Episode Transcript
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(00:02):
Yes, you know, there are people,we sell ourselves short, human
beings, we have powers. And at one point mesmerism has
been hidden. If you look up mesmerism now or
even ask AI about mesmerism, it will tell you, oh, that was
superstition. The guy was a quack.
But hypnosis came out of it. And hypnosis can do some things,
(00:24):
but all hypnosis can do is you get 23 treatments and maybe
you'll give up smoking. And so it doesn't really work.
But what they don't tell you is that all kinds of celebrities,
military men, medical doctors, celebrities, all kinds of
people, authors, Charles Dickens, Lafayette were
mesmerists and that there were millions of them.
(00:46):
It was just as popular as acupuncture today.
But. Aloha, and welcome back to
another show. Guys.
I'm beyond excited for today's show because we have a guest who
(01:10):
is truly an A league of his own,Adam Bergstrom.
Adam is a researcher, an author,and a deep thinker who has spent
decades uncovering the hidden truths about health, energy, and
the way our bodies really function.
His wealth of knowledge challenges what we think we
know, and his insights have changed lives, and today he's
(01:34):
here to share them with you. You can find more of Adam's work
at his website, solartiming.com.Also, huge news guys.
We officially hit a 3000 followers this week.
I'm incredibly grateful for every single one of you who
listens, shares, and supports the show.
This wouldn't be possible without you.
(01:57):
If you love what we do here and want to help keep the show
going, please take a moment to follow, subscribe, and leave a
positive review on your favoritepodcast platform.
These ratings and reviews are what helps us bring incredible
guests like Adam to the show. They also show potential guests
(02:19):
and sponsors that this show has a loyal, engaged audience and
that makes all the difference. And it only takes a few seconds,
but it truly helps more than youknow.
Also, if you like to support theshow directly, head over to my
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Shop and Books I Read section. If you make a purchase through
(02:42):
those links, I do get a small Commission at no extra cost to
you. It's a simple way to help cover
the expenses of running this podcast and website.
OK, enough of that guys. And now let's get into our
conversation. So let's welcome Adam to the
show. The views, thoughts, and
(03:03):
opinions expressed in this podcast are intended for
entertainment purposes only. They do not purport to reflect
the opinions or views of any experts or medical
professionals. This content is not intended to
be a substitute for professionalmedical advice, diagnosis, or
treatment. Always seek the advice of your
physician or other qualified health providers with any
questions you may have regardinga medical condition.
(03:26):
Gosh, So how are you? OK.
We've had some rough weeks because of different things that
happened and but ever but otherwise OK.
And we had some rain. Of course we were concerned
about the fire. We were really fortunate because
it was like this little sliver of land that was like protected.
(03:48):
It had no wind and it was just from Carpinteria to Galita and
that was it. And everything else had wind
blowing and fires started all over the place.
And of course, LA burned down. And part of it, which I'm
talking about on Facebook, but nobody's going to listen, I
(04:12):
don't think, is that you can actually terraform California.
What why this weather is going on is because of taking the
trees out. And strangely enough, the trees
that burn actually bring the water.
So they won't burn. That's why in the rain forest
now where they've cut the trees,they're having droughts.
(04:32):
And so you'll have droughts. And it also leads to disruptive
weather patterns. So you will have hurricanes like
the one that came into Acapulco and then they had actually they
had three hurricanes in two years.
And that kind of stuff wouldn't happen if it wasn't for all the
trees that are going down. And the same thing here, why
(04:54):
California now is burning down is not only the how they're
handling the water, they can actually get the water at point
of delivery in numerous ways which have gone in for the way
Bermuda, You know, Bermuda doesn't even have a, they don't
have any water there. There's no water there.
(05:14):
There's no streams, no anything.It's a, it's a rock basically in
the middle of the Caribbean. And they have plenty of water
because they have special roofs that that shepherd the water
into wells. And then they all have a wells.
And you have to have that kind of roof to do it.
Well, California doesn't even have to do that, but they could
(05:37):
do that. There's numerous solutions.
The Amish never run out of water, even though they're not
hooked up into any water system because they have the same type
of roofs that shepherd the waterinto barrels and cisterns and
various places. And then they know how to find
water in wells and everything like that.
(05:57):
But the modern technology they have here in California isn't
even the technology. It's idiocy.
And of course, saving the smell and the standard steelhead and
salmon does not help anything. So.
But anyway, rant on. California is going whatever.
(06:18):
Whatever we can discuss today, we can do all show up on
California's stupidity on. Water, I know.
And talking about the stupidity.As I was flying into Los
Angeles, I was flying from Hawaii to Los Angeles.
Los Angeles to Orlando, but so Hawaii to Los Angeles.
(06:40):
As we were approaching Los Angeles, I could smell wires
burning. But we were in a plane.
And I was like, Oh my gosh, I smell burning.
I thought it was the plane. What's that smell?
And it kind of was worrisome. And then I looked out the window
and I could see this thick, disgusting smoke.
(07:02):
And just, I mean, it was dark, so you I couldn't see if there
was any kind of fire going on. There was no more fire.
It was just smoldering at that point and there was no lights,
obviously, because there wasn't anything going on there.
But you could smell it and you could see the thick, disgusting
smoke or smog or whatever this thing is.
(07:25):
And, and then we flew out of it.But you could smell it.
I could smell it before I saw it.
Yeah, I know. And and they don't think about
things like, for instance, they could have, what do you call
them? Fire warnings?
What's the word? Can't even think of the word for
those fire devices. Ohh.
(07:47):
Smoke alarms. OK, it just came to me.
Smoke alarms that are not radioactive because they tell
you those are perfectly safe because you only get 1% of it is
a gamma ray and the gamma rays really aren't going to bother
you. You're right.
And they say the beta rays or the alpha particles are locked
(08:08):
behind the plastic. As long as the plastics there
you have no problem. Well, the alpha is different.
It lasts for thousands of years.The gamma, it's like a bullet
going through you. It's gone, but the gamma ray
stays. OK.
Now what happens when the plastics not there when you burn
it like our landlord alone had probably has thirty of those
(08:31):
fire extinguishers in his house.Our little shack here 123 maybe
four in this little place. While these big mansions in
Malibu, you can bet some of themhave 40 in them.
So here you have beta radiation being released into the
(08:51):
environment permanently in the water supply, in the food
supply. Whatever you grow in that area
now is going to and beta rays and you're getting radiation.
That's just one of many of the stupid toxicities that I have in
building materials there. But that's really interesting
that you could smell it through the closed airplane.
Yes, it was a little bit scary. Yeah, absolutely.
(09:15):
And I did not know there was some kind of gamma rays or
whatever inside the fire detectors.
I had no clue. Well, it has gamma rays, but
they're relatively safe. See, gamma rays can go through
anything. A A, a beta ray can't even get
through your skin unless you have a cut.
