Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Sunday
Night Live and, depending on
where you are on the planet,it's either Sunday night or, but
everybody can see me right OnFacebook and all that.
You guys can see me and hear me.
Instagram can see me and hearme.
Yeah, okay, cool.
What about YouTube and all that?
Hello, you can all hear me,right?
Can someone let me know theyhear me or see me?
(00:22):
All right, cool, Okay, cool.
All right, cool, I'm on, allright.
So, anyway, uh, let's get a fewmore people on, and I just
wanted to say something that Ithink we need to talk about just
briefly, but it's really, um,important.
Let's wait for people anyway.
So, welcome to sund Night Liveand let me just tell you a few
(00:44):
things about what we're doing.
It's fantastic, all right, cool.
Thank you, so you all knowanswers and questions.
Look at that, got my answersand there's my question
Fantastic.
Look at that.
Amazing.
When it works, it's amazing.
What's the opposite of amazing?
That's what happens most of thetime.
(01:04):
Anyway, when it works, it'samazing.
What's the opposite of amazing?
That's what happens most of thetime anyway.
Um, so the stuff I'm supposedto read to you.
Is that?
Okay, so you know, you submityour questions on the website,
but you can also submit oninstagram.
If you're on instagram, you canjust submit directly.
I forget, uh, I mean, I neverknew, but there's a way to do it
.
And, by the way, listen, ifyou're right now going through a
(01:26):
problem with CFCs, contact myclinic in Arizona, oasis of
Healing.
Okay, because we've been therethis is actually our 21st year
because we just completed the20th so been around back when we
were really really consideredweird.
I'll tell you how far back itgoes.
(01:48):
It goes so far back that thepart of mesa that we're in was
actually nice.
Now, um, maybe say it's stillsafe.
I'm just kidding, but anyway itgoes.
We go way back, um, and sowe've been doing this a while
and, um, the only differencebetween what we do, I think, and
everyone else becauseeveryone's got similar
modalities of therapies Right,everyone's got, you know, ozone,
(02:12):
vitamin C they don't do itcorrectly, and I'm not saying
that for any other reason thanit's true.
So I don't know how else do yousay the truth.
But just to say it, so they,most people don't do it
correctly.
They don't have a plan, theydon't know how to measure
outcomes.
It's just really weird.
You'd think they would, butthey don't.
But the conventional guys do.
(02:32):
They have a very systematic wayto objectively monitor how they
put you into a condition calledasystole, which I'm going to
explain in a moment because it'simportant Now.
Anyway, we have a fantasticteam and I remember we've just
been there a long time.
But the difference is thisBesides all the therapies and
(02:53):
all that, what is your goal?
Is your goal to have the lumpgone or the metastatic
carcinomatosis gone partially?
But your real goal is for it tostay gone and not come back.
And anyone who's had a problemwith CFCs knows that one thing
about them is they keep comingback.
They keep coming back.
Anyway, that's what we work onfrom the beginning.
(03:17):
That's how to stop making CFCsAll right, and then, of course,
we're going to help eliminatethem.
Of course, but how do we stopthis?
How do we keep this in thehistory column and not the
current events?
That's really what we want toknow.
So, anyway, if you're having aproblem with CFCs, give us a
(03:37):
call at An Oasis of Healing.
I forget the number.
It used to be 418-834-5414, butof course it's not now.
Isn't that our number, you guysout there?
Anyway, it used to be, but Isee they call a different number
, but anyway, an oasis ofhealing, easy to find.
And you can find us on theinternet.
And it's easy.
(03:58):
If you forget an oasis ofhealing, I shouldn't have put an
in there, I should have justleft it Oasis of Healing, anne,
oasis of Healing.
If you forget that, just putStopMakingCancercom.
Stopmakingcancercom and thatwill bring you right to our site
anyway.
So now so the inner circle,which we were calling the inner
circle, which sounds really like, I don't know, it's kind of
(04:21):
elitist, so it's really.
We're just going to call it DrLodi's community.
What are we calling it?
The Dr Lodi community?
Anyway, something like that.
So it's a community, we're acommunity, the Dr Lodi community
.
And what that is is, you know,three groups the health and
healing group, where we talkabout health and healing, which
is what?
(04:42):
Well, it encompasses.
So so I got it, I'm on portrait, so it encompasses a whole lot
anyway.
The other thing is, um, thesecond group is parasites, which
is a major, major, majorproblem in the world.
And the third thing is and I'mnot talking about the parasites
or that um, call themselvesgovernment, I'm talking about
(05:02):
these actual critters, right.
And then the third one is CFCs,chronically fermenting cells,
and for you that still thinkthere's astrological science
inside of your body at certaintimes, it's not.
There's no.
Cancer, gemini, leo,sagittarius, scorpio, aquarius,
libra, saturn, as it says, aries, taurus, montes, goompa, pisces
(05:26):
, and none of that's in yourbody.
You have chronically permanentthings.
If you have enough, that willform a mass.
That's what you have.
So we don't use astrologicalscience around here.
It's not that I don't thinkastrology is legitimate, because
I do, but I just know it's notlegitimate.
It's not part of what's goingon in our bodies, although
(05:46):
there's an influence, but it'snot the same thing.
So, anyway, so those threegroups constitute the, uh, the,
the community and we all, and Ithink probably the.
I mean, yeah, I, I do.
I have meetings with you everyweek, uh, we have long meetings
five, six, whatever hours, untileveryone's questions are
(06:08):
answered.
But in addition to that, thereis the Telegram groups, where
they're amazing.
It's too bad.
It can't all be.
All the data can't be taken offwithout your privacy, but
there's no way to do it.
That's why we have them set up,so that you can't take pictures
of it.
You can't do anything.
So it's all private.
It's very private, but there'samazing information there's,
(06:30):
like so many experts.
We're all experts in our ownway, but a lot of people have
been going through what you'regoing through longer and have a
lot more experience, and it'sjust amazing what goes on there.
Then of course, we've got Darren, our kinesiologist, who comes
on every week with Vanessa.
Vanessa is the nutritionist andhealth educator and yoga
(06:55):
instructor.
She's just everything.
And then every other Tuesday wehave Donna, who's been raw for
37 years, so she's kind of gotlike credentials.
And then, of course, then we'vegot Kathy's Corner for people
who are in CFC group.
Okay, and you know, I knowpeople in the parasite group
have been asking too, but it'sreally hard because there's only
(07:16):
one of Kathy.
Last time I checked, I don'tknow, she may have she went off
to America recently, maybe shecloned herself, I don't know,
but as far as I remember,there's only one Kathy and she's
a psychotherapist and is on thesame journey as we all are.
So anyway, everybody that'spart of the CFC group is there.
(07:38):
There's a waiting list.
So we're going to have to dosomething about Kathy, something
to make her be able toaccommodate everyone.
But that's the benefit of beinga member.
So that's what I wanted to sayabout that All right.
And then, as you know, it's atDR Thomas Lodi, md.
If you're on X or TikTok ournew TikTok and everything else
(07:59):
Instagram, youtube, linkedin,facebook it's at DR Thomas Lodi,
no MD at the end.
Okay, all right.
And these, as you know, arereplayed immediately and they're
available to you and there's awhole archive of all these.
All right, so that's that.
Now the other thing is the humandiet.
I postponed part four because Iwant to get the word out there
(08:20):
Nobody other than our group isjoining these.
I mean, first of all, okay,episode four, it's called the
Human Diet.
Episode one was nature's design.
Two was cooked food is poison.
Three is what does the researchsay?
And you know, I'm going to haveto redo those because nobody
other than our community sawthem and you're not going to get
(08:41):
this information anywhere else.
You're not going to get thisinformation anywhere else.
You're not going to get thisinformation anywhere else.
You are not going to get thisinformation anywhere else.
I'll repeat it one more time.
No, I won't.
Okay, but let me tell you thisthe one number four is exposing
the myths that are keepingpeople from living healthfully,
(09:01):
who probably were, and nowthey're not, not because they
have been told that kale is nolonger a superfood?
Well, it certainly is.
Nature didn't change.
People's minds change, people'saddresses change Depending on
the war status of a country.
Hemlines go up and down.
(09:21):
All kinds of things change.
However, the truth doesn't'tchange.
So oxalates are bad?
No, well, they are.
But do you get them from eatingspinach and kale?
No, that's just your, that'snot my opinion.
I'm not going to give you anopinion, I'm only going to tell
you the truth.
And I've got the research andI'll show you that that's an
(09:41):
absolute misunderstanding.
And lignans are bad?
No, necessary for health, infact, you want them.
What?
Yes, what about phytates?
Bad, no, soy, very.
Make sure you're eating itevery day.
