body's getting everything itneeds for a healthy metabolism?
Metabolism is the function of,of a biology, of a biological,

(01:10:43):
of an organism, but now they'vecome to call it functional
medicine.
I don't know what that means,functional medicine, but I want
to tell you it's not reallyfunctional medicine.
It's fashionable medicine,because these guys they'll
change as soon as they'll change.
It's like Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg, during the greathoax, he was going to what do

(01:11:05):
you call it?
They censored, right, facebookcensored and all that.
And then now, when the newadministration came in, he was
suddenly oh, we're not going todo it, I was made to do it, they
made me do it.
So, anyway, they changed.
But there's doctors like thattoo.
You know what.
25, 30 years, I don't rememberMaybe Years ago, I almost lost

(01:11:26):
my medical license for puttingpeople on a water fast, and now
everybody's an expert on waterfasting.
So it's popular.
Now Somehow it got past that.
And it's popular the same witheating kale, chard and broccoli.
And that is why you're going totune in to the fourth episode of
the Diet, because I'm going togo into these particular myths.
It's a myth, they're myths.

(01:11:46):
They're myths.
Broccoli causes goiters, kaleand chard cause oxalosis.
It's nonsense.
So I will get into that,because it's not true.
This is julian hi, new here.
Much love out to everyone.
Please do let me know if I'm inthe wrong for asking several
questions.
I'd like to know your take onbinders and chelators.

(01:12:08):
I see them as essential toolsfor a detox protocol.
That's why I'm asking they willaccelerate the elimination, yes
, plus, it's a safeguard not tolose in a virus system.
And what's your take ondiatomaceous earth Should we
consume?
Have you ever tried toincorporate it into your
protocols for parasites?
I've put it in my pet's driedfood before and it was super

(01:12:30):
effective.
I saw the parasites coming outof their anus every single time,
painless, every single time.
And lastly, is there anywhere Ican find European sources to
find the best links to buy allthe products for the parasite
proof?
Well, the one thing in Europeis niclosamcom for niclosamide.

(01:12:51):
Right, that's in Lithuania, soI would contact them.
That's where you can get yourniclosamide from them, but you
might niclosamcomN-I-C-L-O-S-A-Mcom, and I would
ask them if they, since they'rein that's the kind of work they
do, it's their business.

(01:13:11):
They might know where to getthe other ones.
So I would talk to them becauseI don't really know in Europe.
Now I know I know a Germandoctors who have to get it in.
It's not legal in Europe, soit's.
You know all this.
It's very difficult, it's verydifficult, but that's what I
would do is in nicholsamcom.
I would talk to them and findout and I'm pretty sure that

(01:13:34):
everybody that's in any of thesecountries, whether it's
Australia, europe or UK, thatyou're going to have to somehow
leave and bring them in.
That's the only way I can thinkof it.
It's ridiculous, and this isAvelina.
Avelina, my cousin had 10 by 10centimeter mass in his left

(01:13:58):
gastrocnemius surgically removedin November of 2019.
Gastrocnemius is the.
I guess they call it the.
Is that calf muscle?
Yeah, you know, the musclebetween your heel and your knee
and the back GastrocnemiusPathology is low-grade
fibrosarcoma in the leftgastrocnemius.

(01:14:19):
Okay, he didn't have any chemoafter that, didn't?
Since February 2023, he has.
It has spread around his spine,thoracic, lower back and sacrum
.
After recent six chemotherapythey started to enlarge instead
of shrinking.
What is your opinion on starting?
Ivermectin and fenvenazole?
Wow.
So, evelina, he needs to do alot more, but absolutely

(01:14:41):
ivermectin and fenvenazole.
Ivermectin, 12 milligrams threetimes a day and fenvenazole 222
milligrams three times a day.
I would also do niclosamide forsure, because niclosamide has
been shown to.
They're using it withosteosarcomas and soft tissue
sarcomas.
Niclosamide, so add that in 500milligrams three times a day,

(01:15:05):
and you look up the research onit, you'll see.
But those are the.
And then nitroxonide, 500milligrams three times a day.
Now, but a lot of other things.
You've got to look at thebiological dentist.
You've got to do a thoroughcleanse, all the things that we
talk about.
Evaline, I'm assuming that youare aware of all these things,

(01:15:26):
aware of the fact that what CFCsare, regardless.
Now, sarcomas just means thatit's the process where the place
where the mitochondria weredamaged, so the cell had to
switch over to fermentation forenergy production, the place
started.
So if, for example, if you'retalking about ovarian or or or
liver or breast or anything,those tissues ovary, liver,

(01:15:50):
breast, prostate all started orarose out of either the ectoderm
or the endoderm of the embryo,those organs and those are
called carcinomas.
So anything that forms out ofthe mesoderm, which would be,
you know, muscles and bones,would become sarcomas.