But it goes through your mouth. Once you put it in your mouth,
(09:36):
it's like having a transmitter in your body until you poop it
out, pee it out, sweat it out, it's in there.
And of course it stays a long time.
And so you've got constant radiation every hour of the day
while with the gamma ray went through you gamma ray.
These are usually people get scared of them like in an
(09:56):
airplane, you're actually get less gamma rays in an airplane
than you do down at sea level. So that whole scary thing is
just to confuse people about radiation, alpha radiation and
beta radiation. Alpha is like solid matter.
The beta is more like smoke, andyou would say gamma is like a
(10:22):
flash of light. And they get it mixed up
deliberately a lot because they want to confuse people about
radiation. And actually we should not go on
on nuclear reactors. It is a bad choice in a lot of
ways. Look what happened at Chernobyl
and places like that. You can't even there to this
(10:44):
day. Yeah, exactly.
Fukushima too. It's actually still leaking
radiation in the the water continuously, continuously.
Right now it's still dumping water that's radiated.
Interesting. Interesting enough Temp Temple
granted her. You're familiar with her the the
autistic woman who revolutionized the beef
(11:07):
industry. You mentioned her before, yes?
Yeah, she, she looked at that and said if she had looked at
it, she would have never approved the plans because she
said they approved the plants and they were perfect except if
water got on it. And because they didn't protect
themselves from the water comingin, of course it's going to set
(11:29):
off the radiation. And that's lucky it wasn't even
worse. Some people like D Pat Flanagan
predicted a lot worse, that we're going to have a super
meltdown. I don't think that's really
possible. And I think some people over
extreme nuclear winter is what they're going to be.
But it's a dangerous technology to be messing with when we
(11:53):
really have a lot of other technologies we could use a lot
of them, including solar at point of delivery.
You can have solar up an Anchorage and you can have it in
Hokkaido. I mean, solar works up there
perfectly. They don't tell you that because
it's the intensity of the light,not the heat that has anything
to do with it. I, I used to do workshops up in
(12:17):
Wisconsin and I was amazed at all the solar.
What happened is they did have anuclear plant or two.
And finally the populace said, we're not going for a third
plant. And they said, oh, but then you
won't have any radiation. And they said, we don't care.
And so when that happened, the power companies would sell the
(12:40):
nuclear, I mean, the, the solar devices to the people directly.
No piping it to anybody. They put it on the roof.
And I, I was in a lot of solar houses when I was doing
workshops that were perfectly fine and ran and didn't even
need that much. The battery thing they do now,
(13:00):
they overemphasize it when you have a local, local way of doing
it and know how to properly weatherize your house as well.
I was in one house that was underneath.
This guy said I'm a dumb hippie so I couldn't work for anybody.
So I opened my own construction company, and he lived in a house
(13:22):
that didn't even need a heater, that had a S facing window with
a garden in it, glass on the outside.
And glass is the second level. And he didn't need any heat.
And you parked above his house. And he was set for the winter
and built other houses for people.
(13:43):
Yeah. Wisconsin was very Eau Claire,
Chippewa Falls. They were very progressive.
And I was amazed what can be done?
And now, I don't know. Maybe the nuclear people have
talked them into something different.
I haven't been to Wisconsin for like 40 years.
In a long time, what about thoseradiations?
(14:03):
You know when you go through theairport, they make you stand in
those things and it goes around you.
They're not good, you know, it keeps, it keeps adding up.
And of course they make a big deal about going through the
other way. They they treat you like you're
a criminal. Or something when?
We went to New Zealand, we got the the touchy feely deal and of
(14:27):
course The Dirty looks and stufflike that.
The guy at in New Zealand, in fact, coming back, he was worst
of all, almost couldn't come back into the United States
because of that guy. And I kept insisting I'm not
going through there. Yeah.
And he keep on saying, well, youhave a pacemaker or what?
They kept on going. It's perfectly safe.
(14:47):
It's perfectly safe. You're right.
Then you go through. Medical doctors.
Exactly. And even the.
Medical because radiation is accumulative.
They don't yes, it's a cumulative.
So I mean, you're only allowed so much in your body and that's
it. And every time you go through
that, you're accumulating radiation.
(15:08):
So I do the same thing. I'm not going through.
I even got the FBI fingerprint that all that stuff.
So I can bypass the that for through the TSA.
So I paid extra so I don't have to do that.
And they still they randomly andthey always randomly pick me as
I going through the other side. They're like, oh, stop, you have
(15:31):
to go the other way. And I said for what?
I have the FBI thing, why do I need to go?
Oh, it's just random, really random.
OK, so I know. So I say I'm not going through
that. Just pat me down.
So they they said, oh, Are you sure you want to be pat down in
front of everybody? Want to go into just pat me.
I don't got nothing. So pat me down.
(15:52):
I just want to go, no, I'm not going through that.
It's it's all the time. I think because I don't go
through that. They have me on the list to
randomly do that all the time, all the time, every time.
It's so annoying. It's like, why do I pay for
this? So yeah, so I don't go through
that. So I'm glad you do the same.
(16:14):
Yeah, it's awful. The whole idea is to basically
harass you until you finally say, oh this is too much
trouble. I'm going to do it, that's
exactly. Point of view.
I mean, what's the point of that?
They want to see everything, youknow, 'cause I mean, it's actual
radiation. It shows all the way through
your, I mean, it shows you like you don't have clothes on, you
(16:36):
know, I mean, that's not why youdon't go through that.
But I mean, it's the radiation. It's awful.
It's like I, I think when, during my dad's time, when he
was young, they had those radiation for the shoes when you
put your foot in and they had the radiation back then to
measure your feet. You know, as a kid I used to
(16:57):
play in those things. Every time we went to the shoe
stop, we shot. Like if my if my mother bought
shoes, if my father bought shoes, or if I bought shoes.
Oh, can we play in that and see our feet and our bones?
How cool. Yeah, I spent a lot of time in
those things, so I'm lucky to bealive, probably.
And radiation, you can't get that out of you, can you?
(17:19):
Or can you? Eventually you can't get it out
and it has to do with being whether you're acid or alkaline.
The more alkaline and inflamed you are, the more omega-3 fatty
acids you eat. There's a whole bunch of
factors. The more estrogen we basically
are basically are balanced as anacid alkaline way, but not in
(17:42):
the way that's buffered. The blood is buffered, the
saliva is buffered, the urine isbuffered.
What about the fat that doesn't even have water in it or very
little, it's water less. So that's where the problem
starts. And actually fats sterols versus
omega-3 fatty acids and any fatty acids, they balance each
(18:06):
other out to make you more acid or alkaline or more oxidative,
which means inflammative or whatyou would call what's the word
reductive? They call it in other words, you
got more carbon dioxide and you're more acidic.