And I'm not just telling youthis, I'm going to prove it,
(10:02):
because I want you to eathealthy, because I want you to
eat healthy, because I want youto live healthy, because I want
you to be.
The only defense against lies isthe truth.
It's the only defense.
So you've got to hear the truth.
So I would expose, I postponedit a couple weeks.
I don't want to get people thatdon't even know that we exist
to somehow hear of that.
That.
Wait, here's, wait, here'sanother view, and it turns out
(10:24):
to be the true view.
Well, how can you say that?
How can I say that?
Because I've done the researchhours more than years, but I'm
at.
The research is there.
It's not me.
I didn't.
I, you know why would I make upsomething about oxalates or
what?
What would be the purpose incoming up with a story that's,
that's I mean.
I don't even imagine.
(10:44):
I can't even imagine themotivation behind it, let alone
the time required to do it, andthen what to do it.
Anyway, the truth is that allthese things, all these myths
and there are other myths toowe're going to go through, but
I'm exposing the myths, I'mgoing to expose them really
thoroughly.
(11:05):
After you see this, you'll haveno doubt that that, yeah, you
can go back and have your kalespinach smoothies, but you're
gonna put some stuff in thereand make it taste good too.
Kale, it's not.
I mean, kale juice doesn'treally sound exciting, does it?
But you make it delicious.
You make it delicious, andwe'll talk about how to do that.
So everything you're putting inyour mouth should be delicious
and that you love it, all right.
Otherwise, it's actually notgood for you, because it's going
(11:26):
to suppress your immune systembecause you're feeling deprived,
yes, okay.
So, anyway, now I wanted to bea little more serious for a
moment here.
I'm going to first talk to youabout a concept.
It's not a concept, it's just averbiage.
Oh, lori, thank you.
No picture Picture's back onyou guys anyway.
(11:48):
So we'll get into.
So it's not only reallyimportant for women.
Because why?
You all know this if you'vebeen watching for a while.
Why?
Because, uh, it is aphytoestrogen that attaches
itself to the estrogen receptorbeta, which shrinks tumors.
And guess when?
There's a lot of estrogenreceptors in prostates.
All right, so you got to watchit.
(12:10):
Okay, it's going to be in twoweeks.
What's the date?
The dates are episode four.
This is exposing the myths, orshould we call it exposing the
BS, because I don't know whypeople would, why would they
come up and say these things's?
On september 25th, 8 pm eastern, 5 pm, arizona, is that?
(12:31):
And I don't know if we're instate of daylight saving or
whatever.
Who the hell plays with theclock?
I mean, it's bad enough that wehave to deal with clocks and
calendars and they mess withthem.
Okay, then episode five, whichis basically going to be a
comprehensive episode, one whichI feel like I left too many
things out, which is nature'sdesign.
How are we designed For eating?
Because most of our anatomy andphysiology is centered around
(12:55):
eating and making babies?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you see, okay, fantastic, franz, what's up
with all this?
More chill on, or whatever ishappening to a lot of people via
exiting their skin in otherorifice, every other orifice,
(13:18):
what?
I'm glad I don't understandthat.
Lucy, what's up with that thingthere?
Wow, anyway, wow, anyway.
So, yeah, okay.
So be sure, I mean, what's themyths?
All right, if you think any ofthose things.
If there's else, it might bebad.
I forget all the other.
We're carnivores.
No, we're not, we're omnivores.
(13:38):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, and it's true, we are omnivores by perversion
, not by design.
All right, we'll talk aboutthat, but anyway, I went out of
the woods.
Anyway, they're all in there.
Everybody needs milk.
Everybody under around up toabout the age of two needs milk.
I mean talking about milk, nottalking about nut milks and
(14:00):
stuff like that.
Anyway, we'll do that.
So, listen, let me just talk toyou about something quite
serious now for a moment.
It's very serious and it'ssomething we need to think about
Now.
When the heart beats, it'scalled.
You know, if you've ever hadyour blood pressure taken, the
top number is called thesystolic and the bottom number
is called the diastolic.
(14:20):
Right, like 120 or 70 is 110over 60 is all those are good.
You know, you're getting below100 on your systole, then it's
probably something's going on,you know, and you get to 140 of
the systole, something's goingon, it's too high.
And then the diastole okay.
So what is systole?
When the blood goes into yourheart and then your heart goes,
(14:44):
and that pump is the systolicpressure.
Okay, it's called systole, okay.
And then the diastolic, sothat's the force of the pump.
And then what keeps it flowingbecause you don't just have that
pump is the flexibility andstrength of the blood vessels,
and that keeps your diastole.
(15:04):
So that means that's the lowestpressure that your blood is
flowing under.
This is pressure of blood flow,okay, so that's the upper one.
And then the diastole is thebottom number, because you must
have an adequate amount of bloodentering all the tissues all
the time, okay, anyway.
(15:26):
So between systole and diastole, then you have an average
amount which is always enteringit, so there's never a time
where you're not getting bloodIn.
That systolic pump is the heart.
Now, in Latin, which became partof medical jargon, you put the
(15:47):
letter A in front of a word, iteliminates it, it negates it.
For example, anemia is blood.
Anemia would mean, in reality,no blood, but really when we
talk about anemia we just meanlow blood.
But anorexia, an, and anAnorexia has to do with eating.
Anorexia is stop eating, noteating.
(16:08):
Anyway, what else?
I think there's some examplesyou would know, but anyway.
So the word asystole is when theheart is stopped, and that's
usually.
We use it in ICUs, we use it inemergency rooms, we use it at
the bedside.
If someone's heart stops, it'scalled asystole.
(16:28):
There's no longer any systolicfunction.
Okay, so that's the time thatwe all go there and transition.
We transition, fortunately,fortunately, this is not the
only show.
This is just one half, maybenot maybe one millionth, maybe
(16:49):
there's, you know, but anyway,from our perspective is one half
anyway.
Just let you know that.
So the reason I brought whywould he be talking about that?
Because I want to bring up asubject.
I know that in order for me tostay, not get censored, I can't
use words like we use forasystole.
So if someone's asystole, thatmeans they're asystolic, all
right, and so I'm like, so youknow that.
So I won't use that wordbecause you know, I found out I
(17:12):
was getting censored for usingwords that I didn't like, for
example um, if a cell it nolonger is, it goes in.
You can't say it's asystolicbecause it's in the heart, but I
can't use any of those words.
So let me just say this If youall remember Dr Gonzalez, about
what was it?
I don't know how long ago,several years ago, dr Gonzalez
(17:33):
was the first, I think in awhole lot, at least 70 other
people, other physicianspracticing like I do, were
forcibly put into asystole.
You remember that many, many,well, not many 10 years ago, was
it 10 years ago, maybe about 10years ago up to 70, and that
(17:53):
was for doing their best to helppeople heal.
So when healing becomes a crimeand telling the truth is
punishable by d d, d, d, as-dasystole, forced asystole, we
have entered the gates of hell.
Now, dr Gonzalez and all thoseother 70 people who committed
(18:15):
suicide by you know, I'm notsupposed to use that word either
Anyway, put to themselves, Imean all that stuff, they were
for healing.
And then, as you all know, drBouchard was not for any of his
healing, although he was part ofthe group that we would call
alternative or integrative orwhatever, but he was doing
(18:35):
something.
I guess that's worse he wastelling the truth, and we all
know what happened last weekSomebody else was silenced for
telling the truth.
So when healing becomes a crimeand telling the truth is
punishable by a forcedassistable, we've entered the
gates of hell.
So what do we do?
Do you remember what we did?
So when you will?
(18:56):
Yeah, we've walked through thegates of hell, but if we want to
seal and lock the door, thedoor is locked by us accepting
it.
The door is locked by usaccepting it.
The door is locked by usaccepting it.
If we don't absolutely rejectand refuse this, then we've
locked the doors.
They're not locked yet.
We can't just look at this asanother headline.
(19:17):
That happened.
You all know who I'm talkingabout, but it's not another
headline.
This is a big deal, and the bigdeal is this let us remember
the elephant.
The elephant doesn't want to goup that hill.
You're not going up the hill,so we got me and the elephant.
The elephant is about 99 of ustwo and I'm about one percent.
(19:38):
I'm not going up that.
We are the 99, we are theelephant.
We don't have to go up thathill, all right.
Anyway, I'm being genericbecause I don't know what to say
.
As soon as I get a, what do youcall it?
A X or a rumble station, I'llbe more precise and tell it like
(19:58):
it is man, all right.
So please keep that in mind.
We can't just it's not justanother headline.
Okay, you guys.
It's not just another headline.
Okay, you guys.
It's not another headline.
It's a wonderful human beingLost breathing rights last week.
You all know who he is Charlie.
Whether you agreed or not, itdoesn't matter if you agreed
(20:20):
with him.
