Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_00 (00:00):
All right, so
welcome to Sunday Night Live.
Even though it's Monday morning,what is this?
No, I don't want any of this.
Go away.
Alright, so here we are.
For some reason, this is notdoing it right.
Pineapple juice.
Fresh pineapple juice.
It just grows around here.
That's one of the that's one ofthe things you gotta put up with
at least third world disgusting.
(00:22):
Not modern countries.
You know you gotta put up withstuff like fruit growing.
Can you imagine?
How annoying.
Uh anyway, this has got to beportrait because is that do you
guys just like see part of mebecause there's all this
advertisement?
Health and alien group, parasitegroup, or is that all there?
Anyway, I hope it's like that.
(00:42):
Not what I see here.
Anyway, okay, cool.
So let's get started.
Welcome to the this week's umlive on planet Earth.
And I didn't mistakenly not saydisc earth.
Because there ain't no disc.
Okay, and by the way, anybodywho still thinks, I mean, okay,
listen.
(01:02):
I saw that there was a ragingdebate.
This can only happen in America.
There was a raging debatewhether or not that they should
have tampon dispensers in themen's room.
Because men do menstruate.
And this this was the uh hairscoming out of my ear.
That that was the stance ofthese people.
I don't know where it was.
Was it in Congress?
So, you know.
(01:23):
But anyway, here's one thing Iwant to know.
Okay, and I'm sure I'm sure oneof you guys can explain it to
me.
It's flat.
Why is it daytime here andnighttime here?
And I'm I'm sure yourexplanation is to do something
with the fact that there reallyis no sun and there really is no
moon, and there really are nostars, and stuff like that.
(01:43):
So, anyway, it's can you imaginesitting around and thinking
about this kind of stuff,letting this occupy your mind
and actually like people thathave to work for a living don't
usually think about thesethings.
People that work, not like youand me who sit at desks, but I
mean people out there workingwith moving the earth, stuff
like that.
I mean, yeah, I spent 14, 18hours, 42 hours in hospitals
(02:08):
every other day, not sleeping.
You know, I guess that's worktoo.
But I when I think of work, Ithink of moving earth and
planting and taking care of.
I don't know why I think of itthat way.
I think that is fundamental tobeing alive on earth.
Because you know, when you sayon earth, when you say are you
making a living, are you earninga living?
And uh I like you know thatconcept of earning a living.
(02:30):
You mean it's not free?
What do you mean here?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, it's not that it's notfree, it is.
Look at the earth was given tous free.
We buy the earth, no, we got it,right?
It's our heritage, it's ourniche.
But you know what?
It's just not right.
You know why there's too manytrees and uh waterfalls, and
(02:50):
it's just a little toobeautiful.
So and and I think we need to uhyou know, like do you see all
that dirt?
See, dirt is what we used tosome of us still refer to as
earth, right?
Dirt's pejorative, as you wellknow, and uh we are always
speaking pejoratively with uhregarding nature because it's
(03:11):
man against nature.
Man against nature, not managainst nature, man.
We're gonna we're gonna we'regonna conquer nature.
Let's conquer nature.
That's what a fantastic,wonderful thing to do.
That's my pinky arguing with myhand.
We are nature.
It's it's so bizarre, it's sobizarre.
That's why you never have todon't don't read fiction.
(03:33):
You don't have to read fiction,read the newspaper.
I mean, I mean, they'repretending not to be fiction,
but don't read the ones who weretelling you it's fiction.
Anyway, I segue before I evenstart.
But anyway, so welcome here.
And as you know, this is Sundaynights in that side of the
world, and Monday mornings onthis side of the world, and I'm
(03:53):
gonna answer questions that weresent in previously.
That's the format here.
So even though we all like to uhinteract, even though it'd be
nice to interact and I'd be ableto turn room dark, then put a
flashlight on the ground, moveit in circles, some of the floor
is okay, Lori.
(04:14):
So for 24 hours or for 12 hours,this part is because the flat
all right.
So all right, and does it let meask you a question?
What what okay?
So suppose it's a flat diskextending to everywhere,
extending everywhere.
(04:34):
Is it on top of something?
And we want it to be flatbecause we want to and there's
no sun and moon and stars andand and and and planets.
There's none of that.
None of that.
We're just on a flat disc andthe and it's just and and that's
all, and there's and there's akaleidoscope, someone with a
with a with a with a uhflashlight up there, but there's
playing games with us, and thatmakes sense.
And how did it all come about?
(04:55):
Was there a big bang or was itwas uh well I don't know.
Listen, you all think that it'sgot some plausibility.
I can't at all think of it anyany any when any ways possible.
But have you and know about thehollow earth theory?
So the earth is a hollow, yeah.
And you know about um in 19 wasit 1890 or earlier, anyway,
(05:17):
around the turn of the century.
Oh, God made a disc.
Oh, that's right.
And he and he made thefirmament.
Can you tell me what a firmamentis?
What is a firmament?
Where is it defined?
So God made a disc and he put afirmament, whoever that is, and
there's waters above it andwaters below it, but which has
what meaning?
And then by the way, you know,the other thing about God is
that um in one point God it'sreferred to in the plural in the
(05:41):
other point again.
He said this whole thing, we'renot gonna, I don't want to get
into the biblical stuff becausethen people get weird with
emotions.
So um, but anyway, the hollowearth theory was you know, about
in 1890, there was a guy calleduh the book he wrote is called
Edadorpa.
And uh so very interesting, butthat the earth is hollow.
(06:01):
And then you then you want tofind about Admiral Byrd, his
guys supposedly flew right intothe con, into the hole at the
top of the North Pole, and wasflying on the inside concave
surface of the earth.
And they freaked out when theyall came back.
They were uh put into uh mentalinstitutions, probably forced
there just because they didn'twant whatever they were saying
to get out in those days.
(06:21):
So um anyway, so there's a lotof stories and a lot of
potentials about I mean themammoth caves in Kentucky, uh
the Himalayas, there's lots ofentranceways to the center of
the Earth.
And the center of the Earth is aconcave place and it's got a
central sun, and all planetshave a central sun.
So there's the there's otherreally an interesting story
(06:42):
stories and scenarios.
I don't know.
You got hung up on the uh yougot hung up on the flat earth,
which is the most stupid of allof them.
Uh, but um, I'm sorry that Isaid that.
My gosh, can you imagine howpolitically stupid of me?
So um, but I got a politician,so that's anyway.
Hollow Earth sounds pretty cool.
The central sun, there's a lotof good explanations for it.
(07:03):
Um, and by the way, that centralconcave surface in there,
because it has a central sun, itdoesn't need a moon, and I won't
explain it to you now, but uhwhereas we need a moon because
of the sun we have out here,it's yeah, anyway.
Um, and that city or that placeis called Shambhala, Shambhala,
yeah.
And I'm sure you've heard ofpeople on the road to Shambhala.
(07:26):
So, yeah, hollow earth, flatearth, solid earth.
All right, so what?
Now, where does that leave us?
I got a pain over here, there'sno I need to know that for, is
what you're all thinking, right?
Yeah, so anyway, it's just umamazing.
Oh pineapple juice.
Okay.
I've been trying to find yourvideo when you discussed NAC and
(07:49):
CFCs.
I've always been told to avoidglutathione, but you say NAC is
okay, correct, because it's NAC.
Well, okay, let's just answerthat real quick.
N acetylcysteine.
Cysteine is one of the it's therate limiting amino acid in uh
glutathione, you know, which isthree amino acids.
Okay, the other two, the glycineand the glutamine are available.
The cysteine is not as so ifonce there's enough cysteine,
(08:11):
you you more will be produced.
So it that's the rate limiting,they call it.
The the degree to which that isavailable influences the degree
to which the uh tripeptide canbe produced.
So by taking NAC andacetylcysteine, cysteine, then
uh you're um providing the thirdcomponent of the tripeptide, and
(08:32):
it could be made easily, easily.
That's basically what happens.
In fact, it's so such a good wayof doing it that that's used in
the ICUs when we have peoplethat with uh Tylenol overdose or
any other thing that's causingcausing fulminant liver failure,
or someone will actually not bearound in within 20 24 hours,
maybe maybe 48.
(08:52):
It's very rapid.
Same thing, but if people eat umthere's a mushroom called
Amanetus phylloides, uh it'salso called a DCAP mushroom.
I can't say that word enoughthat we're on uh social media.
By the way, have I ever uh youknow, I don't know if you know,
you know, there they're a wholething called the spectr autism
spectrum disorder, which is new,by the way.
It didn't exist when I was akid, it didn't exist when I was
(09:14):
a young adult.
I mean, it didn't this middleage?
When when did it come about?