Basically it's a fancy term for.So that actually is what
determines also you with cancer.And a lot of people don't
(18:31):
understand this. If you're in an acidic
environment, which means more carbon dioxide, reductive, less
oxygen, you grow cancer. But if you're in an oxidative
environment, you spread cancer. So you don't want to be
oxidative after you have cancer.And people try to alkalize after
(18:53):
they get cancer, and they're doing it completely backwards
and killing themselves. I know you started a cancer log,
you said or journal for 16 days,for the past 16 days.
And to clarify, it's not becauseyou have cancer.
Nope, not yet. Don't say yet.
(19:14):
No, you don't. And so you're just what are what
are these cancer posts? What are they talk?
What do you talk about in them? Well, there's several.
I've written books about cancer.1 is a releasing and he's the
acid alkaline one. And a person who has time to
know how to prevent cancer, that's the book to read.
(19:35):
But what person who has cancer, they don't have time to figure
all that out and do it. Unless we had a hospital that
did Ruvisi's type of work and wedon't have it anymore.
The last one went down the tube,probably in the 1990s.
Ruvisi died at 101 and all his work went down the tube.
At that point they tried to keepit up.
(19:58):
It might have kept up till maybe2006 or 7 and the final lab went
down. So nobody is doing that work and
I found it did. The only total understanding of
cancer was by Doctor Ravisi. Now there are other methods to
do it. The choletoxins basically toxify
you and turn the immunity on where it wouldn't be on.
(20:23):
It's kind of like you get up in the middle of the night, you got
a cramp. Well instead of rubbing it
lightly it doesn't stop the cramp, but if you cramp it more
by putting pressure on it, the cramp goes away.
The same with cancer. If you cramp it more by giving
it another shock on top of the cancer shock, it'll often eat up
(20:43):
the cancer. And it happened to a friend of
mine who had a big hole burnt inher back.
Now she had get this cancer of the spine.
I'm sure I've mentioned her before.
Cancer of the spine, cancer of the lungs, breast cancer.
And they said you get your affairs in order.
(21:04):
You're how did you even walk in the office?
You know, you got cancer everywhere.
You're, you're nothing but cancer.
Go home and get your affairs in order as quickly as possible.
Instead, she went to San Antonio, had a big hole burned
in her back, and it totally reversed the cancer.
For eight or nine years after that, she lived.
And I'm not sure what she finally died of, but but anyway,
(21:28):
a counter shock, basically chemoworks by counter shock.
You could just as well go out and get in an automobile
accident and be cured or by stung by killer beers Beezus.
If you survive the bees, the cancer goes away.
That's what Doctor Kohli found. So there are various ways to do
that, including I've gone into Doctor Beard's ideas and he was
(21:50):
on the right track too. But most people, they're not
going to have time to do that and they don't understand the
technology and the technology isnot available.
They want you to make think thatcancer is genetic.
It is not. It is just one stage of cancer,
of many stages of cancer. So I'm writing a book on
cachexia because once a person has cancer and they survive, if
(22:15):
they survive the treatment and get the Hospice because frankly
the treatment kills most people with cancer.
But then the second thing that 2million people die a year of is
cachexia. They waste away because their
body can't handle anything. So I had a dear friend when I
was thinking this out at the point and she was my experiment
(22:40):
unfortunately, and I wish I knewmore because I was figuring out
how she could she had liver cancer and her stomach would
throw up everything that went down it.
So I knew that our mouths and our cecum and other parts of her
body can double as a as a as a stomach.
So I had her holding things in her mouth and at first it was
(23:03):
rough. It didn't work.
Now get that she was £85. She went down from 130 to 85
lbs, which happens that's the final stage of cachexia wasting
syndrome is the is the other forit.
So and she was bedridden and shehad friends she was saying with
that had to take her to the bathroom where she had diarrhea
(23:24):
about 20 times a day. So she was just running out the
end. So I I told her to start holding
things in her mouth, particularly sugar and I said it
can be any junk food. Do not try to kill cancer.
Cancer is an isoparasite. So you're killing yourself
instead eat and out eat the cancer.
(23:45):
So at first she had a tough time.
She threw up and she said it's painful.
But finally by just holding things that she could hold in
her mouth like sugar and later other things came.
She built up to 103 lbs, which was 8595, a close to 20 lbs she
gained and was up and going to stores and walking around and
(24:08):
not having diarrhea and feeling pretty good until.
So she finally started going downhill again and went down
fast. But due to the information I
gave her and then I worked out at that point, she got an extra
year of life. And this was a dear friend,
someone I knew since the time I first met a Donald back in the
(24:29):
1970s. So I'd known her for years,
really good friend and and I only wish I'd known more because
maybe we could have kept her alive more.
Or even I think once you go a certain a certain route, you're
the cancer will give up. That's my theory and I haven't
(24:51):
proved that part yet, but cancerhas done that before.
Spontaneous remission is so common that when I was
researching in the medical library, I found a very large
book of hundreds of cases of unexplained, totally documented.
In other words, some people think I had cancer and they say,
(25:12):
well, you really didn't have cancer and you can't really
prove it either way. But these cases were proven
cases of cancer that were fatal.The person was going to die, but
they didn't. And the lab tests they were,
they were tested extensively to prove that something happened
(25:32):
that doctors don't know about. And believe me, doctors don't
know a lot of things, including the psychogenic part, how your
mind effects cancer as well. You can actually think yourself
out of cancer, but that is very difficult.
It takes 100% concentration thatpeople usually aren't gifted
(25:55):
enough to be able to do because they get the beer and what the
doctor says and what their relatives say etcetera.
But anyway, you can, you can by eating very foods you agree with
that that your body agrees with,even foods that are considered
(26:15):
bad as long as it goes down and gives you calories, you don't
need nutritives. They try to tell you, oh, you
need nutrients to fight the cancer.
No, you don't. You need calories to say alive.
All you need is fuel to keep going, and then eventually your
body starts to figure out how totake care of it itself and
(26:36):
doesn't. The sugar buffers your protein
from being eaten up by your bodyto convert the sugar so that you
can run your body and takes all the fat off your body to do the
same thing. So anyway, that's what I've been
writing about and I think I'm upto #19 or something like that.
And I'll, I'll probably, I've been putting it in my Diamond
(26:59):
Body journal, but I may just actually have a book because so
many people when I started writing this said my uncle's
dying that way, now my mother's dying that way, so and so's
dying that way. And they just tell you there's
nothing you can do. Ironically, they tell you, oh,
you can take omega-3 fatty acidsfor it.
(27:19):
And do you know what? That's a very worst thing you
can do for cachexia. They're very worse.
So in my latest installment, I wrote something like that you
take cod liver, then you would take cod liver oil for for
cachexia. And and so I said I asked,
(27:40):
started asking doctor Google trick questions.