It would be the same thing ifanybody who's telling their
story, who's telling the truth.
In my era, I watched JFK.
I watched his wife crawling outon the back of the car trying
to grab a piece of his head, hisskull, his brain.
I watched Martin Luther King,bobby Kennedy, john Lennon.
(20:43):
So it's not that this is new,it's just that we can no longer
just view these as headlines.
We're always talking about them.
There's only a them becausewe're allowing it.
Just remember that.
Okay, keep that in mind.
I'm not going to go into allthis, but we're when I get a
(21:06):
platform where I can talk.
I'll talk, but just please keepall that stuff in mind.
So let's get on with the show.
The show is what are thequestions today?
Okay, now, Okay.
So this question is Pamela Newmember.
So I just choose a member ofour groups Parasite group.
I'm sorry I'm late on this.
(21:28):
I only just joined the InnerCircle this past week.
We're calling it Dr Lodi'scommunity now instead of Inner
Circle, just because it soundselitist.
I didn't want to sound elitist,not Lodi's.
It's not my circle, thecommunity, but you've got to
give it a name to the Dr Lodicommunity, something like that.
My question and I'm choked upbecause it's so hard to talk
(21:50):
about, because nobody talksabout it I have parasites in my
mouth, eating away at my dentalimplants and gums.
I have them collecting insideone of my sockets from a tooth
extraction in April of 2025.
I have been on your recipe toblast them out, but nothing is
working.
The socket closed over and Ibelieve they're all trapped
(22:13):
inside there.
I can't eat or chew anything.
They also inhabit my ears andeyes.
I do have pictures and I havebeen documenting my journey.
Can you please share with meany solutions or remedies to my
infestation.
Thank you so very much, whoa.
So, pamela, I'm so glad you'rea member of the Parasite Group
and I haven't met you yet.
(22:34):
So this week, on our meeting,which is tomorrow, bring your
pictures.
I just got to see what you'retalking about.
Because here's the thing Now.
First of all, let's start withthe fact that they're eating
away at your implants and yourgums.
Now, just to keep in mind,parasites, the ones that we
refer to, are either worms, thehelminths, or the protozoa,
(22:56):
which are single-celledorganisms.
So normally, what we find,usually the parasites we find in
the mouth, are protozoa,because there's a number of
protozoa that are actuallynormal inhabitants, unless they
get into the place where theydon't belong, where they don't
fit, you know, whatever, butthat usually gets worked out,
(23:17):
that's usually not a problem.
But what you're talking aboutalmost doesn't even sound like
either the helminths, which wethink of, the roundworms and the
flatworms, and it doesn't soundlike the helminths and
certainly not the protozoa.
It almost sounds likeectoparasites.
And you know, uh, you all knowwhat ectoparasites are.
(23:37):
These are parasites that are onthe outside of our body, um, in
the skin and the hair, and itcan be in the mouth and the ears
and, yeah, and they arrive byinsect, they can.
They can arrive by insect asvectors, bringing them, um, like
scabies, which is, you know,like lice, head lice, scabies,
which is, you know, like lice,head lice scabies, which is
(24:00):
scabies all over, not just headlice, but scabies is all over.
And then there's lice which canbe pubic, scalp or axillary,
you know, and of course youcould have fleas and other
things like that, but there aresome really nasty ones that are
basically the larva of fliesthat can get into your skin and
your ears and crawl.
What they do.
(24:20):
It's just if you see thepictures, it's hard to look at
the pictures.
Okay, so that sounds what you Imean the way you're describing
it and eating away at yoursocket.
Now I have seen surgeries wherethey've got a tooth removed and
out of the socket they'repulling out larva and these, you
know, larva is the word thatyou know we've come like the
(24:43):
larva of a fly is what we callmaggots.
So, but anyway, I've seen that.
So you know, from what you'redescribing it sounds like that.
So, really, when next Tuesday ortomorrow, my Tuesday, your
Monday, let me see what you'retalking about, okay, and
especially if you say they're inyour ears and your eyes, all
right, and dental implants andgums, so yeah.
(25:03):
So, first of all, number one,what you need to do is we need
to get you to a biologicaldentist Now, I don't know where
you live, pamela, but we'll talkabout that tomorrow but a
biological dentist.
And why a biological dentist?
Because they're going to not doanything harmful, whereas other
other dentists might not evenknow.
(25:24):
I might not even know they'redoing harm, but you know they
use dental materials that areincompatible with the person and
they get really sick and stufflike that.
Hold on a second.
Someone's giving me a messagehere.
Ah's something else.
Okay, very good, all right.
So, um, where are we again backhere?
Where did we go?
Oh, there, um, now.
(25:45):
So the first thing and this istrue with any if you were to
have um, you know these, theseectoparasites, these, these,
they're insect larvae.
If you were to have them, likeanywhere else in your body,
you've got to remove themphysically.
That's what the surgery is.
It's dental surgery.
They've got to be taken out.
We've got to take them out.
So if you're saying nothing'sworking by taking it, you're
(26:07):
right, it won't.
So anything you're takingorally that's getting into your
blood to be delivered everywhereis not adequate for these
larvae that are large andcomparatively so they've got to
be removed.
(26:27):
So that would be the firstthing.
And if you're saying they'realso in your ears and your eyes,
then we've got to take a lookat that too, because they've got
to be removed now.
And if they're ecto and then'vegot to be removed now, um, and
if they're ecto, and then theyneed to be analyzed, what are we
talking about?
We've got to go to take them toa lab and look under the look
under a microscope and find outwhat they are, right, okay, um,
(26:48):
so that's what it you know.
So it's certainly, um, if youcan feel them eating away now,
dental implants probablytitanium, I would, would imagine
which is what we need to, whichthose probably have to come out
.
Anyway, I don't know whathappened, where you are, how
this all happened, so we'll talkon Tuesday.
But, just for everyone else'ssake, the first thing we would
(27:09):
do, we need to do in a situationlike this, is get rid of
whatever is visible.
All right, you get rid of it,then you work with, and once
you've analyzed what's there,then you can work with the
appropriate treatment.
But you got to know what'sthere.
Now, putting all of that asidethe fact that we've all got some
(27:30):
degree of Helminth's worms andprotozoa in us we need that
whole other cleanse that wetalked about.
It's still very muchappropriate and this is still
necessary for you, but right nowthe most important thing is
actually surgically removingthese guys from what you were
describing.
So I'll find out, okay.
So hang in there, I'll see youtomorrow.
(27:52):
Now this is Rebecca Triplepositive, stage one breast CFCs.
So, rebecca, we don't useastrological signs Not that I'm
against astrological, I loveastrology but in this situation,
breast CFCs you did 12 weeks ofTaxol and Herceptin.
What does that tell us?
(28:12):
Everybody that tells us it wasfor sure estrogen receptor and
her two positive.
Now why she was triple positive?
Why didn't they give heranything for progesterone
receptors?
Positivity because they don'thave anything.
So it's not a big deal.
It's not a big deal becausethey don't have anything.
Just let that sink in for aminute.
They don't have any treatments.
So I had had a lobectomy withunclear margins.
(28:35):
So second surgery they still.
They still found 15% CFCs.
They want me to do radiation,low-dose tamoxifen and cadsyla,
which is Herceptin that has achemo attached to it.
I do 12 milligrams ivermectinand 222 fenben daily.
I do Alinea a few times a month.
I do tons of supplements, veryclean eating and green juice
(28:59):
every day.
I'm scared to do standard ofcare, but I'm also scared not to
.
What would you suggest would bethe most important of those
items for me to do?
We need a thorough I hope you'rewatching because I'm glad
you're here because we need todo a thorough.
We need to give you a showerinside, clean out your mind and
(29:21):
change your words.
Okay, first of all, please goto standard of scare webinar.
Just go on any search engine.
Okay, because it's a video.
It's not.
There's no charts for it.
It's called the Standard ofScare.
Please watch it.
Please watch it.
(29:41):
Number one, watch that.
How do you join the community?
Go to drlodycom, my website,right, drlodycom, drlodycom.
Right there it'll show you howto join, remember, dot com,
(30:02):
drlodycom.
And right there it'll show youhow to join.
And you're I remember the.
Uh, I've got to work with thequestions that came in and if
you all join the communitiesthat we can talk like this, we
can have actual discourse.
Um, so we've got to change thisto the first one triple
positive um, stage one.
Okay.
What that means is that it was avery small lesion.
Lesion is a ridiculous termthat just means anything that's
(30:24):
not normal healthy tissue.
Not normal healthy tissue wouldbe a lesion.
It's okay.
It's parasite group Monday orTuesday.
It's Monday in the US, for meit's a Tuesday, so that's why I
mixed it up.
But for you guys it's a Monday.