(01:16:14):
These are just names, they'rejust words.
You know they're just words.
You know they're just wordsthat have no meaning.
They have a meaning but theyhave no relevance.
They gave them so, um, you know.
So what is?
When they say the pathology islow grade, fibrocycline, what
does that mean?
Nothing doesn't mean anything.
Low grade, but it's gone aroundhis spine, thoracic right

(01:16:39):
sacrum, lower thoracic lumbarand sacrum.
That's low grade.
So the word low grade had nomeaning to anybody.
What he needs to do?
You got to get to a biological,a real biological dentist.
I don't know where you are, butAbramayon, dr Abramayon, in
Glendale, california.
But I-A-O-M-T.

(01:17:01):
They must be certified, notjust the members of I-A-O-M-T,
so you can find a biologicaldentist Certified Now that and
you do a thorough cleanse juice,celery, cucumber, kale, spinach
, lemon and apple Then you canadd anything else you want and

(01:17:22):
make it as delicious as you needto, but no more, no sweeter,
it's got to be delicious andthat's going to be a little bit
of extra apple.
Then do it and drink that for it.
Three liters, three quarts aday.
No food, no solid food.
That's going to give you fullnutrition.
That's going to give you all ofyour amino acids and all of

(01:17:45):
your carbs that you need,phytonutrients, chelated
minerals.
It's going to give youeverything except fat and fiber.
So you can do it for six months, nine months, 12 months.
You can do juice cleanses for along time.
It's different than water.
Water's a fast, but he needs todo that, he needs to drink and
just do that.
So I would say a minimum.
I would say eight weeks.
Do eight weeks, get his coloncleaned, colon hydrotherapy and,

(01:18:12):
you know, go to sleep early.
You got to get his hormonesbalanced, especially.
We're talking about muscle andif you join, you should join our
groups and then do a privatelesson with Darren, who's the
kinesiologist.
So we're talking about thegastroc.
The gastroc is a muscle.
So the best way to get that, soabsolutely join the CFC group.

(01:18:36):
But there's all these thingsthat need to happen.
All right.
Now the next person is the nextperson, oksana.
My mom is 83.
Her right breast is completelya wound and inflamed.
Her right arm is swelling.
Blisters coming started to formon her skin, Then they burst.
She has been sent to oncologist.

(01:18:57):
He has been sending her to doall kinds of tests.
As a result, he prescribedhormone therapy how to stop her
inflammation.
Yeah, uh, oksana, you got toget her away from the doctors.
She's got to do listen, thesame thing we.
I just said I just mentioned toavalina.
She's got to do cleansing.
The?
Uh, just mentioned to Avelina.

(01:19:18):
She's got to do cleansingbiologically.
That is the same.
Then you've got to optimize yourvitamin C, vitamin A, vitamin D
, and if you get into the groupwe can talk about.
I give you the basic protocol,but it's melatonin, vitamin A,
vitamin D, vitamin C, vitamin Ein the proper forms, the iodine,
thyroid and the adrenals.

(01:19:39):
There's a way to get healthy,to restore health, and whatever
hormone therapy he it wasn'thormone therapy.
He gave somebody to blockhormones.
Instead of restoring balance,he's blocking them and making
them more out of balance.
And the inflammation you'reright, the inflammation is.
So you've got to do that.
She's got to do the cleanse,the antifungals, the

(01:20:01):
anti-parasitics.
It's a, it's a process.
Oxana, you got to join the cfcgroup.
Join and let's get now be ableto talk to you.
We can have consultations ifyou're in the cfc group.
It's twice a week.
How long?
Five hours.
Sometimes we end it five hoursuntil everybody's questions are

(01:20:23):
satisfactorily answered.
So here this on the Instagramquestions Blake, we've got the
parasites medicines we've goneover many times, right, so it's
the ivermectin, it's abenzimidazole of some sort which
is albenzol, mebenzol,fembenazole, niclosamide or
prosaquantel but I thinkniclosamide is better and then

(01:20:45):
nidazoxanide for theantiprotosols.
But join the parasite group.
Here's one also on Instagramsaying do you use hyperthermia
for cfc?
Yes, systemic and localhyperthermia very important,
very good part of the part ofthe program, right, very good.

(01:21:08):
So the, the local hyperthermia,it can be, even it's the
temperature is even hotter thanit would for whole body.
And that works because cfcshave blood vessels that are not,
that are like spaghetti.
They have no smooth muscle inthem, so they're not able to
dilate and constrict asnecessary to regulate heat, and

(01:21:32):
so they just get fried, whereasthe other cells in the body, the
other tissues in the body, areable to regulate the heat, and
then the whole body is workingon a different.
The whole body hyperthermia isworking from another position,
from another.
Instead of, you know, just theheat, it's stimulating,

(01:21:53):
enhancing the immune system andturning the, using heat shock
proteins to basically turn theCFC back to a normal cell.
So that's what the heat shockproteins can do Pretty amazing.
But I don't know anyone whodoes whole body hyperthermia the
right way, except us, because Ilearned from Dr Kobayashi.