AI, in other words, OK is a fermented oil good for cakepsia?
Oh yeah, yeah, that's good. Fermented cod liver oil.
And then I asked that your question can you ferment a pure
oil? No, you can't.
(28:02):
Then what the heck is a fermented oil?
There's no such thing. In fact, someone got whatever
that Sally Palin group is, they got asked to not show up anymore
when they said you can't fermentan oil, it rots and and see he
got dismissed. And so he started his own
(28:25):
company where he has at least a a coddler oil that is not
fermented, as was an H Price used to have it.
And it it was not fermented. It was clear you could see right
through it. So Coddly Royal is not
beneficial for you unless you'restarving to death of vitamin
A&E, which in our our society, A&D rather in our society, it's
(28:51):
almost impossible to be short onthose.
As long as you want the sun a couple of times a year, even in
the summer, vitamin D will last for three years in your body.
And for sure over a season, Mother Nature figures you're
going to be out of the sun for acertain amount of time.
We'll take care of you because I'm Mother Nature, mother
(29:12):
nurture. But people don't trust it.
Oh, you need vitamin E every day.
You got to get it. If you don't get it at high
noon, you're dead. Get it.
And you got to take supplements and fish and everything else
nonsense. You can get all the vitamin UD
need in Anchorage as long as youexpose your palms or some other
(29:35):
part of your body briefly to thesun.
Maybe 20 minutes and you'll get it.
Or your food. You don't even have to get
naked. You just put especially dried
food like pasta, like mushrooms.There's a whole bunch of foods
that just soak up the sun. You can just take white rice or
pasta. Dried food will soak it up
(29:57):
better than anything else. And I was going.
To say and cooking it won't deplete it.
Yeah, yes. No, maybe.
But you've you've cooked it already.
It's after it's cooked, then youput it out there after it's
ready. Yeah, that's The funny thing
about it. People think that if they go out
(30:19):
in the sun all day, they're going to get vitamin D It
actually destroys vitamin CD. And here's an example with dried
food, it lasts. So at one time, a long time ago,
they decided they're going to take dried food and see if they
can be a source of vitamin D. Well, it was, but then it
(30:40):
destroyed all the other vitamins.
So they said, oh, we got to stopthat.
But they never thought that. Some civilizations took like
white pasta with no vitamins andminerals, soaked it for vitamin
D for that, and then they got their other vitamins from other
foods. I mean, why do you have to
depend on one food for everything?
(31:02):
So that's the secret of it. If you take a dried food with no
vitamins and minerals, nothing gets destroyed.
And the longer you leave it out in the sun, the more vitamin D
it has. Now it's different with oils,
like if I took cream or olive oil out in the sun, all the
(31:23):
maximum of vitamin D would be added within 20 or 30 minutes.
After that it starts to degrade.And in fact if you leave the
olive oil out for 24 hours, say you were exposed to sun that
long, it would be rancid and there would be no vitamin D and
it would be anti nutrients in toblock it because it's it's a an
(31:47):
oily food, not a dried food. And the same thing happens to us
when we're out in the sun. People who get too much sun are
short and they need to get some vitamin D out of their foods,
strangely enough, because they think they're getting it from
the sun, but they're not. So it's very confusing.
And of course the vitamin D, people who want to sell it
(32:09):
desperately for some reason, I don't know, there must be extra
money in vitamin D compared to other vitamins.
They're so desperate to sell it and tell everybody you got to
have 50,000 IU's etcetera, etcetera.
And it's been well known for a long time that 200 I use more
than that per day will actually leach calcium out of your bones.
(32:34):
They don't tell you that part. No.
So so I know some people personally who were told to take
50,000 I US and all of their joints failed.
They had, they had them replacedand they never.
Oh my God. Realized what was happening and
they're going to tell you that because it's slow.
(32:54):
See what? The slower a toxic process is,
the less noticeable is it. Noticeable It is, and doctors
get away with that all the time,so I do.
So what about the sea buckthorn oil?
It contains omega-3, 6-7 and nine and I guess some kind of
(33:18):
lanolytic acid. No good, good or bad.
No good, no good. You know, if you take it because
it's so little, it won't hurt you until you start continually
taking it. And sometimes some of these
supplements can and herbs can act like stimulants, tonics
(33:39):
briefly, but if you keep taking them, you get aging.
And one of the things when I tell people that Omega 3S are
bad for them, they said I, I feel good when I take them.
They actually will make you feelgood and take your pain away,
just like I used to take pain away by giving you radiation.
Oh, come step under my radiationmachine.
(34:02):
My pain is gone. I'll come back for more
treatments. Well, the same thing with Amiga
3. How does it make the pain go
away? By decreasing immunity.
You want to build immunity to get rid of your pain.
And that's where people misunderstand what Amiga 3 fatty
acids do. Now people aren't going to
(34:23):
notice it because it will knock off two or three years
afterlife, 10 years afterlife, whatever it is, and give them
diseases like Parkinson's disease, dementia, all of those
type of Lou Gehrig's disease, all of those need omega-3 to set
them off unless you're exposed to radiation or high levels of
(34:46):
estrogen in other ways. But almost always you will find
in those diseases, including heart disease, omega-3 fatty
acids involved. I, there's even, I found two
medical textbooks, I tell you that you can't get heart disease
from cholesterol unless you haveOmega threes to set it off.
(35:07):
And so of course, that's the, the rule since 1930 has been
that Omega threes are essential fatty acids.
They're not essential fatty acids, They're killer fatty
acids. And they're even got a campaign
saying American Indians got 50% Amiga threes and 50% Amiga
(35:27):
sixes. The Apaches didn't eat fish.
They and they didn't even eat ananimal that ate fish.
They couldn't eat bears because a bear would eat a fish and they
knew the difference. Geronimo died at 81 or 82, I
believe. He got pneumonia when he fell
off his horse dead drunk. Yeah, it was a drug.
(35:49):
Otherwise he probably would havelived 100.
And he was. And he was fit, as fit as you
get. He was a warrior.
He killed so many people in battle and he survived so many
wounds and everything. And so he didn't have any
omega-3 fatty acids to protect them.
So there's so much ridiculous things about especially Amiga
(36:11):
threes. It's one of the it's one of the
greatest scams as it's ever comedown because it's lasted since
1930. It's going on 100 years, a 95
year scam and even I respect andand actually no, I I met him
(36:31):
Andrew Wilde, but Andrew Wilde he agrees with most of the other
things I say even that black pepper is a problem.
But he's a fanatic about Amigas threes being so good for you and
I just shake my head. I don't see how he could have
possibly got it because other just about everything else.
I used to go to him to see if heagrees with the things I I found
(36:55):
and almost were in complete alignment about a lot of things.