It was right around withAlzheimer's and so you know how
Alzheimer's is so I I found outI found this really new, it's a
new form of dicks dyslexia.
It's a very rare form, you'reright.
Um it's called the um it's theit's called the ZF, um, the ZF
(09:36):
dyslexia, or some people call itthe FCs dyslexia.
Uh whatever it is, whateverwhich way you want to call it,
it's you know, F.
You people get their Fs andtheir Z mixed up.
It's just, you know, and I I Ithought that I had that.
And why am I telling you this?
Because I'm saying that I wantto eventually get off all these
platforms and just get onto um Xor Rumble.
(09:58):
Okay.
Uh, because you know, um uh Iknow now Meta owns it, but I
just don't like the fact thatFuckerberg, you know, Martin Um
Fuckerberg um uh has his eyes onwhat we're doing.
I don't like that, or has anykind of you know, say in the
matter.
This guy's a punk, young kid.
(10:19):
He's a young kid who's not sureif he's the surfer with pushy
pushy or if he's a nerd.
He can't figure it out.
He's gonna wait until the nextperson gets elected if he's
gotta change clothes again, youknow.
So um, but I do know he's got abig underground bunker because
they are gonna turn the lightsout someday soon.
I hope you're all ready forthat, right?
(10:40):
I know you don't want to hearit.
Anyway, um, so NAC's good.
And why, why, why C's versuswell, they're uh actually
learned that from Dana Flavin.
A lot of you know Dana Flavin.
She's uh used to for the FDAactually, she used to um help
bring drugs to market.
And her her for that, you know,the uh NA uh the CFCs cannot use
(11:04):
the NAC as rapidly as healthycells can.
And so therefore, while they'reum so if you're giving thing
lots of NAC, the the healthycells are going to incorporate
that in and put glutathione,whereas the the uh CFCs cannot
do that as quickly.
However, if you're givingglutathione, because if you
bypass digestion, because youcan't digest, you can't orally
(11:24):
take it and digest it, uh you'lldigest it, you won't be able to,
you won't the tripeptidesanyway.
So, but but got it IV or in aliposomal form.
Somehow you go bypass thedigestive process and you got
that in, then uh but again, youthen then the the CFCs can use
it.
So they have more benefit withyou're benefiting the CFCs more
(11:46):
when you uh use just pureglutathione.
Whereas if you use uh NAC, youare providing a great benefit to
your healthy cells, and only amild to your uh to the CFCs.
So the net effect is the healthycells, orange juice.
They make this fresh, it'samazing.
(12:06):
And you know how much they don'tadd they don't add sugar because
there are days when it's orangejuice can be sweet or it can be
sour.
That's cool.
This is a really cool place theydo that.
Actually, no, you can go overhere too, the place called uh
one D, and you can get um allthis pro produce, like we even I
had like uh what would beequivalent of three shopping
(12:28):
bags of of produce, and it cameto like a little over two
dollars and it was organic, andit's about 15 minutes from here.
And by the way, one D in theyhave it written in English, but
one D in uh in Thai means notthe Australian good eye or
whatever you say, but it's it'sa good day.
I think they do, but they don'tcensor, they all keep tabs, they
(12:50):
all do.
If if I was in my house bymyself talking about just
talking to a group of people,I'm sure they keep me tabs.
I wish we could answer thesequestions.
We're gonna I gotta get to thepeople that sent in the message
and send in the question.
Anyway, just a reminder, we'vegot three groups, and those
groups are really important.
Although, crazy as it is, youknow, a lot of people follow
(13:12):
this, and it turns out we don'thave we have not that many
people in the group, so I don'tunderstand it.
So there's three groups healthand healing meets every other
week with me, and every week youget to meet with our
kinesiologists, ournutritionist, uh you know,
there's just a lot of stuffgoing on, a lot of information.
If you're in the parasite group,you get to meet every week
(13:34):
because you also you have alsoyou have automatic membership in
the health and healing group.
And so, since they're everyother Tuesday and you're every
other Tuesday, you get it, orit's Monday for you guys, but
Tuesday for me, every otherMonday.
So if you're in the parasitegroup, every Monday you get
where we have a discussion likethis, and we talk for five
hours, whatever it takes, sothat we can answer all the
questions.
(13:54):
So we do.
And then if you're the CFCgroup, which is uh, for those
that you don't know, chronicallyfermenting cells is what other
people like to call cancer.
That's the last time I'm gonnasay that absurd, disgusting,
horrible, filthy word today,because I have to re-explain it
every time because the wholeworld is stuck on with
Rockefeller.
He this dude won.
(14:15):
So, all right, if you don't wanthim to have won, then stop using
his his vocabulary.
Anyone ever played in a game ofMonopoly, right?
They made here they have herethe peasants playing Monopoly,
pretending it's so absurd buyingall these houses and hotels, and
(14:36):
I mean it's clear.
This is what they made it realclear.
Um, anyway, anyway, they madethat game, they made this game.
Uh, so the only way out is toget out of the entanglement of
the linguistics, it's linguisticentanglement, right?
Um, so this is gonna stop usingthe word, so don't use that
word, and then say, well, theother people don't understand
(14:56):
it.
Well, then explain it to them.
Say, I'm not gonna use this wordanymore, I'm just gonna tell you
what it means.
Okay, so from now, I'm notgonna, and if you talk to me
about it, I'm not gonna listen.
I'm gonna leave.
You know why you need to dothat?
Because every time you hear thatword, if you have CFCs and you
hear that word, you just gotstabbed in the heart, and your
immune system went.
(15:16):
That is that kind of serious?
You think that's important?
You think that should beavoided?
I think so.
Because you want to heal, right?
The goal is to heal.
Okay, so healing requires anattacked immune system, all
right.
And not not to mention theemotional pain.
You look, I don't like emotionalpain, I'm sure you don't.
Okay, so don't let people talkto you about that.
(15:38):
If someone was saying whateverword you find to um be uh
offensive, uh all these wordsare they don't mean anything.
You know how you know, you knowhow you know curse words don't
mean anything?
Say a curse word in anotherlanguage and you're gonna see it
that has no effect on you.
But say it in front of thepeople that speak that language,
and you're gonna see how it'syeah.
(16:00):
So anyway, uh, but if someonewere walking around saying,
whatever they're saying, you'dsay, hey man, come on, don't I
don't want you to talk abouttheir children around or anyway,
don't talk this way now, right?
Uh, or we're gonna have to askyou to leave.
Same thing.
If they use that word, thatabsurd, disgusting word, I hate
it.
Um, because it's it's it's ait's a death word.
(16:24):
If they use that word, just say,Look, I'm not if you're gonna
talk that way, but when if Ihave to go to the hospital, I
got an idea.
Only go to the hospital fortraumatic events, all right?
When you're gonna go there for aconsultation, I'll tell you
right now, it's real easy.
I'll help you save you sometime.
They're gonna tell you thatyou're it's over.
It's over.
There's no cure, you're done.
But we can torture you for thenext six months.
(16:46):
Well, they don't quite say itlike that, they kind of rephrase
it.
Um, but they still keep you umuh at the bitter edges of fear.
They do, and they will, theywill, they do and they will,
because that's what they weretrained to do.
Oh, by the way, uh people arealways uh I'm always seeing on
the and I'll just tell you why Idid this.
I get call I last week somebodysays, uh, what is your doctorate
(17:09):
in?
And they uh and the other guysaid, What kind of doctor is he?
Is he really a doctor?
So anyway, I put these guys up.
All right, so you can just Imean, okay, for those of you who
are, I don't know, because I isit because I don't wear a white
coat and I don't I don't talkwith I don't use absurd words,
is that what it is for them nota doctor?
(17:30):
Anyway, Columbia University, NewYork, American Society of
Clinical Oncology, Arizonalicense, New York license,
American Board of Anti-Age, uhcertified as an instant
potentiation teacher.
And I I couldn't get them allup, but anyway, just so for
those of you who are gonna ask,is he a dang uh yeah, okay?
So don't ask anymore.
(17:52):
Or I got an idea, just turn offthe channel, go somewhere else,
go somewhere where you'recomfortable.
All right, so um, yeah, soanyway, let's let's let's none
of the questions.
I feel really bad.
But join the groups because ifyou join the groups, we can
talk, we can interact like thishere.
I have all your great questions.
I want to answer them.
And you know, I want to answer,just join the groups.
Come on, just join the groups,join the health and healing
(18:15):
group every other week.
We can talk for eight hours ifyou want.
I mean, I'm just there untilyou're done, right?
And plus, there's a lot ofinformation you get too, and
then the webinars are free.
There's a lot of good stuff withit, and you get to get interact
with a lot of other people, likeDarren's very important.
I mean, so join the groups.
So, where are we?