(01:22:17):
He worked with him for many,many years.
Um, and this is uh, also oninstagram.
It says can your breast antigenmarkers show as normal, but the
tumors still remain?
Yes, yes, that's why these,these, uh, what they call tumor
markers are really, I thinkthey're more of a.
They cause more stress thananything else, because, because

(01:22:41):
I've, I've, I've had women withvery large breast tumors and
have normal tumor markers,normal tumor markers for the
breast.
The breast is CA 15, dash three, and CA 27, slash hyphen, 29,
15.3 or 27, 29.
And then I also would check aCEA as well.

(01:23:11):
But yeah, and they can be normal, in the normal range, or if
they're going up, it might notmean things are growing, it
might mean that the tumor isbeing is is is being eliminated
so quickly that it's spillingmore antigen into the blood or
it can mean that it's growing.
So that's why it's reallyyou've got to look at other
things.
You can't just look at tumormarkers.
You've got to look at the LDH,you've got to look at the
ferritin-to-iron ratio, you'vegot to look at the thymidine
kinase.
There's lots of things that youneed to look at to see

(01:23:34):
metabolically what's going on.
Because metabolically, ifthings are D-dimer, if things
are going, if it looksmetabolically like things are
more and more out of balance,then you're going to believe a
rising tumor marker, whereas ifit looks like the opposite, then
you're going to say, oh, Idon't know what to make.
It's the mean things are, it'skilling it more quickly.

(01:23:56):
So that's what we have to keepin mind.
It's very uh misleading to justlook at tumor markers, right,
and you go up no, no, and don'tdo that.
And like it's especially withprostate people, when, when I
talk to people who have cfcs ofthe prostate, all they're
talking about is psa.
They're're treating their PSA,they want to get their PSA.

(01:24:17):
That's what they're treating,right.
That's so okay, hey, debbie.
Yeah, so the reminder is todiscuss oxalates and the juice
protocol?
Okay, but the juice protocol,the one that I've been using for
years celery and cucumber,because it gives you the large
volume of liquid fluid right.
There's not a lot of fluidwater in a spinach leaf for

(01:24:43):
broccoli, but so celery andcucumber for that.
Plus they have some really goodimportant nutrients.
And then kale and spinach andyou pretty much got amino acids
taken care of.
And then add lemon.
Lemon will take away anybitterness that may be in the

(01:25:04):
and you can also add in otherstuff besides the kale and the
spinach.
You can add in parsley, you canadd in.
There's a lot of different.
You get anything you want,really any, any, any vegetable
you want.
So the lemon will take away anybitterness that may have been
in a plant and the bitternessyou know.
Even if you get your vegetablesfrom the same organic farmer

(01:25:29):
grower, what harvests today willbe a little bit different than
what was harvested two weeks ago, and it might be a little bit
different than what washarvested two weeks ago and it
might be a little bitter.
There's no way to predict thator anything.
But if you get it, so anywaythat will help.
The lemon does that and thenthe apple will take away any
sourness from the lemon.
But it also gives flavor and ifyou want to use apple, you

(01:25:52):
could use whatever you wantPineapple, as long as it tastes
good to you, all right, anddon't worry if it's got a little
extra.
If there's the glucose and thefructose, don't worry about that
and I will talk about thatlater.
But don't worry.
But I'm not saying go reallycandy, sweet, just enough to
love it.
You've got to love it.

(01:26:12):
Very important.
If you don't love it it's notgoing to be healthy.
It's 9.30 already.
There's one question here, alsoon Instagram.
It says which liquid biopsytesting is the wisest for breast
masses.
Rgcc has been around for a longtime.

(01:26:34):
They get the circulating tumorcells and they subject them to
all the studies and they come upwith conclusions.
Now, remember circulating tumorcells.
Remember only a tumor canmetastasize.
So that means when you'reanalyzing the cells that are
circulating in the blood, youhave a 99.9% chance of getting

(01:26:56):
cells that are irrelevantbecause they're not capable of
metastasizing.
So to draw any conclusions fromthose cells is not suggested
Now to do a liquid biopsy.
You know, you really I'm notsure what reason are you looking
whatever there's?
No, you're not going to get anyanswers from that.
You know I mean you're notgoing to, it's not going to help

(01:27:17):
in any way, because what youneed to do is go to the
biological dentist, you need todo the cleanse.
You join the group and you'llget the protocols of the basic
program, but you want to get onthose Plus when you join the
group.
We have a telegram.
Each of the groups has privatetelegram groups and they are