He's a little more conservative than they, but we're pretty much
an agreement. And by the way, How I Met him,
he used to be into drugs. You know, he would say he was a
he was a follower of of the guruof Wade Davis and of what is his
(37:19):
name? Squiddy, the guy who went
through the the Amazon and triedevery drug that was known to
humanity down there. Schulze.
Yeah. Schulze.
Richard Schulze was a Harvard man who went down and withstood
the most incredible adventures that you could ever find.
(37:39):
The Indiana. Some people say he was the model
for Indiana Jones. He did all these adventures down
there, took every drug and and Andrew Wild was a disciple, a
student of his, as was Wade Davis.
And I forget they the third guy.But anyway, at that point Andrew
(38:02):
Wild was obsessed with mushroomsand eclipses because they were
had some kind of lunar energy. He believed.
And when I first met him, I he was in town and I went to his
lectures and hung out with him. But then we both were invited to
see Swami Muktananda and we bothcrawled up.
(38:24):
It was a long haul. We you had to crawl up on your
knees to see. Swami looked on and we both
crawled up together. And he told him because he was
bald, he was going to be rich. At that point I wasn't ball, so
I guess I couldn't be rich. And instead Muktananda told me
stick to one thing, stop, stop going and everything.
(38:44):
So somehow, he knew. That that was my the hue I was.
That's your MO. Exactly.
And he mounted his horse and rode all over the.
Direction. He knew that.
He knew it and of course I got mad.
I later interfaced with him in Santa Monica and other places.
He was he was a real deal. Luktananda was a real deal.
(39:07):
Extraordinary man. Hey Ohana, I hope you're loving
this conversation as much as I am.
I just wanted to pause for a quick moment to ask for your
support. If you're enjoying what you're
hearing and feel like we've earned it, we'd be so grateful
if you could leave us a rating or review.
Your honest feedback really helps us grow and reach more
(39:29):
people who love exploring these fascinating topics.
And if you think this episode would resonate with someone you
know, don't forget to share it with them.
Mahalo Nui Loa for being part ofour journey.
Now back to the show. But anyway, cancer, we got kind
of diverted on that. But I'm just getting the point
(39:50):
that most of our medicine is mythology.
I mean, almost all of it. The whole idea of the testing
they do is incorrect. The blood tests are wrong.
They they do them completely wrong.
And I just asked a question on Facebook and I'm going to see
what my answers are. I asked.
(40:11):
What is blood when a when a doctor test your blood, what are
they testing? People don't know because blood
is not just one thing. It's red blood cells and it's
serum. Are they testing the serum or
are they testing the red blood cells itself?
And they don't tell you that or are they telling you both
(40:31):
because sometimes you're low on potassium because you're hot too
high on it because it went into the cell that's a cancer cell
over 60% more potassium in it than the serum is a is a rule of
cancer. And if the potassium comes out,
then you can have a heart attack, but you're not you're
(40:53):
curing your cancer and say they have no clue about that.
And so when people go in and gettheir how much potassium and how
much magnesium and copper, it's all a scam.
They have no idea because they don't figure in the ratio or
even know what blood is. I got a blood test.
What part of your blood? I don't know.
(41:15):
That's great. The terrorists are in your
house. What room?
I don't know. The whole house.
That's their that's their philosophy.
Oh. My goodness, you had mentioned
earlier about reductive. Is that like the I think I
remember from before, there are these little pills that you can
(41:38):
put in your water to make it reductive, is that?
Reductive means lack of oxygen, and here's an example how cancer
grows. Repeat gave a good explanation
of this. He said if you tie a tourniquet
around your bicep and don't moveyour arm, you're more vulnerable
(42:00):
to cancer because carbon dioxidetends to grow cancer.
But if you move your arm with a with a tourniquet around it, you
build a muscle because it's going to build something.
So actually bodybuilders would be really smart if they tied
tourniquets around their arms, whether it worked out or their
legs, whatever they were workingand then took it out.
(42:22):
They. Do that.
Yeah, they do that. I have heard some of that.
It's not commonly done, but I have heard of people doing it.
Yeah. So that's the trick.
But if you lie around with a tourniquet or something tight on
your body and it cuts off the carbon, it cuts off the oxygen,
then you're going to grow cancer.
(42:43):
But the opposite happens once. Once you have it metastasized,
the game's off. Then it's already growing and
you spread it because the oxygenbreaks it down.
And if you have an ulcer, what happens with an ulcer?
It spreads. If you got a tumor, it's in one
place. The tumor protects it from
spreading. But then you if you break it
(43:05):
down, you better have something to kill it.
That's how they do tuberculosis.The tuberculosis can't be killed
because of where it's in the cell.
They give a drug to break it outand then they give a second drug
to kill the tuberculosis. The same thing would work with
cancer, but the Dumbo's are into, oh, it's a genetic thing,
it's DNA. So we're going to make this new
(43:30):
technological invention where you can find the the cancer
beforehand. Well, as far as DNA, people get
cancer about 100 times a day at that level and they just had
that beat every time. So cancer is not a cancer until
it gets into the mitochondria and into the actually into the
(43:52):
cell. It has to get into the cell and
then it has to go beyond that into the interstitial fluid.
Then it has to get in the blood.And by that time you're really,
you're over the hump, you're probably going to go or you need
to follow instructions to out eat it at that point.
And you still can at that point.What's red light?
(44:15):
You hear a lot about red light therapy?
Is red light therapy good for you?
Good for cancer? It's reductive.
So if you have, if you have the type of cancer, well, it's not
reductive enough to cause A cause cancer or anything like
that. Red light is beneficial because
(44:35):
it does expedite healing and even DNA repair if you've been
out in the sun. Actually, you have two repair
times during the day, sunrise and sunset, because if you look
closely, it's red and but we have color accommodation or we
(44:55):
can't see that it's that there'snothing but red light at sunrise
and sunset because we accommodate it and see it so
that we can equalize what it looks like.
But here's how you trick. You can trick nature and see
that it really is red light. Stare at the well, don't stare
at the sun. Stare in the direction of it.
(45:20):
Not good advice. Stare in the direction of the
light, so you're getting the light and then look at the
shadow. The shadow is green, the
opposite of red. So you you're accumulating red
light at that time. So anyway, at sunrise and
sunrise, sunrise and sunset, they're healing times for DNA.
(45:44):
You can actually heal your DNA or have red lights like we have
too. We have a couple of them here.
Nice. Does it matter what frequency it
is? Because there's it varies.
Yes, and here is the scam. They get something like I think
it's 676. It's a Mercedes tail light and
they tell you that's the one youneed.
(46:06):
It's a bunch of it's it's so they can sell their expensive
systems. What you need is that actually
orange light, red light, Crimsonlight and and dark red light are
the healing frequencies and evenyellow.