For me it's a Tuesday, sothat's why I mixed it up.
But for you guys it's a Monday.
Now, stage one means it's justreal small.
It hasn't gone anywhere, it'snot in the lymph or anything
(30:48):
like that.
They can detect and they did alumpectomy with unclear margins,
which is mind-blowing, becausea stage one hasn't grown.
I see a stage two is a mass, asmall group of cfcs that have
grown and are starting todisturb the architecture of the,
of the organ or gland orwherever they are.
Stage one is it hasn't yetgrown, it hasn't disturbed the
(31:09):
artist, it's just like a verysmall spot.
So you don't.
So if you do a lumpectomy, howcould you have not have clean
margins?
I don't understand that at all.
So the way that you'redescribing it according to their
, I'm nothing.
This whole staging racket, whichit's a racket to make money and
but anyway, this whole stagingracket.
Um, you sound like it wouldhave had to have been what they
(31:34):
should have called the stage twoin their in their lexicon.
So after the second surgerythey still found 15%.
It is a boggle in my mindbecause you just take I don't
know how that happened.
That's just crazy.
First of all, you've got to geta whole new team.
You've got to abandon this team.
It's not what I can tell you,but it's what I would do, but I
can tell you, but that's what Iwould do.
(31:56):
Then they want you to doradiation, low-dose tamoxifen
and Herceptin with the chemoattached to it.
We're not on Zoom so I can'tshow you, but if I could, I
would show you that radiationwill stimulate and ensure that
you get metastasis.
The 12 weeks of Taxol did thesame thing.
(32:17):
The Taxol is going to ensureyou get metastasis.
The 12 weeks of Taxol did thesame thing.
The Taxol is going to ensureyou get metastasis.
You can still not, don't worry.
I'm not saying that for sure,because now you know we can take
care, we know what to do toeliminate that.
But what Taxol does and all theother chemos and the maximum
tolerated doses that they use aswell as the radiation.
(32:38):
What they do is they stimulateeach of the six response, the
six necessary steps for asuccessful metastasis.
So they help now remember onlyzero point zero, zero point zero
, one percent of a tumor canmetastasize because they are
(32:59):
stem cells.
Only the stem cells canmetastasize, mature cells cannot
.
Okay, number one.
So the chemotherapy andradiation allow them to escape
easier and they also make it sothat they are sort of protected
from the immune system as theytravel and they make sure that
the environment that they'regoing to the nest, the new nest,
(33:21):
is going to be set up andperfect for them.
They also stimulate somethingcalled EMT, epithelial to
mesenchymal transition, whichmeans they take the mature tumor
cells and turn them back intostem cells so that they can now
metastasize.
I'm not making this up, I couldshow you, but I don't have the
mechanism here, all right.
(33:41):
So I'm sure I've got videos outthere to show you that, but
anyway it's true.
So that's what these things doand they know it.
We're talking about theoncology literature.
I'm not talking about anythingelse.
This is oncology literature.
I'm not talking about anythingelse.
This is oncology literature.
Now you say you don't, you'reafraid to do the conventional
(34:02):
standard of scare, not care, butyou're also afraid not to
that's only because they've gotyou scared.
Do you know that the peoplethat in general, people that do
nothing, absolutely nothing,don't change their diet, don't
do it?
They just say, okay, well, Igot this, I'm going to just do
nothing, I'm going to just livemy life the way I always have.
(34:22):
They wind up living four timeslonger than the people who do
something, who go conventional.
What, yes?
Why is that?
Because what they do should beillegal, and I know I'm going to
probably get shot one of thesedays, I'm sure.
But I don't know.
How do you not tell the truth?
What would I do?
Sit here and make?
I guess I could have been afiction novel writer like Sidney
(34:47):
Sheldon.
He's pretty good, you know.
He was fun to read, likewatching a good movie, right.
But anyway, I can't do it.
I'm not into that.
I have this thing about thetruth.
So here's what goes on, here'swhat's happening.
When you say you're scared notto, that's because you don't
realize what the consequences offollowing that are.
(35:08):
And so, rebecca, you've got tojoin our CFC group and we need
to talk and help you, becauseyou're right at the beginning.
They haven't destroyed you,you're still okay, you're still
doing great.
And then the things that youare doing, that you're trying to
(35:28):
help yourself, are just notenough.
Because you don't know, youhaven't learned, because no one
teaches us this thing.
No one teaches us how to live,no one teaches us what to eat,
when to sleep, movement, no oneteaches us about anything that's
about how to live.
We don't know how to live.
We don't.
We learn by example, fromwhoever we happen to be born,
(35:49):
their friends, and so that's thetragedy.
Being a part of the strategy,the sins of the fathers are
visited upon the sons is whatthat means, all right.
Being a part of the strategy,the sins of the fathers are
visited upon the sons, is whatthat means, all right, so,
anyway, so avoiding the standardof care.
Now, by the way, that's thestandard.
These standards are algorithmsthat come down from the American
Society of Clinical Oncology,large professional network
(36:12):
that's beyond the US.
It's in most of the world.
I think 56% of its members arenot from America, even though
it's called the American Societyof Clinical Oncology.
So, and they hand down,basically the algorithms, and
the algorithms are decisiontrees and the reason they have
to get a diagnosis is becausediagnosis is the appropriate
(36:33):
nomenclature to stick onto thatdecision tree.
So they've got to get thatdiagnosis.
And it's not a diagnosis, it'sa curse.
It's a curse, it's a curse,anyway.
So, rebecca, we've got a lot todo.
You're fine, you're going to dowell.
We're going to help you get offof the Rockefeller death train
and jump on to that beautifultrain that we're all on, going
(36:57):
to that place called health.
It's a paradisical placeRainbows and fruit, laughing
people, kids running around,adults running around playing.
It's called health.
We're on that road.
That's our trip.
So jump off that one.
Join, become a member.
Now here's Scott.
Become a member.
(37:21):
Now here's Scott.
My sister Andrea's doctortested her numbers and her
ulcerative colitis went from 50to 1250.
The doctor is giving hermesalamine 375 and the dosage
increased from three times a dayto nine times.
Question is doing a lemon gingercleanse from Ucoa Plaque a good
idea at this time, and couldthe meds interfere with the
(37:42):
juice cleanse?
Please speak on the nature ofwhat is her best options.
Thank you All.
Right, scott.
So I hope you're listening andyou're a member.
That's great, as you're amember of not sure what group,
but I'm glad you're here so well, first of all and I hope
everyone's listening, because,remember, this is not just
scott's question and none ofthese questions are just that
(38:03):
person's questions, because theyall apply to us all.
Because why?
Because we're all.
Should I say it?
I guess I gotta say it, becausethat is a we're all the same.
I'm different, brad pitt'sdefinitely different.
And then, no, if I was in asituation with you, whoever you
are, we were in a surgical suiteand your abdomen was open.
(38:26):
It would take me a millisecondto find your hepatic artery.
Why?
Because it's where his hers is.
In other words, anatomicallywe're all the same.
Period, period, period.
Our skin may have differentshades, but we're all the same.
Minor, minor, minor changes,and if it's a large difference,
(38:46):
you're not going to live toolong or too well.
Emotionally, we all need love,we need to be loved.
We all need to touch, we needto be touched.
We all need to be loved.
We all need to touch, we needto be touched.
We all need to be recognized,we all need to be.
We have all the same emotionalneeds, even for the
psychological needs, belongingspiritual needs, most of the
(39:09):
need to affiliate, which is ahuman need.
Maslow I don't know if you'reall familiar with Maslow Abraham
Maslow he's an Americanpsychologist came up with the
hierarchy of needs in humans andthe incredible thing is that it
just happens to line up withthe chakras.
Maslow's hierarchy of needslines up with the chakras.
(39:31):
Anyway, in any case, there's aneed hierarchy and in one of
them is a need to affiliate,it's a need to be together in
groups, right, and all stems, Ithink, from the illusion of
being separate and duality, andwe need to get back to all that
because a lot of you don't wantto hear it.
I'll get to my question.
Stop all this stuff.
Ok, so I'm going to try to notsegue too much into the ethers,
(39:54):
although I read.
That's where I like, I theethers, although that's where I
live.
I love the ethers, anyway.
So let's talk about it.
I'd like to use this as anexample here.
I just want everyone tounderstand that it's complete,
no, not 99.999%.
It's complete BS.
This whole diagnostic thing.
(40:14):
Okay, ulcerative colitis, whatis it?
Right, by the way?
Okay, I don't know what numbersyour doctor's talking about,
for 50 to 1250, and I'll talkabout that in a second.
But first of all, what isulcerative colitis.
Okay.
Well, if you look it up, it'sgoing to say that this is a
chronic inflammatory boweldisease.
(40:35):
What the hell does that mean?