(01:27:40):
amazing because you've gotpeople in there that have been
working, doing, going throughthis for quite a while and and
you know, these people are arethey're brilliant, they're
brilliant, they, they, they,they, they're incredible,
they're an incredible.
What's really important aboutin this group is now you have
friends, and when I say friends,I mean these are people that

(01:28:01):
don't want anything from you.
They don't need anything.
They're not there to exploityou or anything like that.
They're just there to share andhelp each other.
It's a beautiful thing that isemerging and beautiful community
that's emerging, but andeverybody's very serious and
smart.
So it's it's just.
It's just.
It's a lot of love.
It's that that those telegramgroups are probably one of the

(01:28:24):
most important healing part.
And then I'll spend twice a weekwith you for hours, and then
you get all the other people too.
So just join and you'll.
You'll get better becauseyou'll know what to do and
you'll feel you're not alone andall that sort of thing, all
right, and.
But anyway, instead of worryingabout any kind of diagnostics,
you've already got a mask, ok,so now it's showtime, time to
clean up, live right, gethealthy, go to sleep early, all

(01:28:46):
the things that you need to doBalance your hormones.
Don't start blocking them evenmore, all right?
Oh, by the way, if you OK,someone's saying, you know, I'm
about to start a 21-day fast,I'm assuming you mean water.
Should I keep taking?
Oh, sir, don't you love thewords?
Osomertinib, right, okay, it'sa monoclonal antibody.

(01:29:09):
It's part of the.
You know, ever since they'vegotten the human genome project
done, we've got all of thesetargeted therapies Anyway.
So the thing is, whenever you'redoing a juice cleanse, a water
fast, you don't want to takeanything unless you absolutely
have to now.
So I my I wouldn't.

(01:29:29):
If I were going to do, if Iwere taking that and I were
going to do a water fast, Iwould not take that during the
water fast.
That's what I would not do, allright, so, but yay, 21 day fast
, a water fast.
I would not take that duringthe water fast, that's what I
would not do.
All right, so, um, but yay, 21day fast, that's fantastic, yeah
.
So here's a good question is thepower of thoughts really that
powerful where it can heal cfcswith healthy diet?

(01:29:55):
You mean without a healthyhealthy diet, you mean without a
healthy anyway?
Um, actually, the power ofthought, the thoughts prevent
healing.
Uh, it's when we stop thinkingthat divinity shines and things
heal.
So it's the not thinking.
When your mind is turned off,it's hard, hard.

(01:30:17):
It takes a lot of work to getthere, a lot of non-work to get
there, a lot of not thinking.
How do you not think?
The reason that's so difficultis because thinking is not
something you do, it's somethingthat happens to you, and so
you've got to not let it happen.
Or you've got to get yourawareness so that it's not in,
even, it's not, uh, yourawareness.

(01:30:39):
If you get to just that part ofyou that's awareness, then the
thoughts are not there becauseyou're just in the awareness.
It's hard to articulate,however, uh, you've got to learn
to not think and we do thatthrough.
That's what meditation is andthat's when the healing happens,
all right.
So as long because, as long asyou're thinking, see, 90 of
human thought is subconscious,meaning it's when the healing
happens, all right.
So as long because, as long asyou're thinking, see, 90% of

(01:31:01):
human thought is subconscious,meaning it's not available to
our consciousness, 80% of humanthought is negative.
So the problem is that means aslong as you're thinking, you've
got some negative stuff goingon.
So even if you're visualizing abeautiful rainbow on a beach,
that's the conscious mind, 90%of the subconscious, and 80% of
that is negative.

(01:31:21):
Negative thoughts suppress theimmune system.
I've had people who push thatall away and they know they
don't believe, they know thatthey're going to heal.
They do.
I had a woman people have heardme say this many times.
She was told she had threegoing to heal.
And they do, they do.
I had a woman people have heardme say this many times she was
told she had three weeks to live.
She was CFC's all over, she wason oxygen, she couldn't really

(01:31:46):
bad shape.
She came to my clinic on agurney lying flat because she
couldn't and she grabbed my armand she said thank God, now I
know I'm going to make it.
Eight years later, thepostcard's from Paris.
So that's how powerful thinkingand not thinking are so very,
very important.
There is the trick.
And also, if you can getcontrol of this madness, then

(01:32:06):
that also, then eating right,everything else will happen,
because why would someone noteat healthy food if they knew
that's what it was?
It's because of this monstercalled appetite, and appetite is
your adversary.
So, anyway, that's all, youguys.
So we are late today andsawadikap, namaste, namaskara

(01:32:26):
and aloha, see you next week,and that's it.
I have a lot to say, but Ican't keep saying talking
because I'll talk all day.
Anyway, sawadikap, bye-byeeveryone.
Thank you and join the groups.
Come on, otherwise, so we canreally interact.
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