Let's get to some questions,okay?
(18:37):
Um come on, not now, man.
What?
Now what?
Oh, got it.
Oh hum, hum kui don't need, umquidoni.
Pom young lao.
He doesn't understand.
Um, where is my where is theheck is it?
(18:58):
Where the heck is it?
Oh, here it is.
Okay, good.
My questions.
Okay, great.
So now, um, and by the way, uhthe human uh the human diet
episode four, I'm gonna postponeit again because I don't have
anybody signing up from outside.
Uh not just our groups, youknow.
You guys, who thinks spinach andkale is bad?
Who thinks spinach and kale isbad?
(19:20):
Really bad, right?
You shouldn't drink it, eat it,right?
Because you're gonna get calciumoxalate stones, right?
Wrong.
Uh, how about lignins?
Really bad, aren't they?
No, save your life.
What about antinutrients?
You can't eat that, it's gotanti-nutrients.
Are they bad?
No, it turns out they're not,they're really good.
Um, all the myths are what we'retalking about.
(19:41):
All the myths, okay?
All the myths that that you'veheard about that that keep what
that keep you from uh eatinghealthy food?
I don't understand it.
And you know, even David Wolfcomes out with kale's no longer
a superfood, it's still asuperfood, it always has been,
it always will be if you'rehuman.
It might not be for the clones,but it's good for us.
(20:05):
Or the all these foods, youknow, and whatever's keeping you
from you know, nightshades, andyou know, there's all this
nonsense.
Oh, seed oils, right?
Okay, forget the seed oils.
Let's just get the oils from uhdead cows.
Let's get the let's get the fatfrom dead cows and dead pigs and
that oil that's good for you.
So, anyway, uh we're we're goingto all that.
(20:25):
I'm gonna go into the science ofit, I'm gonna go into the
explanation, I'm gonna show youthe research, and I'm gonna
expose these myths so you canget soy terrible wrong.
Uh in fact, it's very healthy.
I recommend it daily.
Okay, so all the myths that youthought are have some validity
and they're keeping you fromeating healthy.
It's it's really important foryou to know whether or not it's
(20:46):
true because if they're nottrue, then you should be eating
healthy food that you will thatyou would like to eat.
Okay.
I mean, I saw some somebodysaid, Oh, I'm so glad because I
didn't like kale anyway.
So it wasn't prepared right.
If it's prepared right, a kalesalad is incredible.
Yeah, you gotta know how toprepare it right.
Yeah, otherwise it's kind ofhot, rough, and stuff like that,
but it can be prepared so nicelywithout heat, yes, without heat.
(21:11):
Okay, so anyway, so that's partfour.
I can't do it because we don'thave uh, you know, I don't and I
don't know how to get peoplethat are not in our groups to
and a lot of you are not in thegroups, and you haven't what you
don't want to watch that.
And yet you all ask questionsabout food.
I'm I'm ready to answer them andI'll show you the science so
that you'll be able tounderstand it, and then you'll
(21:31):
also be able to explain it toother people who come up to you
and say, Yeah, but you know,yeah, but you know, oh, but uh I
heard, and that's the most Ifind that most people are um
hearsay hearsayers.
Actually, it's very interestingbecause in in in Thai, in Thai,
when you're speaking, here youknow the actual meaning of this
phrase is not that he said orshe said, but they always say
(21:57):
that kabok wa meaning he said,but it's not it.
It's that's this the way it is,anyway.
It's it's a very interestinglanguage, but but most people
that I meet and most people thatyou meet are gonna tell you
stuff with an incredible,they're emphatic about it, and
and then you find out they justheard it from somebody else.
They don't even if you startasking them questions about the
(22:20):
details, they have no idea, butthey love to come off as experts
and they're just crazy, and webuy it, even though we do the
same thing to them.
We know that we're not we didn'twe I didn't really research
this, but we do it for some.
I don't know.
Human is we can't even put themodern human into the
classification of absurd.
We're gonna have to find a newone, all right.
(22:42):
Kenneth, is this it?
No, no, no.
What am I?
Oh, I'm way up there.
unknown (22:46):
Okay.
SPEAKER_00 (22:46):
First one is Esther.
Hi, Dr.
Ludie.
I had a polyp removed from myrectum, and there were malignant
CFCs in the polyp.
The surgeon said I caught thisvery early on, and that the CFCs
were contained in the polyp, andthere was nothing in the muscle
that he could see.
I then had uh an ultrasound tosee if there was anything left
(23:10):
from the polyp removal.
They didn't see anything left,but they took some sample
biopsies, some sample biopsies,and I'm waiting for the results.
They also said there are likelyno FCs, CFCs in the lymphatic
system.
Now my doctor wants me to do twoMRIs, one of the rectum and one
of the abdomen, to make surethere's nothing left.
(23:31):
I am weary of the MRI dyes, thegadolonium, ghetto, gadolinium
um based contrast agent thathave to be ejected in my body
two times.
Two scans cannot be donetogether because one is timed.
Would you suggest that I dothese MRIs to get a baseline of
(23:52):
where I am at?
Or do you think I should stop?
I should just skip the MRIs andfollow your protocols.
Thanks, Esther.
Okay.
So Esther, um, what you need towhat what you would should would
do at this point too is well, Imean, I'm really happy you're
asking because I'm gonna giveyou the answer.
Answer is that uh, but youshould also ask them.
(24:13):
So you know, let's say you uhfind that there's a small area
over here or over here.
What are you gonna do?
And you're gonna find out whatthey're gonna do.
It's called Mayhem.
Is that a bad word?
Amatar.
Let's call it Mayberry.
We'll call it Mayberry, right?
Or Andy and Deputy Fife live.
Okay, so we'll call it Mayberry.
They're gonna Mayberry you thatthey're gonna cut you up, then
(24:36):
they're gonna give you um reallytoxic poisons.
And then eventually, in a fewyears, when you pass away, it'll
not be because of anything thatwas going on in your body, it'll
be because of what they calltreatment.
That's if you ask them whatthey're gonna do, that's what
they intend to do.
And they're just looking for agood reason.
They just need a reason, theyneed what they call a diagnosis.
Diagnosis is actually ajustification to poison you.
(24:58):
It's a justification.
I need the diagnosis, I gottaget the diagnosis, and all they
do is they one little word, theysay one little phrase in the
right way.
They got you trembling, andthey've got uh the cashier, I
mean the uh stockholders justgiggling with delight.
Yeah, it's a business, probablythe most evil business in the
(25:19):
world.
I more evil than the industrialuh war uh military complex, even
though that's pretty right, butthis is ongoing, slow, slow,
long tortures.
So, anyway, the point is you hada little area of malignancy, of
of chronically fermenting cells.
And without going any further,yes, there are more.
(25:42):
There's a they're around.
They're around.
That's just the way we are.
It's an adaptive process whenour when certain conditions are
right, that's how we adapt.
Just like if there's too muchglucose in our bodies, our cells
will become insulin resistant.
That's just the requiredadaptation.
This is a required adaptationunder certain circumstances.
(26:03):
So you then all you need to dois make sure that adaptation is
no longer required.
That's it.
There's not anything morecomplicated, it's not genetic,
it's not genetic.
Well, I remember uh mygrandfather had a tumor.
I think I better be careful.
How about your mom?
Um so her father had, but shedidn't have it.
(26:26):
But you report you might haveit.
Yeah, you know, runs in thefamily.
They got us, they got they haveus talking uh nonsense to each
other.
I I I would I I was born in theroad, I shouldn't be born here
because I don't fit.
I don't fit, I don't like it.
Any I don't like anything aboutit except I like being nature,
but there's not nothing.
Whatever at you think is coolabout being alive in this world
(26:47):
today, I don't agree.
I don't technology is what it'sa way so that you don't have to
live, you don't have to interactdirectly with your environment,
you don't have to manipulate thesoil and and grow your own food.
No, I can just go order it.
Yeah, what are you ordering?
Who knows?
Well, what's like a grapefruit,yeah.
SPEAKER_01 (27:05):
Well, mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00 (27:06):
Anyway, this is
great, great.
Well, look at all this we can wecan talk uh all over the world,
but we wouldn't have to actuallyif we were living a natural
life, because they wouldn't havethese problems, right?
So, regardless of whether we'reon a disc or a ball, and that
really matters.
I'm gonna spend eight hours, I'mgonna go spend eight hours
thinking about whether we're ona disc or a ball, because that's
(27:28):
really something I gottaconsider.
And once I figure it out, I'mgonna run down the street and
I'm gonna tell everybody thatwe're actually not what you
think.
Yeah, we're on a mm-hmm.
Oh, okay, that's so important.
My God.
Where's Scotty when I need him?