That causes inflammation andulcers on the inner lining of
the colon.
Colitis, colon and rectum it'sthe same thing.
It's a disease.
It's a chronic inflammatorydisease.
It's a chronic inflammatorydisease.
That means it's inflammatory,inflammatory disease.
It's a chronic inflammatorydisease.
That means it's inflammatory,it's inflammation.
(40:55):
It's there's inflammation andthat it causes inflammation and
ulcers.
There's a disease that causesit.
But what's the disease?
All right, well, let me justread some stuff here they have.
It is characterized by periodsof active symptoms known as
flares oh my god, these guys arebrilliant alternating with
(41:16):
periods of remission.
Oh are those?
Deflares are deflowered.
The primary symptoms includeabdominal pain, diarrhea, often
mixed with blood in parentheseshematochesia they don't even
know how smart they are becausethat's the word they use
hematochesia, urgency to defec,weight loss and a loss of
appetite.
The exact cause is unknown, butit is believed to result from a
(41:40):
combination of geneticpredispositions, environmental
triggers and an abnormal immuneresponse where the immune system
mistakenly attacks the liningof the colon.
They made that up.
First of all, there's no suchthing as a genetic
predisposition.
If you've got any AI you'reworking with, whether it's Grok
or Chad or anything, they'regoing to first give you that as
(42:01):
being part of the cause.
There's always going to say agenetic predisposition.
So I don't swear.
But what is a geneticpredisposition?
What does that mean?
You're taking science which isgoing to be a very exact
description of the genome, withthe 46 chromosomes and all that.
It's going to be a very andyou're telling me a
(42:23):
predisposition Meaning what?
It doesn't mean anything.
No one asks anybody.
You have a predisposition todiabetes.
Let me tell you something.
I don't care who you are.
If you eat donuts, pasta, bread, potato cake, rice a lot, your
body is going to need to protectyou itself from you by becoming
(42:47):
insulin resistant.
So you want to call that apredisposition, developing the
appropriate adaptive,homeostatic, adaptive response.
That's not a thing.
So anyway, that's what they say.
So, while there's no known cure,treatments such as
anti-inflammatory medications,immunosuppressants suppressing
your immune system, biologicaltherapies and sometimes surgery
(43:08):
can effectively manage symptoms.
I'm not making this up.
So that's what your sisterAndrea this is what they tell
her she has, and the truth iswhat's happening.
She's probably got abdominalpain.
She probably has frequent bowelmovements.
There's blood in them sometimesand could even be mucus, and
(43:33):
I'm sure she's lost weight'sjust not doing well if she's got
, and so what do they do?
That's so that the question iswell, let's take a look at this
little further.
So what else?
And this applies to a lot ofpeople out there, so keep your
ears open, don't think we'retalking about andrea, so it's
not important to me.
Okay, so here's the thing.
And sebo, I've got sebo.
(43:54):
All right, sebo is new theyjust make.
When did it pop up?
I don't know when it popped upinto the vernacular.
Uh, you know sebo, smallintestinal bacteria of the
growth.
It's an acronym.
They love acronyms, uh as no.
So what does it mean?
It means that there aremicroorganisms in the small
(44:15):
intestine that are usually notthere, that are usually in the
colon or other.
Chronic diarrhea conditionsshare significant overlap in
clinical presentation but differin the underlying cause,
(44:37):
diagnosis and treatment approach.
That's what they want you tobelieve, because that way only
they can figure it out.
Everyone is a different diseaseand it's going to require a
different treatment program.
Okay, so now, okay, irritablebowel syndrome.
Can you imagine that's the nameof a disease, irritable bowel
syndrome.
What's wrong?
My bowel is irritable.
(44:57):
Ah, you've got a disease.
It's called irritable bowel.
It's madness.
So here we go.
Sibo is a distinct pathologicalcondition which is defined by an
excessive bacterial populationin the small intestines,
typically bacteria thatoriginate in the bowel.
Typically Excessive bacterialpopulation in the small
intestines, typically bacteriathat originate in the bone,
typically A bacteria ferment.
These bacteria fermentcarbohydrates, duh, producing
(45:21):
gases like hydrogen and methaneNormal, which lead to bloating.
Lead to bloating.
That is bloating.
They can't even tell you got alot of gas.
It's going to lead to bloating.
No, no, it is bloating.
They can't even tell you got alot of gas.
It's going to lead to bloating.
No, no, it is bloating.
Why?
Because there's gas which leadsto bloating, and then gas,
(45:43):
abdominal pain from the bloatingand altered bowel movements,
diarrhea, constipation or both,oh my God.
Sibo can be objectivelydiagnosed using tests such as
the lactulose or glucose breathtest, which measures elevated
levels of hydrogen.
In some cases, sibo can alsolead to nutrient malabsorption.
In contrast, ibs irritable bowelsyndrome is a functional
(46:05):
gastrointestinal disorderdiagnosed based on symptom
criteria, such as the ROM4criteria, in the absence of
identifiable structure orbiochemical abnormalities.
It is characterized by chronicabdominal pain associated with
changes in bowel frequency orform.
Isn't that what I just heardbefore?
Yeah, while many individualswith IBS exhibit symptoms that
(46:27):
closely resemble SIBO, such asbloating, gas and diarrhea,
these are classified asSIBO-like symptoms when the
bacterial overgrowth isconfirmed.
Research suggests that up to80% of IBS cases can be
associated with SIBO.
Do you understand that?
They're saying nothing andwhat's going to happen is you're
going to see this and if you'renot trained, you don't have the
(46:49):
vocabulary.
You're going to say oh my God,oh my God, and you're going to
get washed away in theirnonsense.
The key distinction lies in thetestability and treatability.
Sibo can be clinically verifiedand often responds to targeted
treatments, like the antibioticrifaximin, which reduces
(47:10):
bacterial load.
Ibs, being a syndrome without asingle identifiable cause, is
managed through a broaderapproach, including dietary
medication, stress managementand symptom controlling
medications.
Symptom controlling Otherchronic conditions, such as
celiac disease, inflammatorybowel disease or conditions
(47:31):
causing intestinal dysmotility,such as diabetes, can predispose
individuals to SIBO or mimicits symptoms.
You guys, by the time you'redone reading this, you're gonna
go whoa.
There's no way to know, becausethey don't know what they're
talking.
They don't know, they thinkthey know, and that's the
problem they think they know.
Then the question is so okay,what about Crohn's disease?
(47:52):
I heard the Crohn's disease.
What's the difference betweenCrohn's?
Basically, ulcerative colitisis limited to the colon and
Crohn's can go all the way up.
It's in the colon, all the wayup into the small bowel, and
Crohn's goes a little bit deeper.
You got these plaques anyway,so let's get that.
So then the bottom, it says andCrohn's can lead to distinct
complications.
(48:13):
While you see, ulcerativecolitis can be cured by surgical
removal of the colon.
You just cured an inflamedcolon by removing the colon.
Yeah, I mean I, it would begreat if I was making this up.
Crohn's disease has no cure,right?
Because you can't remove theentire intestines, although it
can be managed effectivelyanyway.
So I hope you all see that this, the, what they're talking
(48:33):
about, is absolute bs.
There's not there.
I can't even it.
You know I'd have to go througheach one of them and and and,
but I hope you got the picturethat they don't know what
they're talking about.
But they have somehow in theirmind divided this up into all
multiple different diseases, thethings that get into you.
I don't know what a disease is,but I don't want it.
(48:58):
You're out there.
I know there's diseases outthere, everywhere.
In the parking lot I saw adisease next to my car and
they're everywhere.
So watch out for them.
They're going to get you.
And you know how do I know that?
Because they've been telling methis before I could talk.
You're going to get you, um,and you know how do I know that?
Because they've been telling mesince before I could talk
you're gonna get sick and die.
You're gonna get sick and die,all right, so now, now let's go
(49:19):
to this quantification.
And the reason I'm doing allthis, god, is because I want to
save you and your sister fromthere.
They've got you into this.
If you read, like, uh, books ofmythology, right, right, and
they've got all these differentstories.
Here's the story called Colitis.
It's the Colitis mythology.
They've got you into it andyou're like, oh my god.
(49:40):
Anyway, they said that hernumbers went from 50 to 1250.
So I don't know what they'retalking about, because the way
in which they, these freaks,quantify ulcerative colitis,
They've got a few.
They've got the Mayo score theMayo like Mayo Clinic, not
mayonnaise.
The ulcerative colitisendoscopic index of severity,
(50:04):
also called the UCEIS oh my God,must be important.
And the true love and whizcriteria Anyway, all of these
things are based upon.
These are how they quantify.
In other words, they putnumbers to instead of qualify.
You know quality and quantify.
So the quality is I have painand diarrhea.