So when you buy a chicken warmer, a red one like we have,
(46:29):
that red light has all of those frequencies and even some of the
infrared frequencies that you need to close infrared your,
your secondary infrared doesn't do anything except make
pheromones. So, so basically when they sell
you a 670 or something, it's BS.You may have some effect on it,
(46:53):
but minimum effect, the best effect is to get the full
spectrum red light which encompasses part of yellow,
orange and red. And even you will find in Gaudi
Olli's color therapy, they use the orange for cancer and things
(47:14):
like of that nature. So, so they mislead you again,
it's really what's the word criminal to be selling those
things because no, most of the people, honestly, they just
believe what they heard. Someone tells them that.
But the person who first does it, they know, they know they
(47:35):
got the Mercedes tail light and they know they made it up.
And those people really are villains or criminals or
whatever. But but think of the thousands
of people then believe that and there's so many of these
Mercedes tail lights out there now in these units would build
up bunches of lights. All you need is a $12.00 General
(47:59):
Electric chicken warmer. We have two of them.
OK. So is it the LE DS?
Cause some is LE DS they they call it laser I guess.
Are those? Not good.
Counter counterproductive. Counterproductive.
Actually, they're not good for you.
No, I how counterproductive is agood question.
(48:24):
Incandescent is good, and at least our new president is going
to make incandescent OK again. Exactly.
We'll see what happens here in California because we we
actually have yellow light bulbsput in because they didn't run
out of those yet for they run out of them now, but they hadn't
(48:46):
run out of them. So we stocked up on yellow.
That's all we can get. So we're actually yellow is
better at night because you havemore yellow and less to the
white. But incandescent was also
designed to have less blue lightin it, to be like firelight,
because General Electric scientists in 1910s knew that
(49:08):
that was healthier for your human body than blue light at
night, way before all this blue light stuff where people are
wearing yellow glasses and goingon with all that kind of
shenanigans. So you don't even need a yellow
if you have an incandescent white bulb, you don't need
yellow glasses, but it's better to yellow.
And we're kind of used to yellowbeing mellow now.
(49:30):
So we use either either we have yellow bulbs or red bulbs here
and and no white at night. So we get as little blue as
possible so that we can our cycles, our circadian cycles
stay more regular. Is saunas detoxing?
(49:51):
When you go sitting there and sweat, is that a good thing to
do? Yes, no, maybe I think you you
can over sweat and get and get in shock.
So but I think it's beneficiallyOK if you don't do like they did
in Sedona by the way, where all those people died, remember?
Did you know that? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I didn't know that was in Sedonabut OK.
(50:12):
I do remember that they were in a sweat TP lodge thing.
Yes, it was. Halfway between Sedona and
Cottonwood, right in there, theyhad a big center and they kept
people in too long and they died.
So you can overdo sweating. You have to be careful of how
you do it. I prefer hot tubs because hot
(50:34):
tubs, jumping in a cold swimmingpool, coming back into the hot
tub, I think that's much more therapeutic than just sweating.
Also, I find sweat lodge is veryboring.
The one time I was going to go in a sweat lodge with Archie
Fire, Archie Fire Lame Deer, whowas a really popular Indian, a
(50:57):
very very nice man. I got to hang out with him
several times but they wouldn't let me in because I wore an
astrological bracelet and the metal they said would burn me.
Well, after they went in, his wife told me, she said you could
have actually wrapped sage around it and it would have
(51:19):
prevented it. But she said, but don't worry
about it. I get my best spiritual
experiences in the bedroom, is what she told me.
OK. So anyway, so I didn't worry
about it, yeah. Interesting.
I know you wanted to talk about cosmic egg.
I don't know what a cosmic egg is.
(51:41):
What is that? Let's see, now I'm not even sure
what I meant. We're in trouble now.
Probably, you know, probably. I was talking about the
different energies in her body. Kundalini is overrated.
(52:03):
It's actually the spinal energy and the chakras supposedly come
up to spine but they don't. This is probably what I was
talking about. OK.
There is a force around us that is like a.
You could call it your aura, I guess.
And and it's also associated with the skull.
(52:27):
And the true chakra system starts right here.
And if you look at the head, it's an ovum.
And if you look at the spine andit's kundalini action, it's a
swimming sperm. So it is nothing but the replay
of the sperm attaching to the medulla obligata in the back of
(52:49):
the ovum. And then it grew into a big head
and it grew into a spine, and the ambulators to move it around
so the spine keeps moving. All the Open has to say is come
here, big boy, and that's it. So the real spirituality starts
(53:09):
here and ends up in the medulla oblongata, which assassins use
because it's the only instant part of the mechanism.
If you, they call it the sweet spot for assassins, you stab it
and the person can't yell. Any place else you Pierce a
person or shoot him in the brain, they can yell.
(53:30):
That's the one person. They can't because it's instant
timing. There's no delay.
So assassins, it's their favorite place to get.
And that place is so powerful that I met an acupuncturist one
time that said if you get near it, you kill the person, but if
you get within a certain distance, you can heal a
paralyzed person by doing it. And I met some really amazing
(53:53):
naturopaths acupuncture. They had like 12 years of
different experiences like that and they knew what they were
doing. This guy could adjust the
goldfish. That's how good a chiropractor
and naturopathy was. I didn't know goldfish is needed
to be adjusted. They do, yeah.
And any animal can be adjusted. They, in fact, I'm at AI met a
(54:17):
veterinarian who adjusted a cat and cured it of some problems
that had the first time I was a disbeliever.
She said she could talk to cats,and I've heard that before.
I've met a lot of phonies. But this woman, her name is
escaping me right now because I haven't dealt with her for a
long time. She said she put the cat in her
(54:39):
lap and said OK, I'm going to, I'm going to stick a needle in.
No, firstly she's going to adjust the cat.
I'm going to adjust the cat. She started to move the cat and
the cat, of course I don't want my mind adjusted.
So she said I got to talk to thecat and I said, oh, here goes
(55:00):
craziness. He leans down and said it
doesn't say anything. I can't hear anything right.
The cat says it's OK. I said OK.
So then she goes Wham and the cat doesn't even move.
I would have been scratched to pieces and the cat just lies
there after doing a really hard adjustment.
(55:23):
Then she says OK now I'm going to stick some acupuncture
needles in the cat. She sticks one in.
The cat doesn't like it. Got to talk to the cat again,
leans over, cat says it's OK takes about 7 needles in.
The cat just lies there with theneedles in till she takes them
out after 5 or 10 minutes says give him give the cat some
(55:46):
rescue remedy. Do this and do that.
And I was a believer and I, theywere going to bring me actually
into Atlanta, GA, where they were at one time to do workshops
on what I did. And I became friends with her.
And her name just escapes me now.
But anyways, she's a real deal. What is it?