You know, I want him to be meoff onto another planet.
(27:49):
Scotty, where are you?
So here's the thing, Esther.
So that's what they do.
They look in, they they they dothey do call on colonoscopes or
sigmoidoscopes or whatever, butthey just go in and they look
for polyps.
Polyps are little outpocketings,right?
In in uh coming from the mucosalsurface to the inside, right?
(28:10):
And little polyps, is it polyps?
So, and then they they they snipit off and then they look under
the microscope while you'restill there, and um they can see
if it's uh under the microscope,right?
Because what are they lookingfor?
They're looking for a differencein the shape of the cells,
right?
If the shells are shells areshaped differently, and what is
(28:30):
the difference in the shape ofthe cells?
Well, the difference is thesecells have had to become um
dependent upon fermenting,fermentation.
And in order to do that, theyhad to go through certain that
so there were certain newmetabolic requirements required
for that, which meant meant thatthis would have to get bigger
and this would have to getsmaller, and they wound up with
a different size and shape of acell that could now do that.
(28:53):
So that's how they know theylook at it and they say that's
it.
So you have fermenting zone.
So so they found uh they found afew, but they saw that it didn't
go through the polyp into thewall of the of the bowel, right?
Of which is mucosa on theoutside on the on the on the
inside surface, and then beyondthat is muscle, and that's what
they were talking about.
(29:14):
It didn't get into the muscle,didn't get into the fat, didn't
get into the lymphatics.
So it's just right there in thesurface.
But they want to make surethey're gonna, if they find one
cell anywhere else, they'regonna wipe you out.
So my answer is should you dothese MRIs?
No, they should go do MRIs oneach other, right?
Tell them that you want them todo a rectal and a vaginal probe
(29:35):
um um uh MRI uh CT ultrasound oneach other.
Practice, tell them to practiceon each other.
And while they're at it, if theycan stick one in each other's
each nostril, tell them to dothat too.
All right, and then tell the mento get um to go get a mammogram
with their testicles, all right?
Tell them to get a testiclegram.
Okay, go to get their squashtheir testicles and um and and
(29:59):
see if it hurts.
And see uh uh uh uh and see ifwe can see.
Yeah, it's it's really awonderful system.
Should I do it?
No, should I ever do it?
No.
So here's your baseline.
Your baseline is this, you'vegot it.
Some of that you might, but whoknows?
There are other things going on.
It doesn't matter.
What matters is your body's outof balance right now.
It is starting to manifest, uh,and it's starting to show that
(30:22):
it's starting the thechronically fermenting cells are
no longer uh in the excuse me,the nano size or the microscopic
size.
They're getting up into the sizewhere we can see them.
All right, so that's great.
So you got a little messagethat's telling you that, hey,
gotta, it's a good read.
Now you know you gotta do it.
So what do you do?
You're gonna do, you're gonnamake sure this goes away.
(30:44):
Resolves how you do you do thatby cleaning up, get busy, get do
the juice cleanse, do all thatstuff, take the vibes, do all
that stuff, and plus remember,these MRIs they're limited, they
only can see a certain uhcertain size.
If it's below that size, theycan't see it.
So even if they say the MRIs areperfect, you still don't have a
(31:07):
true baseline because thebaseline would tell you that
microscope on a very microscopiclevel, there's lots of stuff
going on, but me too.
I mean, all of us just don't soyou've never there they're
they've painted a picture in aworld that doesn't really exist,
it's not like that at all.
So, no, no, no, you don't wantto fit into their world and get
into the and develop and be partof their nomenclature and all
(31:30):
that, okay?
Because remember, they're theonly place in the world.
These people have a house that'scalled hospitals, right?
What hospital are you affiliatedwith you affiliated with doctor?
None.
You know why?
Because they have a backdoor tothe morgue, and I just don't
want my so I do I use hospitals?
Yes.
If someone's got in in intensivecare, they need a procedure
(31:53):
done.
We absolutely use hospitals, butwe guide them and we make sure
that these freaks can't rip offarms and legs and and start
dismembering people becausethat's what they'll do.
They'll find something, oh mygod, they were there, let's take
it off.
Oh my dad, there, let's poisonthe hell out of this.
No, you gotta you really need uhyou gotta walk in there with
somebody who's like uh like alifeguard, not a bodyguard, but
(32:16):
a lifeguard that walks in there,and um you know, and when these
doctors say that they gotta dosomething, this lifeguard should
just should doesn't need to saya word, just go knock them out.
If you say anything that's nottrue, so you got this guy, he's
uh uh a genius, and he can tellwhen you tell the truth.
And every time you say somethingthat's not true, wouldn't that
(32:37):
be great to have him comearound?
He's a true meter.
So, anyway, Esther, you're ingreat shape.
Now's the time to do and youknow, feel blessed.
You've got a way out.
If you didn't know about whatwe're doing here, wow, so you
do, and you're here, and it'sfantastic.
So let's clean up, do all thestuff that you know to do.
Join our group so that you canreally have some powerful
(32:59):
guidance, right?
This is gonna be, and you'regonna find out that our groups
are amazing.
These people are uh incredible,so and they they actually they
actually enjoy helping eachother, and nobody gets paid
anything, they get paid withwith love and with gratitude
amongst each other.
(33:21):
That's their payment system.
Join.
Okay, so here's Valerie.
How do you get rid of parasitesin the ears and sinuses?
Does ivermectin and fembendazoleget rid of them if you are
taking the meds orally, or isthere there is something that
you can put directly into theears to kill them?
And how do you get rid ofparasites in your eyes?
Well, listen, um uh Valerie,what you're sound what you're
(33:45):
saying sounds just like um uhmyasis, myasis.
It's not myass.
Okay, it's I mean, how do youtell me how you spell pronounce
it?
M-y-a-s-i-s, myasis, whatever.
This is an ect ectoparasite.
We've talked in the past aboutuh the different parasites they
can be endoparasites,ectoparasites, and that's it.
(34:06):
So endoparasites are usually theworms and the protozoas because
they're on the inside, and thenthe ectoparasites are usually
from uh they are insectsthemselves, you know.
I mean, such as fleas andscabies and things like that,
but also uh the insects cancarry one insect can carry the
(34:27):
eggs or larva of another insect,like a mosquito can be near a
place where a certain fly, likea bot fly, has laid its eggs and
and the lays the eggs get youknow, it's all sticky, so it
gets stuck to its leg.
Then the mosquitoes over herechewing on your arm and drops a
few eggs, and those eggs are umwhat they call, or in your ear.
(34:48):
They like ears, they likecavities, um, and they're called
botflies, and uh so uh and theireggs hatch and become larva.
And larva of the larva of a flyis in the common vernacular, is
uh a maggot.
It's really up well right nearthe top uh of the disgusting
(35:09):
list, it's up there, okay.
And so these maggots they getinto your so that if they're
they're in your ear, and if theyget into your ear, they can go
anywhere, they can get intosinuses, they can get uh behind
the eye, they can get into thebrain.
So if that's what's going on,and I'm not so sure it is
because I can from thisinteraction, I don't really
(35:31):
know, but if that's what's goingon, medications won't help.
And the reason they don't helpin this situation is because
these the law these larvae uhthat are might might even be
hatching, um, or you know,whatever they do, are not
embedded in tissue, which isgetting a blood supply where
that with the with the drugyou're taking to kill it can get
(35:53):
to.
I said that word again, toflatline it.
So they've got to bemechanically removed, they've
got to be taken out with uhyou've got to get a surgeon to
to to to and and you don'tnecessarily need to be cut open
or any skilled person who's ableto use some sort of tool, like a
you know, whatever it is, totweezers or to get to get them
(36:16):
out.
But if they're the only otherthe only kind of um there are a
few other non ectoparasites thatcan cause this problem, such as
some of the worms likestrongaloides, um, can do that.
Um there's uh leishmaniasis,there's um uh if you heard of
Loa Loa, they the larva are areinside and they crawl, they
(36:40):
they're kind of crawling throughyour anterior chamber of your
eye, and you can see them.
And if you're looking atsomeone, you can see them in
your eye too.
So they're not allectoparasites, some are the
endoparasites, and uh, you know,with those with those
endoparasites, then you can use,you know, albendazole is a good
one, mimebendazole.
There's a lot of good ones thatyou can use for those kinds of
(37:05):
situations, or if it's um aprotozoa, which it can be,
right?
Uh there are lots of differentkinds of protozoa.
Um and you can kill them.
I'm sorry, you can eliminatethem, right?
So, and the and the protozoa,you know, or like well, strong
alloides is is is is one.
(37:27):
Um uh there's a condition calledChaga's disease, which is pretty
nasty as well.