(50:27):
To quantify is to give it ascore so that we know how bad it
is.
So the Mayo score, which is?
It looks at stool frequency,rectal bleeding, findings from
doing a flexible sigmoid oscar,they put this tube in there and
they look at that, and thephysician's overall assessment,
global success, assessment ofdisease severity.
So those four things, each ofthem get a score of 1 to 3, so
(50:51):
the number goes up to what is it?
0 to 2 indicates remission, 3to 5 indicates mild disease, 6
to 10 indicates moderate diseaseand 11 to 12 indicates severe
disease.
This score is often used toclassify ulcerative colitis and
mild, moderate or severe, and isinstrumental in guiding
treatment to severe.
(51:11):
Anyway, and then there's otherones.
I won't go into it, but theydon't go high, nothing up to
1250.
They're all low numbers, allthe different scoring systems.
So I'm not really sure whatAndrea's doctor was doing, but
whatever it is, I'm sure he orshe is satisfied with themselves
that they have sufficientlyscared the hell out of you and
(51:32):
her.
That's their job.
And they did it because if theyscare you, you're going to say,
of course I'll do whatever yousay, doc, cut my colon, take my
colon, I don't need my colon.
So, all right, forget all that.
Okay, let's say it did exist.
There was a disease called ulcer.
How do you treat it?
How do you take care of it?
Well, the 2025 american collegeof gastroenterology guidelines
(51:53):
for ulcerative colitis emphasizetreat-to-target strategy aiming
for endoscopic improvement.
Endoscopic I got another one onmy endoscope.
What are you talking about?
My endoscope is fine.
I'm not talking about myendoscope.
I'm talking about my bowels.
Endoscopic improvement toincrease the likelihood of
sustained steroid-free remission.
Yes, yes, the likelihood ofsustained steroid-free remission
(52:18):
.
Yes, yes, we did hear that.
Sustained steroid-freeremission and reduced
hospitalizations and surgeriesJust a couple of years.
Key updates include strongrecommendations for newer
biologic and small moleculetherapies such as S1P receptor
modulators, il-23 inhibitors andJAK inhibitors, such as for the
induction and maintenance ofremission in moderate to severe
(52:39):
EUC.
What is UC?
Again?
University of California?
No, no, no, no.
Ulcerative colitis, that's it.
Can you believe it?
I think they believe it.
They do.
They believe this stuff.
So, for mild to moderate, theygive you rectal 5
aminoacyosylicolate, which isaspirin, and they also give you
(53:03):
butanosinide.
Okay, this is drugs.
Now, systemic corticosteroidsare recommended for inducing
remission in patients who failthis first part.
So that didn't work by theselocal anti-inflammatories.
So they're just suppressing theinflammation.
They're not finding out whatcaused the inflammation, to
eliminate the cause.
That is irrelevant.
(53:25):
It's the unknown.
The unknown is that.
Why is it unknown?
Because you didn't look for it.
It is known, it's right therein front of you and I'll tell
you what it is in a minute.
So they failed that.
So they put them on steroids,which wipes out their immune
system, wipes out their adrenalglands, turns them into they're
now addicted to these steroids.
They don't have them.
They'll die.
Now in moderate, that wasn'teven moderate to severe.
(53:47):
So in moderate to severeanti-TNF agents, tumor necrosis
factor, such as infeniximab andadrelilab and golobilab, and
vitoalosimabab andusaprofeniacinib.
Vitoalosimabab is preferredover adrelilabab for induction
and maintenance of moderate tosevere, based on strong
recommendations for hospitalizedpatients with acute, severe
(54:10):
allotoxia.
Intravenous corticosteroids arefirst line, with infiximab and
cyclosporine, which ischemotherapy.
If no response in three days, Ijust don't understand how
insane this is.
Okay, okay, so steroids shuteverything down when they can't,
when nothing is working,because steroids always make
(54:34):
things seem better, because iteliminates the discomfort of
your immune system trying totake care of something that they
think is unknown.
Their immune system recognizesit and they give subcutaneous
injections of these differentkinds of drugs.
They're basically antibodies.
They develop antibodies to goagainst different parts of your
immune system and differentparts of drugs that are.
They're basically antibodies.
They develop antibodies to goagainst different parts of your
(54:55):
immune system and differentparts of your bowel.
It's a war process.
They're going to war againstyou because they've identified
an enemy.
That's the diagnosis is it's anenemy now.
So what I did was, when I readthis, I said okay.
So I asked them well, um, whatabout?
Um fecal, which they didn'tmention?
You notice, it's not on the2025 American College of
(55:18):
Gastroenterology guidelines forulcerative colitis.
It's not there.
So I said what about fecal?
Microbiota transplantation?
Fmt shows promise as atreatment with reason evidence
indicating its potential toinduce remission.
So a systemic review andmeta-analysis of 14 randomized
(55:40):
control Okay.
A meta-analysis is when theytake multiple, different
clinical studies, multiplestudies, and look at the data
from all of them and try to comeup with a grand conclusion
based on a larger group ofpeople, because you're looking
at 14 studies and they found 14randomized controlled trials
involving 600 patients foundthat FMT fecal microbiota
(56:05):
transplantation wassignificantly associated with a
higher odds of achievingcombined clinical and endoscopic
remissions.
So even my endoscope would feelbetter, oh my gosh.
This meta-analysis alsoreported improved outcomes for
clinical remission.
What does that mean?
Clinical is when you're talkingabout people.
Pre-clinical is when you'rewith the animal, all right.
(56:25):
So it means nothing.
It's just a word they like tothrow it around.
And endoscopic remission myendoscope is in remission.
An endoscopic remission myendoscope is in remission.
Oh my God, that's not what Iwanted.
I like my endoscope Anyway, andthe safety profile appears
favorable.
These findings suggest that FMTis not only effective but also
safe for patients.
(56:46):
Now, that wasn't offered andit's not part of their plan.
Plan is to attack and kill andthen wipe out your immune system
.
So why would this work?
Because what you're doing isyou're changing the, you're
getting the.
You're getting the, themicroorganisms from the stool of
somebody who doesn't have thiscondition, condition meaning
(57:10):
what it was.
You mean this was all along,this was just a dysbiosis.
That's what it always will be.
And what is SIBO A dysbiosis?
And what is Crohn's A dysbiosis?
Because there are none of thesethings.
There's just different kinds ofdysbiosis.
You've got more of this andless of this, and I have more of
this and less of this.
(57:30):
Why are they there?
Because they're being fed.
Whoever's there is getting fed,otherwise they wouldn't be
there.
All right, there are no.
You will never see ants in aplace where there's no food for
ants.
You will never see elephants ina place where there's no food
for elephants.
And I won't go on.
I hope you got the point, okay.
So the point is this we allhave dysbiosis.
(57:53):
Some people have a much worsedysbiosis.
What do you do in all of theseconditions?
I don't care what you're goingto call it Ulcerative colitis,
crohn's, irritable bowelsyndrome, sibo, what else?
Diarrhea, bloody diarrhea,whatever.
What's going on?
(58:13):
What's going on is yourmicrobiome.
Actually, the organisms arecalled microbiota.
The microbiome refers to thegenes, the genetic, the
different uh genes in all thesemicroorganisms.
So we're not in general, we'retalking about the microbiota,
the organism.
The relative proportions of themicrobiota in your body are not
(58:36):
compatible with health and theycause all kinds of problems,
because what the microbiome ormicrobiota do when they're in
the proper, healthy proportions,is that they contribute to our
well-being and our health onalmost every front.
They keep our immune systemstrong.
They make it strong.
Without it there's none, sothey help us.
(58:58):
We produce serotonin and otherneurotransmitters that are very
important.
We produce it for digestionwith blood clotting and with
communication to other parts ofthe body, so there's a two-way
communication going on with thevagus nerve, anyway.
(59:19):
So when we have the right ones,the ones that are appropriate
to our physiology, us humans,who all have the same anatomy
and physiology, we all have thesame anatomy.
There's no celebrities, anyway.
Okay, for those of you who arelike me, not a celebrity, yeah,
we've got the same.
There's no celebrities, anyway.
Okay, for those of you who arelike me, not a celebrity, yeah,
we've got the same anatomy andphysiology.
Therefore, we need to eat thefoods that will allow for a
(59:45):
healthy microbiome, which willresult in a condition called
health, because if that'shealthy, you're healthy.
So what do you have to eat?
You have to eat human food.
So what are you going to do?
You're going to go watch onSeptember 25th.
You're going to watch at leastthe part four, which is the
myths, and then you go back andyou want to watch one, two,
three.
I'm redoing one anyway, acouple weeks after the fifth,
(01:00:10):
but anyway, that's what you do.