(56:07):
Mary. Mary.
Yeah. Mary.
Mary Brennan. Mary Brennan.
So if anyone really wants a woman that she told me when you
adjust a horse in a stall for the Kentucky Derby, which she
did regularly, you have to get that neck and one swoop or
(56:29):
you're stomped. She says it's a very serious
business. So she she was sent to Saudi
Arabia to for by shakes and to Hawaii to adjust their horses
and because no one else could doit.
She's a remarkable woman, just remarkable.
And she gave us advice when my friend's dog was dying.
(56:51):
She said what to do and that thedog probably wasn't going to
stay long, but to do this and don't do the advice we were
getting from other, other sources.
Yeah. Mary Brennan, Amazing.
She wrote a book about the the natural horse, I think, which is
a very good book on horses. And she wrote one on the natural
(57:11):
dog, too. And extraordinary person.
So if anyone is into their dog'shealth and their horse's health,
I'd recommend her book. In fact, when we went to New
Zealand, our friends were into horses and so we bought a gift
of her book to to her so that she could.
(57:36):
Read it. Oh very nice.
I think he also wanted to talk about Wizards and yogis.
Yes, you know, there are people.We sell ourselves short human
beings, we have powers. And at one point mesmerism has
been hidden. If you look up mesmerism now or
(57:58):
even ask AI about mesmerism, it will tell you, oh, that was
superstition. The guy was a quack.
But hypnosis came out of it. And hypnosis can do some things,
but all hypnosis can do is you get 23 treatments and maybe
you'll give up smoking. And so it doesn't really work.
But what they don't tell you is that all kinds of celebrities,
(58:23):
military men, medical doctors, celebrities, all kinds of
people, authors Charles Dickens,Lafayette were mesmerised and
that there were millions of them.
It was just as popular as acupuncture today.
But because they know what to leave out of, of education, no
(58:49):
one believes that today. You ask AI, it'll tell you it
was some kind of superstitious thing.
But William Rockefeller was a practicing mesmerist, William
James was a practicing mesmerist, Charles Dickens was,
and all kinds of other famous mesmerist were out there healing
people of even blindness from cataracts.
(59:14):
Took four years, because that's a long thing.
But the minor stuff was easy. You could, you could go from
high blood pressure to normal blood pressure in one minute.
That's serious competition for medical doctors today.
One minute. And and I have a case of it.
I wrote in one of my books, I don't even remember which one.
(59:34):
My big one is Mesmerism and Miracles, which is 173 chapters
of basically mesmeric phenomena and miracles, what we would call
miracles that people don't acknowledge as being true.
And I was amazed myself because even in the library I couldn't
(59:56):
find anything justifying mesmerism until I got on the
computer and one thing led to another.
I used one to track down each one and I found hundreds of
sources of books and PDFs on mesmerism.
And that's where I basically based my book on, on these old
(01:00:17):
cases of mesmerism where people could see in the dark.
In fact, if you turn on the light, they couldn't see
anymore. Or they could, they could look
at a piece of cardboard and see themselves in the cardboard like
a mirror when they were suggested this is a mirror look.
Oh yeah, I see. Oh, I got a pimple here and
(01:00:37):
they, I could see it all and, and they could read in the dark
and people had been in trance states, have woken up in the
middle of the night and wrote books or drawn pictures in the
dark and then gone to sleep. And it was all perfectly aligned
and everything of that nature. There's so many cases I wrote
(01:01:00):
about. It's just extraordinary.
And so of course, I was mesmerized by the process.
The closest thing we have to mesmerism now is applied
kinesiology, where I probably already have told you this.
I had a buddy named Frank Broskiand he was in Sapulpa,
(01:01:21):
California. They've renamed the town now,
but he lived there and he was there with his two sister in
laws who were young, the young sisters of his wife.
And so I'm talking to him and I said, you want to do an
experiment. He said sure.
So I said hold out your arm and have one of your sister in
(01:01:52):
So anyway he held out his arm and of course it was strong.
So I said now do it and I did what's called position of axis
where I just moved my hand down in his direction and I said now
test him and he weakened 2000 miles away and his arm goes
(01:02:13):
down. That's the power of mesmerism.
So then I didn't tell him what Iwas doing.
I said, well, we'll try it one more time again.
And this time I went up the other direction.
And now she said, why are you stronger than he was before?
What the heck happened? So I I went to a Donald and I
(01:02:35):
told him that stuff for me nittygritty that really works.
He said, yeah, but healing involves intimacy.
So it's good to be a circus performer and do that stuff, but
it's not really good for for therapy.
So I kept it to a minimum, but it works.
(01:02:56):
And that was my first experiencewith Frank Brodsky before I ever
knew that mesmerism was a commonthing.
And these kind of things were done regularly back in the day
where where people could under mesmeric states could know what
other people were doing and likein a shipwreck and things like
that that were told before they ever got in the news.
(01:03:17):
The news was a lot slower, like in the 17th or 18th or 19th
century, so people with no way in advance, they were the news
service. When they were under mesmerism,
they found certain people. So it was mesmerism.
Some people are really superstars at it.
When I do mind hacking, anybody can do that because it's gross,
(01:03:39):
gross motor movements. But with mesmerism, there are
Babe Ruths and there are Woody Allen's.
You know, that's swinging that bat.
That's not going to be a very good baseball player.
So you find certain people that are really good at it.
I may have mentioned a Rico, thesurgeon of the Rusty knife.
(01:04:01):
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, he he did.
He cut cataracts out of people'seyes with no anesthetics and
they felt no pain. And yet Henry Belk, who I I met
was friends with, he said he wasdown there and watched the tests
and they did tests trying to even touch that part of the eye.
And it's painful to touch much less cut into it.
(01:04:24):
And so, but he was a witness to those surgeries and he said he
sometimes do 10A day line up, cut through them and do all
kinds of other healings too, where people that were had
fatalities. You hear a lot of fake, what do
you call them? Those psychic surgeons that pull
(01:04:44):
things out. Most of them are fake and
there's tricks of doing it, but some of them are real, so and
they have super abilities. Arrigo worked on the president
of Brazil. He worked on their their like
their Elvis, whoever their pop singer was their top pop singer
and worked on their top polo player.
(01:05:08):
It was a polo, no soccer player,soccer player and all kinds of
people. And they put him in jail because
it's a Catholic country. So you're disobeying the
Catholics to heal people withoutChrist being involved.
So they put him in the prison and the guards left the door
open because he wasn't going anyplace.
(01:05:29):
And they had a line of people coming to being healed in the
prison until they finally let him go.
Realize this isn't doing any good.
So anyway, what year was that? I, I would say in the 50s I
think he was still alive. I think he died in the 50s and
you can find some a couple of videos on him and the book is
(01:05:51):
called and I wish I had a copy of it, A Regal, The Surgeon of
the Rusty Knife and my friend Henry Belk was involved.