But they're a lot there that butbut from the way you're
describing it, so you wouldn'tfeel any of these uh the worms
like crawling or whateverbecause it sounds like they're
very active.
So you need to get to a anddon't go to like a regular
(37:50):
emergency room, you need to goto like a place that uh
specializes infectious tropicalinfections, an infectious
disease department of tropicalmedicine that knows what they're
doing, who's had who hasexperience in this.
You know, down in Latin America,it would be uh a lot easier
because that that that's whereyou know a lot of stuff happens,
(38:11):
Latin and Central America.
Anyway, I don't I don't reallyknow your situation.
So you need to work withsomebody.
Uh you can go to my center in uhMesa, Arizona, and we'll figure
out what's going on with you.
Oh not sweet orange juice, lowglycemic for sure.
High, very sourhemic, lowglycemic, yes.
(38:33):
And you say in your eye, so Idon't know.
You know, it sounds like youknow, if you where have you
been?
How I you see, this is why Val,you guys if you join the
parasite group so we can I cantalk to you, ask you to find out
what's going on.
This is not the uh the bestforum for this because I can't
help you.
I don't know exactly what'sgoing on with you.
So join the group so we can jointhe parasite group.
(38:55):
This is Tammy, but yeah, or findtropical medicine somewhere.
You gotta find a tropicalmedicine expert, infectious
disease department, tropicalmedicine.
I wish I could tell you exactlywhere to go.
But like I said, you can go toour an oasis of healing and
Mesa.
This is Tammy.
Can you help me?
For 10 plus years, my hide, mybody has been producing
(39:19):
hundreds, truly hundreds oftumors.
They are not CFC.
I have three major surgeriesover the years to remove them,
300, 400 each time.
Yet they return.
Doctors tell me they don't hurtor bother anything.
That is a lie.
They hurt.
They are every size.
They stab, block blood flowbecause of their size.
(39:42):
They are from key my keens, Iguess, knees, to my forehead.
I'm now 66.
They drain my energy.
I uh have always been athletic.
I believe there's a naturalremedy for this.
I just don't know what it is.
Wow, Tammy.
You I say I can't interact withyou because uh you because
(40:06):
that's what I think.
I think it sounds like it'sneurofibromatosis.
I don't know if anything elsethat does something that you're
talking about.
Um but I mean, you know, excuseme.
Uh anyway, so neurneurofibromatosis, you know, you
get these spots all around, butthen you can actually get like
tumors all over the place.
(40:27):
And it's you know, around in thenervous system, right?
And the nervous system iseverywhere, so you know, you
know, aren't anywhere you youcan have them, but they can also
have it on on spinal cord, sothat they can be uh, as you
said, as you rightly said, thatthey can and are painful.
And I don't know why they'resaying that.
And it's usually not they canvery, very, very, very rarely
(40:52):
become a malignant, but for themost part, there's not.
They're just they call they callthem benign.
Anything with benign is the onlydistinction I can find between
malignant and benign is that themalignant one metastasizes.
So, in in in that sense, it'snot metastasizing, but the
original primary process isgoing on everywhere.
(41:14):
So you know, there's a very fineline there.
It's just words, okay.
So, without knowing exactly whatit is, but you know, that's what
it sounds like.
So you've had this condition,I'm assuming you told me you're
66, so that means you you musthave see, they take 300 to 400
(41:34):
out each time.
And I'm sure they've looked atyou know, I'd love to talk to
you, Tammy.
I'd like to find out what'sgoing on.
I have when they've taken theseout, I'm sure they've uh brought
them to the laboratory and andevaluated and what did they what
did what did they find?
So, Tam, you guys join thegroups because how can I
interact with you?
How can we take this further?
(41:55):
So the answer is I'm not surewhat what's going on, so I don't
know how to tell you to to workon it, except that you got to do
the same thing that we all haveto do, and that is clean up and
then provide only our bodieswith what they need.
So, whatever's going on, even ifwe had uh trisomy 21, you know,
what they call um Down syndrome,you can be if you're living
(42:16):
healthy, like I'm talking about,you'll be a high functioning
down syndrome.
I'm not gonna change it, but Imean the difference between
being uh never having having noeducation and being a a ward of
the state versus uh becomingeducated and taking care of
yourself.
That's a major difference.
And I've seen it, it's not I'mnot making this up, I've seen
it.
(42:36):
I've seen a poorly functioningDown syndrome child graduate
high school with honors.
So, and but the mother wasstrict, child ate only real
food.
It was incredible.
So, what I'm saying is that nomatter what our condition is, we
will maximize the functionalityand our and our subjective sense
(42:57):
of of well-being by livingaccording to the laws, the
biological laws that govern ourour our our biology.
That's it.
So, Tammy and Valerie, I expectto see you guys right away.
Go to drloy.com, drlodi.com.
Join now, okay, because we gotto talk.
You can't have serioussituations like this, and we
(43:19):
just and you get a hum answer.
That's not cool.
And you got parasites all over,and and you've got tumors all
over.
We're we're just gonna leave itat that.
No.
All right, here's Melissa.
My son is six years old withlevel three severe nonverbal
autism.
How do I find the properprotocol to detox him from heavy
(43:40):
metals and parasites?
Also, are there anyover-the-counter options for
serumen?
All right, so so your child issix years old, level three
severe.
You know, I didn't I I guessthey're take they they they've
taken their diagnostic, youknow, at first it was only
autism, then it became autismspectrum disorder.
And now, so let me see what thewhat they're calling a level
(44:01):
three severe nonverbal autism.
A level three.
Oh, yeah, this is great.
Let me see what they're tellingus.
Level three, nonverbal autism.
Come on, what is it?
Come on, involves significantchange challenges in the social
communication and inflexiblebehaviors require very
substantial.
(44:22):
Come on, kind of answers this.
They may be nonverbal or haveonly a few intelligible words,
their very limited ability toinitiate a response of rigid and
inflexible behavior.
The tragedy of this is that theythey they they caused it on
purpose, and they don't care,they don't care, they don't
(44:45):
care, they don't care.
They are the ones that uhsupport hospitals.
Hospitals are where they maketheir money, it's one of the
best the best places we can maketheir money.
We're dealing with this is whowe're dealing with.
This is these the this they madeup this whole thing called
diseases, and they've got us allhaving diseases and the and all
that, and they're and and thisstuff did not exist.
(45:08):
There were not children likethis, maybe one in a trillion.
Anyway, so but that's you knowwhat you want to know is how do
we how do we fix this?
Well, there is chelation is veryimportant.
So I'm hoping that um for theper six, I mean when did you
stop getting him injected?
That's because that's a veryimportant thing, is when did he
stop getting injected withwhatever whatever uh pro
(45:31):
whatever group was doing it,whether it was the physic the
the Pfizers or whoever theywere.
So anyway, fortunately he'sstill sick, so he there's a lot
that can be done.
Definitely Keelation.
And do you know uh uh what's hername?
She's a as a she's a femalepediatrician, she's very well,
well known and well and spokenout.
(45:51):
Um, she's really uh she wouldknow where where you where you
could go, but I would say theydo have EDTA suppositories and
pills, and they have DMSA pills.
Your son would probably benefitby some IV chelation, but he
also needs to be chelated.
He also needs to be um, youknow, get his nutrient,
(46:12):
everything has to be improved.
He's got to be cleansedthoroughly, and he's got to be
given um just like everythingthat we do, taking enough
appropriate vitamin C, vitaminD, all that stuff to maximize
his body's ability to deal withwhat they've poisoned him by.
And this is the effect ofpoison.
This is poison, this iscriminal, this is criminal
(46:35):
beyond because it continues,it's me on a mass level.
It's like, but anyway, so that'swhat we need to do.
And they're calling it levelthree.
What the hell?
You know, so now what?
You think they're they'rethey're smart?
They oh my god, I don't know.
It's uh hard to deal with this.
So, what's her name?
You all know her name.
Come on, the lady's name uhbegins with M.
(46:59):
Is it M.
Where am I?
Uh there we are.
Um, is it um Mark Tempene,Tempene, Tempene?
Dr.
Tempene.
So, you know, look her up, findout because I she will know.
She will she'll have the she'llsee.
I'm sure she's got a greatdatabase of practitioners who
are that's what they do withchildren.
All right, they help, they uh,you know, yay, Marta, see you
(47:23):
tomorrow.
Yes, no, he's not human.
Fuckerberg, not human at all.
Margaret is I don't know if hername is Margaret Tempene.
Temp Tempene, Tempene.
But she's before the scam, thegreat the great scam of uh 2020,
she was even thoughcontroversial, anything that um
is uh has any truth in it isconsidered controversial.
(47:47):
Uh, but she was still highlyrespected.