But anyway, as you do, you eatfood that humans were designed
to eat and the result is youhave the microbiome which humans
were designed to have, whichresult in health.
And it's not only food, becauseif you don't get enough sleep,
if you don't get enough sleep inthe proper sleep, if you're
under stress, all these thingsaffect the microbiome.
That's why, if the microbiomeis healthy, you're healthy.
(01:00:31):
Okay now.
So what in your Now?
So what should your sisterAndrea do?
Is never go back to that doctoragain or anyone like him ever.
Number one, number two do athorough, thorough cleanse,
juice cleanse.
And the reason I say juiceinitially is because I don't
(01:00:53):
know.
This is what I would recommend.
If I've met her.
I can't tell your sister.
I've never met her, I've nevermet you.
I'm not recommending you to doanything.
I'm not telling you to doanything.
This is not a consultation.
I'm just saying what I would doif I had I hate the word
patient, but a patient come tome with what your sister's
condition is.
(01:01:13):
I wouldn't give it a name, Iwould just say, ok, well, you've
got a dysbiosis going on here.
So I would look and look atthis and blood test, make sure
she wasn't mountain, you knowjust if she was OK to go on a
fast, a water fast or a cleanse.
And probably the reason I dojuice cleanse is because you're
getting lots of nutrition injuice, lots of nutrition, and
(01:01:34):
you're giving your bowel a breakand you're going to clean it
out and all that.
So I would, you know, dependingon things, I would anywhere
from I don't know, three to 12weeks of lots of colonics and
appropriate supplements andvitamins, and you know there's
right and then, after thecleanse, eat real food, human
(01:01:56):
food, appropriately, for aboutfour weeks, five weeks, and
things may or may not.
I don't know how far we wouldhave come with that and we may
want to, if necessary, go on anddo a water fast for one week or
two weeks at most you wouldn'tneed more than that and then
(01:02:16):
resume eating healthy food andit would be gone.
Whatever you think was therewill be gone.
Nothing will be gone.
What will have happened is shewill have been restored to a,
her microbiome will have beenrestored to one that is on her
side, making her healthy andfeel good.
And guess what?
(01:02:37):
This is not 90 effective or 99,it's a hundred percent.
Yeah, hello for a long time.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me now?
Yes, you can hear me, right?
(01:02:57):
Wow, so sorry.
How long was I gone?
Let me move this so I can seeyou guys.
Oh, my gosh, so you lost me.
We're at the end of theulcerative colitis.
End of ulcerative colitis.
Wow, so sorry, my gosh, I gotto keep this my view here.
I'm so sorry, gosh, I gottakeep this my view here.
I'm so sorry, gosh.
What was anybody else?
(01:03:17):
How far did we get withulcerative colitis?
I'll go back to the breast in aminute, but, uh, so we finished
the ulcerative colitis, right?
Yeah, good, so fat.
Yeah, we did the juicecleansing, okay, so you got.
You got the, you got the.
You got the fact like right, soso you got it right.
It's a dysbiosis Fromeverything.
Julio Iglesias, I was muted assoon as you said fasting and
(01:03:41):
juicing.
Oh, okay, so anyway, a juicecleanse would be easy.
It's easier to do if you'rewell-nourished and I don't know
Andrea's degree ofmalnourishment or anything like
that.
So he went to instagram.
They hear me great, uh, so,anyway, um, but you know, a
(01:04:02):
prolonged juice cleanse, theneat real food for a while.
But it also remembered themicrobiome is not just what we
eat, the levels of stress orwhether or not we're getting
enough, proper, appropriatesleep movement, all the things
that are for life.
Ah, 100%, yeah, what I was.
Did you get that?
So what I was saying?
Discussion was pretty complete.
(01:04:23):
So what I was saying is thatthis works 100% of the time.
Prove it wrong.
Prove it wrong.
I never lost connection onInstagram or YouTube.
Weird, because YouTube's partof this thing.
Anyway, I'm glad we're all here.
So let's go, you can do thefecal implants, but again, those
guys that are getting thehealth, the microorganisms that
(01:04:44):
you're getting from the feces ofsomeone else, if they don't
have the food to eat, they won'thang out.
So, yes, you can do that, butyou should also remember that
you've got to still cleanse anddo all that stuff.
Yeah, okay, real food, realfood is.
The earth produces food.
Whatever humans do to what?
The earth, whatever to nature.
If we modify nature, we come outwith something else.
(01:05:06):
It's called artificial.
So God produces nature, wemodify it, and it's artificial.
So God produces nature, wemodify it, and it's artificial.
So nature produces tomatoes.
We make tomato sauce for pasta.
Do you think they're the samenutritive quality?
Do you think they're the same?
No, it's different.
What's different?
(01:05:27):
Well, we've added heat.
What would heat do to something?
I don't know.
Let's try sticking our fingerin the fire.
See what happens.
Let's put our money.
Okay, see what you want, to seewhat heat does to the money, to
your money.
All right, so heat, we'vemodified the food that nature
produced with heat.
And the reason I don't put myfinger, clothing, money or
(01:05:49):
anything else I value into fire,because fire is destructive.
Therefore, what does that mean?
So you modify, or you, you, youprocess with heat food, okay,
so again, I, I, it's, it's,there's some food in there, but
I wouldn't call that real food.
And since, if you're sufferinga lot, it's not the only time.
(01:06:10):
People are going to makechanges like this in their life
is when they're suffering, right, because, as it turns out, our
best friends are pain andsuffering.
It's not otherwise, we're notgoing to change.
Why should I change?
So that's why we now, insteadof using the word raw, let's try
and use another word, becauseraw to me sounds very painful.
Right, if I was extremelyoverweight and when I walked my
(01:06:34):
thighs were rubbing, they wouldget raw.
I don't want to be raw, so Ilike the word real food.
Now you can say so, you can.
You don't have to eat everything, sherry.
You guys, you've got to watchthese food webinars.
I've been doing it.
25th of September, go todrlodycom, sign up and watch
(01:07:00):
this, at least that part, andthen you've got to go back and
watch number three, which was oncooked food.
Okay, so anyway, you don't haveto do it for long.
I mean, yeah, just do it longenough to get healthy and then
you're going to find out.
Anyway, if you're sufferingenough, you're going to do it.
You're going.
You're going to do it andyou're going to find out that
it's actually delicious.
(01:07:20):
You can make it delicious.
I was so happy yesterday.
Check this out.
I six months.
They told me they opened.
I didn't even realize.
I was just driving down thestreet.
I drive on all the time and Ilook over and it says
plant-based.
So I went over and it's a veganrestaurant close to me and I
(01:07:42):
looked on the menu there.
It was One of my favoritethings is a kale salad, a real
kale salad with avocado andstuff.
But anyway, once your tasteschange, greasy, slimy stuff
doesn't really taste that thatgood anymore.
It just doesn't taste that goodanymore.
Now, I'm not saying youshouldn't have it.
Try have it, but make sure youthe next day you cleanse anyway.
(01:08:05):
But when you're real sick youwant to get well first, okay, so
that's the thing.
So that's why we love pain andsuffering, because it gets us
moving.
And now let's go to the next one, which we missed, I guess, and
that was right, okay.
So it was from Lisa, who's?
She's in remission from breastCFCs and she has a cyst that's
growing and I'm assuming it's inone of her breasts.
(01:08:28):
So of course, you know, thething is she's been trying
fenben and ivermectin for yearsbut was missing the other
components of our treatment.
I don't know what TT is, but Iwould like to try your method.
Yes, please join one of thegroups, okay.
But let me just say this Cystsare usually but let me just say
(01:08:52):
this Cysts are usually.
A cyst means it's a fluid-filledsac, not solid, okay, although
it can be many other things.
It can be.
In different organs it can be,like you know, in the ovaries
you can get a cyst.
That's not parasites.
(01:09:12):
There's different cysts thatare not parasites in different
parts of the body, but probablymore than not a cyst means that
there's parasites in it.
But anyway, regardless of that,cysts in breasts can.
Often, if you have multiplecysts, it's called fibrocystic
condition in the breast andthat's basically an iodine
(01:09:32):
deficiency.
Fibrocystic condition in thebreast and that's basically an
iodine deficiency.
And in a situation where it'skind of severe and even if it's
not, you can do it is to paintthe inside of the vaginal wall,
your vaginal wall, with like a5% Lugos as close to the cervix
as possible.
Cervix is the opening of theuterus and you know we can guide
you through that.
But that is for fibrocysticbreast conditions and if you're
(01:09:58):
joining one of the groups we canhelp you.
You can examine yourself andexplain to us what you and,
anyway, guide you through it.
So, lisa, join, join, join,join, join, and I would say the
cfc group, because you get morethan just parasite protocol.
You get a lot of otherinformation.
But whatever, join one of them.