She she she had a lot oftestimony before Senate and
other governing bodies uhregarding um the inoculation of
diseases to um and I have tocall them diseases in this
sense, the inoculation ofillnesses uh to children.
But find her, okay, because Ithink she would or her office or
(48:11):
whatever will be able to directyou to someone as close where
you can get that.
But he he needs to be chelatedbecause we know heavy metals are
involved.
But now the parasite thing, um,all of all the ones like the
ivermectin or mebendazole oralbendazole, niclosomide, they
all have dosing.
(48:31):
If just look it up and you'llsee, just say dosing, dosing, D
O S I N G dosing for ivermectin,and they'll tell you per
kilogram, meaning, so if yourchild is you know 15 kilograms,
you know, that you can figureout the dosing.
And remember that theseantiparasitics are being taken
by children worldwide andanimals worldwide, and it's uh
(48:54):
and by the kilo, body weightkilo.
So you you can see what'savailable to you, get at least
two uh in your area, at leastminimum two of anti-homethics.
Three would be good, um, andantiprozo, a linea, you know,
and just look up the dosing foryour child, and you'll figure it
out, and you'll be able to doit.
(49:14):
And remember, give to give thema strong three weeks on or four
weeks on, whatever it is, andone week off or something like
that.
It's important to get the timeoff just so that things can
recover.
And you always give liversupport while you're doing it.
You give silly marin or mixedmilk thistle or silly binum or
silly good, any of those.
Um, with the alpha lipoic acid,and the and you can add it and
and and acetylcysteine, like wetalked about.
(49:37):
You guys are evil.
No, uh evil's too kind of a wordfor these people, too kind.
I wish they were just evil.
They're not, they're way worsethan evil than them.
So, where are we now?
Come on.
So the D, you know, he candetox, same thing.
Uh, just to remind you, Melissa,he can do a juice cleanse.
Uh you know, not real long,because you know, but uh, you
(50:01):
know, five days, and then youknow, let him eat healthy food,
real food, real food, real food,real food, real food, real food,
real food, real food, and thenafter that, real food.
Okay, and then he can do anotherfive days later, and you can
clean out, gotta clean them out.
Real food is essential, and ifyou join the group, we'll be
(50:23):
happy to help you witheverything.
So here is Ness Reen.
Okay, my nine-year-old daughterhas juvenile idiopathic
arthritis in her knees, in herankles and knees.
She did methyl drexate andchumera for two years and was
okay.
Now it's been nine months, sheis off the meds and it came
(50:44):
back.
We're doing autohemotherapyminor, but still no stem cell
activation after 15 sessions.
Also did bioresonance and foundechinococcus and monisia
tapeworm, doing at least threecycles of albendazole, 400
milligrams a day for four daysand two weeks off until it
(51:04):
clears in bioresonance.
Also doing my closet like threetubal tablets, one a day, and
and and we and we repeat inthree weeks.
What is the right dosage, numberof cycles for the drugs in this
situation?
Are we doing the right thing?
Should we have started withheavy metals, detoxed with DMPS?
She also has mild aflatoxin andaspergolosis, uh, aspergus,
(51:28):
aspergillosis, aspergillus,aspergillus, and where are we?
Aspergillus and gliotoxin andochre toxin.
I know nothing about these mildprotocols.
Please enlighten us if we'redoing the right protocols.
Also, any IV cocktailinformation.
So a nine-year-old girl, okay.
They tell us 30% of childrenoutgrow it by the when they
(51:49):
reach puberty.
All right, so Nessarine andCarol and Caroline.
Beautiful.
One second, I gotta turn the airis not working.
Excuse me, one second.
It's just too noisy.
I can't use that one.
I think it's noisy too.
But anyway.
So let's talk about uh Nessarineand uh Caroline.
(52:11):
Um, first of all, you know whatthe word idiopathic means.
It actually means the doctor'san idiot and the patient's
pathetic.
Idiopathic.
But basically that's what itmeans.
Um, in other words, they don'tknow.
Idiopathic means they're callingthemselves idiots.
At least that's like the onetrue thing they do.
Idiopathic means they don't evenknow the cause.
(52:33):
And um, which doesn't matterbecause they never look for the
cause anyway.
So I don't know why all of asudden they're looking for the
cause in idiopathics.
So, in other words, something iscausing an uh uh a uh a response
in her knees and ankles, allright.
And what is that response?
That response is an immuneresponse, so the immune system
has been activated in thoseareas and also the process of
(52:56):
healing, so the immune system'sthere and the whole body's tuned
into that area becausesomething's happening in that
area, so you don't have to go tomedical school to figure that
out, and it's not a greatrevelation, and we know that the
process of healing involves uhit's called what we call
inflammation.
Inflammation has four cardinalsigns, right?
(53:17):
All due to increased blood flowbecause the body's increasing
blood flow to those areas tocarry in nutrients and oxygen
and immune cells and all that,as well as to drain it, to keep
it drained.
But a little bit more goes inthan is being drained, and so
winds up getting swollen, orwhich they call uh tumor,
(53:37):
t-u-m-or, or not tumor that wethink of with CFCs.
But because they used to useLatin, they use the Latin roots,
right?
Tumor, rubor, calor, and dolor,right?
Which is uh tumor meansenlarged, uh, calor means rubor
means red, and dolor means pain.
And those are the four cardinalsigns of inflammation.
(54:00):
So that's what she's got goingon.
And if it's in her name in herknees and ankle joints, you
might not necessarily see theswelling because it's within the
joint, right?
But it is uh that's what's goingon.
So they call it itis.
Anything that's inflammationmeans itis, and so they
rightfully call it arthritis.
Arthro is joint, so is itarthritis, inflammation in the
(54:23):
joint, and they don't knowwhat's causing it, but what
they're gonna do is give youmethotrexate, which is a
chemotherapy.
They also do injectable gold,they do a lot of different
different treatments for forthis.
So anyway, so now I I I guessshe's off of you've gotten her
off of the off out of theallopathic conventional care,
and you're with an alternativepractitioner who's giving um
(54:46):
what was you said here, it's umautohemotherapy minor.
So major autohemotherapy iseveryone knows, or basically as
ozone, standard ozone therapy isMA major autohemotherapy, and in
major autohemotherapy, they takeyour blood out into hopefully
glass, not plastic, a glasscontainer, and then they add
(55:08):
ozone at a specificconcentration, and then you mix
it very slowly, not hard, notbecause you don't want to break
up the red blood cells.
You mix it very slowly, and it'sall really bright red because
it's ozone becomes oxygen.
Uh then they hang it up and theylet it flow back in.
That's major auto hemorrho.
So minor auto hemorrh is usuallywhen they take out, they'll draw
(55:29):
some blood from uh yourdaughter, perhaps 10cc, into a
20cc syringe where they add inan equal amount of ozone.
And ozone, as you know, is very,very uh oxidative, you know.
And so then they shake itvigorously because they want to
break up the red blood cells,they want to break up all the
cells.
So the idea is to breakeverything up into smallest
(55:52):
pieces as possible, and now theimmune system that's in there is
going to be able to identify notjust the major antigens on the
outside of the cells and stufflike that, but now that all
these cells are fractured, itwill develop uh uh immune
response to all different partsof it.
So it increases the immuneresponse.
It's called miter autohemon.
(56:13):
And then they take that bloodthat they've just combined with
insulin and shook vigorously,and they give it usually an
inject an injection either intothe uh gluteus or deltoid, and
we do that for CFCs as well.
No stem cell activation after 15session.
So I'm not sure what they'redoing there, how they're looking
for that and all that.
(56:34):
So the bioresonance, which is adiagnostic tool and also helps
you develop uh specifictherapies, they found two
different kinds of worms, tapeworms.
All right, and so you did threecycles of albendazole 400
milligrams a day for four dayson, two weeks off, and then
niclosamine.
Well, first of all, those areunderdosing because remember,
(56:57):
uh, if these worms are indeedinside her, um they need a very
powerful at least two weeks ofshh every day, then you can take
a week off or two, or but butnot too much because you want to
keep doing it, because everytime you take the the time off,
you allow them to regroup and toget get strong again.
(57:18):
So you don't want to do that toomuch.
So depending on her date or herher her weight, so what she'd
like to do is uh you know haveher weight in kilograms and look
look up the uh for albendazole.
Um and if she's got tapeworms,prosequanto would be good as
well.
(57:38):
So I would do that since she'sgot if it's true that the
bioresonance did actually pickup uh something that that
there's these two differenttypes of um tapeworms, then you
definitely want to use somethinglike prosequanto.
So again, get her weight, keylevels, and figure out the
dosage.
Uh and you got the niclosamide.
So you've got you've got threethere.
(57:58):
So you should you should I don'tsee hypermagnum, which I would
recommend.
And and the um albend is allfine, and then uh nyclosamide,
and figure out the dosage andgive her a good three weeks on
and one week off, three weekson, one week off, or two weeks
on and one week off.
So, are you doing the rightthing?
Yeah, that's part of it, but youcan't be looking at as things
you've got to get rid of.
They have you and they have youin another John Wayne movie,
(58:21):
it's us against them partner,and instead of saying that uh
realizing that your body isreacting, her body is reacting
to something that probably isundetectable.
It may be a nano-sized organism,it may be who knows?
No one really knows, right?
It's why it's idiopathic.
So you gotta clean her out.
Um and um, so she's a younggirl, she's nine years old.
(58:44):
So, right, so she'll be getting,depending on her diet, she'll
she'll become, she'll be comingof age soon.
Um, does this necessarily goaway?
Well, no.
And yes, but I I wouldn't dependon that, because regardless, if
it's held at bay, but we haven'tyet eliminated the primary what
(59:07):
was causing it in the firstplace, because they don't look.
And so she's gotta, you've gotto just like we do with CFCs,
you've got to maximize her onvitamin C.
So you get the um liposomal, andshe can take one gram of a
liposomal four times a day.
Vitamin D, you want to give hera lot until her level is well
over a hundred.
The same with vitamin A, themixed uh carotenoids, and the
(59:31):
mixed tacophorols andtocotrianols, which is what we
call vitamin E.
You want to make sure herthyroid is functioning fine, and
you do that but the same way youwould with an adult with basal
body temperatures.
So Nessarine and Caroline, drloadie.com, drlodi.com, go there
and join the the the the healthand healing group, and um so
(59:55):
that I can interact with you andwe can figure out what's how to
be part of that.
30.
Oh, because you're sayingbecause 30 they told you 30
children, 30% of the children,once they reach puberty, this
resolves.
So let's uh yeah, but let's findout what's going on and let's
make sure we do this uhthoroughly so that we don't it's
not 30, it can be closer to 100.
(01:00:17):
So, yes, the cleansingessential, then eating human
food, essential, essential,essential.
Going to bed early, essential,essential, essential.
Running around and playing allday, let her be a kid, let her
play.
Okay, and then some sort ofchelation uh antiparasitic.
It's all a very good plan.
But just keep in mind that themain therapeutic approach is the
(01:00:40):
cleansing and and then feedingonly real food and living a
healthy life.
And yes, these other things arevery important.
So, for example, if you you youmentioned here D DMPS, that's
usually IV.
They do have, I think, an oralone as well, but uh DMSA is used
(01:01:02):
orally, and she can takesomething like 250 milligrams um
every other night at bedtime fora couple weeks and then decrease
it to perhaps three times aweek.
But there's a whole lot, uhNessarine and and Caroline,
Caroline.
When you're in Dubai, so we'repretty close time zones.
(01:01:23):
So please join these groups sowe can talk about this, uh, be
more specific.
I can't find where you guys areyet.
There we are.
Ah, I love that Virginia.
Yes.
Good morning, Sydney.
So and then I I that ocularmelanoma.
You guys have to join our groupsbecause I it's because I'm gonna
(01:01:43):
I you you can't if you diagnosewith that, what can you do?
To you know, there's a lot, andI I really need to find out what
you've done so far, where you'reat.
So that's why this kind of thisformat is really hard to answer.
I may have to change this formatsomehow.
Thailand, yeah.
Good morning from Thailand.
Yes.
So, all right, anyway, let's getback to our questions.
(01:02:06):
Okay, this is Kenneth.
Is it the right person?
Yeah, Kenneth.
So Kenneth is I live inMinnesota, have done a lot of
global travel, and know I haveparasites.
Would like to go after them.
Listening to your talk onFacebook, I want to see if I
have it right.
Ivermectin 12 milligrams threetimes a day, prosequantal 600
milligrams three times a day,fenbendazole 100 milligrams
(01:02:29):
three times a day, and day fourmetronidazole, and then day five
fluconazole.
Well, so the ivermectin and theprosequantal and the
fenbendazole is on good.
Okay, and it's three times a dayfor three weeks, one week off,
three weeks off.
The same with the metronidazoleand the fluconazole.
(01:02:50):
You can do them at the same timefor three weeks on and one week
off, or you could save thefluconazole and do that on the
week off for one week.
And um, fenbendazole usuallycomes in 222 milligrams or 444,
not usually 100 milligrams.
Are you sure that's notalbendazole?
(01:03:10):
So can so you understand thatwhat I'm what I'm saying.
So those you've got themedications correct, and the
dosing is pretty good, exceptfor the fenbendazole, which
doesn't make sense at 100milligrams.
Usually it's 222.
That's how I've seen it.
220, 222 a day, 444, but therecould be somewhere 100.
The metronidazole is, I think,the least effective of all the
(01:03:31):
antiprotozoles.
I would probably go with alinia, which is nitoxoxinide,
500 three times a day, 500milligrams.
Good.
So you've got it looks likeyou've got everything.
You're you're ready to go, Ken.
And you might want to join ourparasite group so we could you
can go even further becausethere's more that you need to do
than just get rid of parasites,a lot more.
Cleansing, eating right, allthat stuff.
(01:03:53):
Very important.
Because if you're a healthy60-year-old and you want to be a
hundred a healthy 108-year-old,you've got to do all this.
So, Frank, I hi.
Um, my question is there are somany supplements, you literally
could probably spend 500-2,000 amonth just on all of these
supplements.
If you had to narrow it down andyou're the you're on a limited
(01:04:15):
budget, what would be theabsolute absolute as lean as you
can make it?
The absolute supplements, youneed to take other words the
best of the best, single mostimportant.
unknown (01:04:29):
Thank you.
SPEAKER_00 (01:04:30):
Supplements,
fundamental vitamin C, two
grams, liposomal four times aday, every day, vitamin D, 400,
uh 40,000, 50,000 units a dayuntil your levels well over a
hundred.
Get the vitamin D3 with K2,mixed uh carotenoids, 40, 50,000
(01:04:52):
a day, melatonin, and then theiodine thyroid bands,
foundational, fundamental, butthat's nothing else.
You don't, that's it.
And so, Frank, I understand it'sa limited budget, I get it.
That is even more limitedbecause you're living where
Minnesota?
Is that where you are?
No, that was Ken.
So, Frank, but you're living, Ithink, in the divided states of
(01:05:13):
America somewhere, and uhprobably living on a fixed
income from Social Security orsomething like that, or but
whatever it is, it's very hardto make it all work.
That's one reason why you shouldbe in another place where having
less money is makes you canstill live a very nice life.
It's true, can I say?
(01:05:35):
Um, that's what I would do.
That's what I did.
That's not what I would do, Idid do.
But those are the fundamental uhuh supplements that you need.
Now, you have a second questionhere regarding prostate CFCs.
If you're on a very limitedbudget diagnosis, at least four
or five months ago, metastasizedprostate CFCs.
What would you do?
(01:05:55):
So I get it.
Uh it's very expensive.
So, what would I do?
Prostate, fortunately, you whatyou need to do is not gonna be
expensive at all.
All you have to do is do acleanse, thorough juice cleanse.
And if that is too expensive todo a through juice cleanse, then
do the ultimate, do a waterfast.
That's not expensive.
Water, not too bad right now.
(01:06:16):
Um, and uh you know, do water aslong as you can.
Two weeks, three weeks, fourweeks.
Drink lots of water, at leastthree at least three quarts a
day.
And what's wrong with this?
Why is it not working?
Come on, uh water fast and dosome enemas, you can get an
enema kit and do enemas at home.
(01:06:38):
You don't have to go pay forcolonics, salt water enemas just
to clean out.
Do the um and then you do a goodgood do a good do a two-week
fast, and then eat nothing butreal human food, which is
fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds,period.
Organic, and eat within asix-hour window, and stop eating
five hours before sleep.
The rest of the time you're noteating, you're drinking.
(01:06:59):
Okay, this is after you've donethe cleanse, and you go to sleep
early, nine o'clock latest, andyou move around all day, whether
you want to go hiking or bikingor whatever you want to do.
So the the doing all of this,um, and you've got to you I hope
you're not eating animalsbecause animals and prostates
(01:07:19):
are very close, close friends,and then you won't need a ton of
supplements because you'll beeating healthy, because when
you're eating, you'll be eatingchia seed and flexia.
So you gotta join our group, andso you can get all of the you
know information and andresources and where to get
things in our our guys.
Um, there's a place um onlinewhere you can get bulk
(01:07:40):
supplements like kilos for verycheap of something, like
melatonin, and it's in ourmembership portal.
I don't even know what it'scalled, otherwise I'd mention
it.