(01:10:18):
Okay, cysts in the head.
You can have cysts in the brain.
Yes, thank you Danette.
So, lisa, that's it.
So basically, okay.
Now Lenore, lung CFCs.
We are currently doing a heavymetal detox.
Can we start the parasitecleanse while doing a heavy
metal detox?
Sure, and heavy metal detox youmean IV, oral, both.
(01:10:44):
That's why it's so good to jointhe groups, because I can talk,
I can ask you questions and wecan take it further.
But yeah, I mean, a heavy metaldetox is either with the EDTA,
dmps, dmsa in terms of thepharmaceutical approach, and
that's about it.
So the EDTA can be disodiumEDTA or the calcium sodium EDTA,
(01:11:08):
and pros and cons to both.
If you have the time, becauseyou've got about three hours
each time, max twice a week isthe disodium EDTA because it
gets a lot of side benefits likeeliminates osteoporosis.
But anyway, you can do DMPS IV,you can do DMSA orally.
(01:11:29):
You can even do EDTA orally andrectally.
So there's different ways ofdoing it.
But yes, there's no problemwith doing a parasite cleanse
while you're doing that at thesame time.
Now, this is Amy.
I found you on a parasiteprotocol, a parasite support
page on Facebook.
I've been suffering over sixyears.
I'm fairly sure that I've beendealing with this dog hookworm
(01:11:51):
Kaposi's sarcoma.
Okay, just a moment.
Don't let me forget.
I'm sure I've been dealing withthis dog hookworm, kaposi
sarcoma.
Okay, just a moment, don't letme forget.
I'm sure you're dealing withdog hookworm.
I have yet to get a diagnosis.
I saw a functional medicaldoctor for a couple of years and
he tried me on a few differentantiparasitics with no
improvement.
I watched your video how totreat for helmet.
I am wanting to find out if youwould see me, treat me.
(01:12:13):
I have serious issues.
I will come there or do a Zoom,et cetera.
Well, amy, here's the thing Ifyou join the parasite group,
then I'll be seeing you weeklyand it's like an ongoing.
It's not a consultation, it'san ongoing partnership in your
(01:12:37):
healing.
And then you've got a lot ofother, a lot of other resources
in the group by joining thegroup as well.
A lot of other resources, notjust me and that's it.
But yeah, um, I'd be.
You know, because I, I can't.
I, I used to do consultations,but you have to realize, when I
do a consultation with someone,it can't be two hours Maybe,
(01:12:59):
usually more.
And then what?
Then I don't just say, aloha,you got to do blood tests.
It never stops, we keep going.
So I found that I couldn't doanything else.
That's why I formed thesegroups, so that we don't have to
do that.
So you don't really need thatintent, you don't need it.
I promise you this works, okay.
(01:13:21):
So the parasite group go todrlodycom, drlodycom and then
just join the parasite group andthat way we can deal.
Start immediately with yoursituation, deal.
Start immediately with yoursituation.
Um, and let me see if the hookwe're not um, I don't know if
we're gonna, if this thing isworking or not, anyway, um, I
(01:13:42):
don't.
I know we're out of time, butanyway.
So, amy, I don't know whatyou've taken for the and you
think it's dog hookworm becauseyour dog has it and that's why
you think you have it.
And you tried, which ones didyou try?
You went to the functionalmedicine doctor.
Did he give you fenbendazole orpyrantopomoy?
(01:14:05):
I don't know what he gave you.
So I mean, I don't know.
It's really hard.
So it'd be really much betterfor you to join our group so I
can find out what's going on.
Okay, because it's really hardto.
I just thought I've got to askyou questions, we got to go,
we've got to have a dialogue,okay, uh, and not just once.
(01:14:26):
We want to keep doing it.
All right, I would like to tryto get everybody.
What time is it?
I'd like to try to geteverybody.
What time is it?
We still have time.
Where are we?
Where are we?
Here we are, oh, okay.
Listen, lenore, your 94-year-oldmother.
You know I can't.
I've got to find out a littlebit more about her and you.
So join one of the groups ortell me next week your question,
(01:14:50):
put more detail about yourmother, any other problems she's
having and all that and anymedical problems that you know
of and the same with she haslung CFCs.
So, yeah, I can't tell you howmuch.
You've got to join a group,lenore.
She has lung CFCs and she's 94,and she wants to do parasites.
(01:15:11):
So we really need to talk and Iwant to talk to you because she
, anyway, you've got to join,okay.
So I'm sorry, there's no otherway I can help you in that way.
So let me just try to get backto these questions.
This is it.
Yeah, okay, cool, okay, allright.
So now, oh, wow, this is a longquestion.
I'll tell you what.
(01:15:34):
Marianne from Ontario, you'llbe first next week, because I
can't do it.
In fact, the rest of you guys,I'll take it from there, from
this person here which isMarianne from Ontario and the
rest of you for next week.
Okay, and I'm sorry that Ican't get everybody.
I can't.
Yes, zeolite's fantastic.
You know there's otherbotanical ways too.
(01:15:58):
Yeah, it's just that I don'tknow what we're talking about.
Those are really good in healthmaintenance and all that sort
of thing.
And killing the eggs after.
Well, hopefully we're going toget them, because we wouldn't
want zeolite to be like it,because that's really not
Zeolite's much broader.
We wouldn't want zeolite to belike it, because that's really
not zeolite's much broader.
It wouldn't just be going afterthat anyway.
Uh, kaposi sarcoma somebody wasasking about that.
(01:16:18):
I just wanted to say brieflyit's kind of like um.
It first became um.
I think it was quite rare priorto the 80s when um, the whole
aids deb happened.
I don't know what that was, butwhatever it was, it was
horrendous and there were a lotof people with Kaposi's sarcoma.
(01:16:41):
And, as you know, sarcoma meansCFCs that grow out of parts of
the body that originated in themiddle part of the embryo,
because embryos an outer middleand well, they have three layers
right.
So the middle layer is mesodermand that's where sarcoma is,
(01:17:03):
that's all it means, okay, andyou know, and they call it
Kaposi sarcoma because this guy,kaposi, was working on it,
right, and so it's actually inthe skin and the mucous glands,
the GI tract.
It could be anywhere from themouth to the anus, to the
stomach, to the lungs, you know,and you know, the thing about
(01:17:27):
it is they say this is going toget into a whole different thing
, that I, we don't have time todo.
But let me just tell you thisviruses, whatever they are,
we're not going to talk aboutthem now.
Whatever, whatever they are, um, they find them in different,
different cfcs and what we'reand what they are is just little
(01:17:51):
changes in, they're just littlepackages of genetic material
that are being carried around,anyway, so with COPACs they find
HHV-8, human herpes virus,number eight.
Human herpes virus number oneis, you know, simplex, the one
on your lip and genitals, right,that's one, two, three, four,
(01:18:11):
and the Epstein-Barr is a herpes, cytomegalovirus is a herpes,
chickenpox is a herpes, and thenthere's HHV-6, hhv-7, HHV-8.
So, anyway, it was found duringthe AIDS epidemic back in the
80s, and I was right in themiddle, I was doing my residency
(01:18:34):
in New York City at the timeand what we noticed was that
there were seemingly twopopulations of people that were
getting this conditionIntravenous drug users and
homosexuals, but it was onlymale homosexuals.
None of it made sense.
We now know what they did inthose days, but we were seeing
that the IV drug users were notgetting the Kaposi-Sarkoma but
(01:18:55):
the homosexual gay men weregetting it.
And I get that.
We're homosexual, so it's weird.
What did they do?
Anyway, we didn't know, but wenoticed that distinction.
So that's how we became awareof Kaposi's.
Prior to that it was raredistinction.
So that's how we became awareof capital season.
We, because prior to that itwas rare.
(01:19:15):
Now they're saying that hhp, ithas this herpes virus number
eight in there, and um, anyway,who knows what the truth is
about?
You know the viruses and allthat, but here's the thing it's
the same.
We deal with it the same way wedeal with all CFCs.
Okay, because fundamentally,it's not the genetics that have
(01:19:35):
been modified.
It is a metabolic condition.
We know that.
We know it's due tomitochondria, we know that.
I mean, that's not the question, so it's the same thing.
So, for sure, if you or someonefriend or family join our CFC
group, then let's get into it.
Okay, you're right, it's allthe same.
(01:19:57):
Hiv, I mean the same thing.
We know that the spike proteinis the same.
What they call AIDS is HIV, butthey were calling this other
one, the great hoax, covid.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, I get it.
So, anyway, so, what do youguys?
So what do you got?
And I'll see you all next week,and, uh, I just can't get there
, but you got to join the groupso we can talk more.
(01:20:18):
Okay, aloha, wait, where is the?
Oh, there, it is.
There we go.