I don't hide things.
Um, but there's voices, so sothere's a lot of benefits to
being part of these groupsbecause these the the group of
people they they they they'vethey're all it's like having a
(01:08:03):
thousand friends out thereworking to help you, but really
that's it.
And I hope that simplifiedthings for you, Frank.
You just need those basicsupplements, and the rest you're
gonna eat your way to health,all right.
So now, Stacy on drloadie.com,go there and join the group.
Desk is too short.
Join the group so I can helpyou.
(01:08:24):
But what I just if you don'tcan't even go afford to join the
group, then don't what I justsaid is it, and then come every
week and let's talk a little bitmore.
Send in your question.
Okay, but that's it.
The fasting, cleansing, eatinghealthy, going to bed early,
moving around all day.
Stop eating five hours beforesleep, but eating healthfully,
that means eating plants, andplants are everything from the
(01:08:45):
root to the stems to the seedsto the flowers to the fruits,
and you want a lot of brassicavegetables, which is
cauliflower, you know, bok choy,broccoli, kale, things like
that.
All right, so now this is uhStacy.
Okay, so Stacy's saying, wherecan I buy ivermectin and
niclosamide from?
Okay, yeah, so there's a placecalled ameds.org, ameds, amed,
(01:09:10):
amed s dot org, right?
And you can order there.
There's other resources too, andI just don't know them off the
top.
Of I don't want to use an idiom.
I don't know them just what Idon't have mem memorized, I
don't even remember looking atthem specifically, but there's
lots of other resources, and youcan get that by joining the
(01:09:30):
groups.
But so so so try ameds.org forthe iramectin.
And niclosamide, you just go tonyclosam.com and they're out of
uh Lithuania, and they'll sendyou that.
So you had a situation with CFCsince April, you've been on
different therapies.
I'm currently on oral therapy atprayer over medication of the
(01:09:52):
body.
I'm taking all right.
So you're Stacy, you're askingbasic.
Oh no, no, no, okay, okay.
So I told you where to get theivermectin and lyclosamine.
Actually, you're gonna do fan,you're gonna do fantastic,
Stacey.
Um, I wish you could join ourgroup so because we could really
be more specific for you, whatyou need to do.
We can I can talk to you and askyou questions.
(01:10:13):
But you know, the idea ofgetting the idromectin and
lycosamide, that's good, but youshould get a third one, like um
you know, fenbendazole oralbendazole or mebendazole, one
of the benzamidazols, uh, andthen uh uh protozo, I don't
know.
I think protozo would be wouldbe a linea, and then the fungal
would be like fluconazole.
(01:10:34):
But in addition to that, you'vegot to be doing the you've got
to clean out.
Everyone has to realize thatregardless of whatever, wherever
you're starting from, whateveryour condition is, and even if
it's a condition of health, andI want to be stay that way, it
doesn't matter wherever you'restarting from, you clean out,
and cleaning out means good eatjuice cleansing and uh water
(01:10:55):
fasting, and it's good to doboth in different combinations,
and then you continue to cleanout by eating healthfully,
because if you're eating humanfood, you'll have great bowel
movements, um, and and thingswill be coming out.
You'll you'll and and it and itprovides all the nutrients for
your all your systems to workbetter, right?
And you and you're stoppingeating five hours before sleep.
So you when you go to sleep, yougo right into autophagy and you
(01:11:16):
start cleaning house.
Very important because if you'veeaten within five hours, that
won't happen because your body'sstill absorbing nutrients.
So, anyway, it sounds you'redoing well.
You're also reading JaneMcClellan, blocking all the
pathways and stuff.
There's that that's important,but I wouldn't necessarily do
the uh um I think she recommendsliplator or some other such
(01:11:38):
drug.
And the reason I don't go alongwith that is because it's
associated with uh decreasedwhite matter in the brain and
and and different kinds ofdementia, which some of they
call Alzheimer's and stuff.
But yeah, CFCs make morecholesterol, but they make more
of everything because they'rethey're like little um hogs and
they've got to have more.
They need 15 times more glucose,they need more iron, they need
(01:12:01):
more of everything.
So, but the rest all over all ofthe things in Jane's book book
are are are very good.
But join our group so that wecan really fine-tune your
program.
Okay.
I hope I answer that.
The next question is regardinglung CFCs.
My dad has stage four lung CFCwith pleura and brain
metastasis.
Can he be treated with yourprotocol?
(01:12:24):
Uh yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
But my pro my protocol is not myit involves cleansing and all
that stuff, but also it also hasinterventional therapies such as
IVs, such as you know, IVvitamin C and ozone and stuff
like that.
But in addition, if it's a verysounds like it's a very advanced
(01:12:45):
situation with your father, wewould also consider doing
insulin potentiated potentiatedlow dose chemo.
And I don't know what's going onwith the brain meds.
Sometimes there we need to be weneed to do uh short-term time
radiotherapy, radiation therapy.
So there's you know, uh the theprotocol, and when people refer
to my protocol, my protocol isvaries depending on the person,
(01:13:07):
and it is integrative oncology,so we include everything.
And if we've got to do thingsthat I usually don't recommend,
such as radiation because of aparticular situation, such as a
tumor in the brain, then we doit.
So we've got to know all of itso that we uh can can decide
when when do we do this and whendo we do that?
So the answer is absolutely,absolutely, but just understand
(01:13:28):
that the protocol is not onlydetox and cleansing, okay,
because it involvesinterventions.
And um, so as you know, andalways is a feeling in Arizona.
Um, we're we it's our 21st yearwe're in now, and it's you know,
we do it all there (01:13:44):
mind, body,
spirit, and we teach you how to
live your life so that you itwon't come back, you won't
continue to make these things,and we do that by by by
education and training becausethat's really important.
If otherwise, you know, it'slike I remember going to a
dentist when I was young, and onthe way out, there was a bowl of
(01:14:04):
candy on the uh that theyoffered me.
They want to make sure I'll beback.
Well, we don't want you to comeback.
Our goal is that you'll neverneed another doctor again
because you'll be your owndoctor.
And once you get it, it's reallynot that complicated.
In fact, it's so simple, it'sridiculous.
But once you get it, you get it,and then you'll say, Well, what
are you gonna go to the doctor?
I'll go to the doctor if I'vegot a problem, I got a broken
(01:14:26):
leg, I you know, but other thanthat, you know, they're they
don't know anything anyway.
And you know what healing isinnate to the organism, it's
something that your body doesautomatically.
If you get all the impedimentsout and provide it with
everything it needs, then itdoes what it does, and what it
does is heal.
All right, you don't no oneheals you, you heal, your body
(01:14:47):
heals.
That's you don't even you can'teven say I healed my CFC.
You didn't heal your bodyhealed.
That's its process.
We get all the stuff that is animpediment away, and we provide
everything necessary for it tooptimally function, and whoa,
there it is, health.
But there are times like in thissituation with with Fang's
(01:15:08):
father, we're gonna need to do alot more than just cleansing and
colonics.
So, but we've got you know, soyou should call the my my my my
my center in in Arizona an oasisof healing.
All right, all right, very good.
All right, next person is Tracy.
She's saying it's a secondopinion.
Any information on carcinomacaused by radiation from breast
(01:15:32):
CFC treatment.
See, uh, so you same thing as ifit wasn't caused by it, except
understand that it's gonna be avery strong one.
But no, absolutely, Tracy, thesame thing we would do.
Um, and it's a whole, it's it'snot, I can't just like you have
got to join the CFC group.
DRLodi.com, join it, we'll goover exactly what you need to
(01:15:56):
do.
But you've heard today, andyou've I hope you've seen other
times, it starts with cleansingbiological dentistry, though I
point essential, cleansing andthen eating healthy, and then
getting your vitamin C A and Dand melatonin and thyroid
function and getting all thatgoing.
Uh, and then if you've got atumor there that's by radiation
(01:16:18):
and it's locally available, wecan touch it, we can put things
on like seven percent lugalls,um, and then balance your
hormones, bring your hormonesback into balance.
There's so many things that haveto happen.
So please join the CFC group sowe can really help you.
Okay, because you already knowwhat they're gonna do could can
(01:16:42):
can bring back the samesituation you're trying to
eliminate.
So clearly, from if you if ifyou're saying that the breast
CFC is is developing out of theirradiated part of you, the
radiation you received fortreating CFC.
It sounds insane, but it'syou're absolutely right.
Dr Lodi.com, join the group.
All right, so hey you guys, it'safter nine, and um well in the
(01:17:04):
East Coast, it's 10 p.m.
in Europe.
I know you're sleeping by now.
Um, so anyway, so what do youcall Namaste and I'm a scout?
And aloha to everyone.
Um