He would come to a metaphysical bookstore that I managed and
tell us who was fake and who wasreal.
Like Nord Bruchen was fake, who was a popular healer back in the
day. People don't even know who he is
(01:06:12):
today. I hung out with, I had a groupie
that had a romance with him and went to Florida with him and he
was a red hot hat monk from Tibet, Tibetan monk, and
supposedly he was fake. He never went there and he was
in a Florida prison and things like that.
(01:06:35):
He had a certain amount of power.
He was big in Houston where he came into the Aquarian bookstore
and told the ladies, they're thekind ladies.
My master showed me how to ship Cadillacs any day of the week.
(01:06:55):
One of those ladies was John Gray's mother, by the way.
Virginia Gray. You had mentioned that
Rockefeller, he was actually oneof the Rockefellers, was a
mesmerizer. Was he trying?
Was he trying to do good? You know it.
(01:07:18):
It's not clear on that in historical records that I found,
but I suspect he used some of those abilities because his
teacher taught it to him when hewas in I I believe at that point
he didn't have any money and he was a barefoot kid when he came
into the school. And this man, his name escapes
me now, wrote several books on mesmerism and also knew a lot
(01:07:42):
about psychology. See, even Freud knew about
mesmerism. There were two schools in
France, the Nancy school and theother one I can't pronounce.
It's French. Susie could probably pronounce
it if I could spell it. But anyway, these two schools
were the major schools and one regarded mesmerism is only
(01:08:04):
capable of people that were neurotic.
And the other one said no, it can be used for anybody.
And the truth is kind of in between, because a man named
Caesar Labroso wrote a book showing that all genius, 99% of
it of geniuses are sick. They actually have problems,
(01:08:28):
sexual problems, they can't conceive.
They're dwarfs like the famous artist.
They, they have all kinds of problems with them, blood clots,
they die young. And he made his book The Man of
Genius is an extraordinary book.You can find it on the Internet.
(01:08:49):
And it just goes into everybody.I mean, there's, there's
probably hundreds of people he lists and their case histories
and why genius is a disease, as Swami Nitty Gritty had told me
before, but I had no way to lookanything up until I found his
(01:09:10):
book on the Internet. So the Internet has been very
kind to me. Yeah, I guess.
Steve Steven Hawkins, would he or Hawkings, would he be
considered? Terrorism example, yeah.
And of course that was way afterCesar Limbrosso's time, but
that's a perfect example. And that was one of the
examples, by the way, that O'Donnell lay used
(01:09:33):
synchronization. Yeah, he said, in fact, my
friend, I had a friend named Hugo Conti who was a Superman.
I mean, he he could run 30 miles, he could do 300 push ups.
He was one of those guys could do chin ups with 100 lbs
strapped to him, you know. But but when he heard that, he
(01:09:53):
was disturbed because he wanted to be both a genius and A and a
strong man. And Donna said you're not going
to make it because you don't have any problems.
So, so that was very disturbing to Hugo.
He did not like that at all. That's hilarious.
(01:10:15):
He can be smart, you know, and, and, and to be a genius
sometimes common sense aces out genius anytime because a lot of
times I, I love the famous storyof the the truck that comes up
to a bridge and it's an inch taller.
And so they get all these engineers.
(01:10:35):
How are we going to get the truck through the bridge and
someone comes up a. Little kid A.
Little kid, why don't you just let the air out of the tire?
Exactly. Another one of those stories is
my favorite. A guy breaks down and he has a
flat. The lug nuts come out of the the
(01:10:57):
tire. So he's got this tire there.
He happens to be by a nut house.So there's a guy over the fence.
He said, hey, why don't you takethe one lug nut out of all of
the other 3 tires and put it on that tire.
He says, wow, what a great idea.So he puts it on and, and so he
says that that was pretty smart.What are you doing in the nut
(01:11:20):
house? And he said, he said, I'm I'm
crazy. I'm not stupid.
That is true. That is true.
Why is that? Yeah.
Common sense and that's the thing that people really leave
out with health before you do common sense.
(01:11:42):
But now they tell you this is true and people believe
something so preposterous and most of our medical mythology is
so ridiculous and people believeit.
I won't go into this events of the last four years, but there's
a perfect example for you. Take something and and and make
it crazy and it's going to happen again.
(01:12:03):
Now they're killing all our chickens.
Why don't they kill the animals in zoos?
Oh yeah, yeah, they're killing 14,000 a a month.
In America or? 14 million in America 14,000,000
a month now. Common sense.
(01:12:23):
Why? Why do they just treat it like a
cold in a zoo when the animals are more expensive?
Because they don't want us to have chickens.
And they don't. They want the eggs to keep
creeping up with prices, things like that, right?
Because. And there's other reasons which
I won't go into because I don't want you pulled off a show.
(01:12:43):
I don't know, on Facebook. They're pretty open now.
We can say things on Facebook. That's because Zuckerberg is for
Trump now all of a sudden. Yeah, suddenly he turned.
Suddenly he changed what happened?
That's because probably Elon Musk is on his side.
So he's like, hey, if Elon is and he's a billionaire, maybe I
(01:13:06):
can because it's a cool thing now.
Yep. I don't know.
You know what Elon's defense? He believes that we have to
change our genetics to go to outer space, that there's no
other way. And he's got a point.
So in his heart he wants to savehumanity.
(01:13:27):
He at the same time, we'd like to be a king, definitely.
There's no doubt about that. He wants to be the guy in
charge, but he and Michael Milken, both in a 2011
interview, said to get to outer space, we have to change our
genetics. It's done.
They don't understand certain things about genetics.
(01:13:48):
They can't do it. But consciousness is not mine.
And that they don't get. And that's where their confusion
starts. And the research they're doing
now now is way off track. They could actually change it in
other ways, but what we have nowis not, I won't go any further,
but it's not good medicine or common sense and it will not get
(01:14:10):
us to Mars. And they're claiming now we're
going to be there in 2028. I predict we're not.
And if we try, it's going to be a disaster because they don't
know what they're doing today. Because I'm not an advisor.
I wish. Yeah, I I could actually give
him some tips on where to go. I'm not the technical part, but
(01:14:34):
I could tell them what they're doing wrong.
That's easy. That's common sense.
But they don't seem to have common sense.
Larry Ellison's cancer cure. That is the most ridiculous
thing ever. Assuming.
I've ever heard of. That cancer is at a genet.
Yeah, he's got some millions of dollars that this new deep sea
cause sabotage that you can. Do with children.
(01:14:56):
But it can't be done cheaper anyway because cancer is not a
DNA problem. They have got that all wrong.
Why do they have DNA? Because you can patent it.
You can't patent a protein, you can't patent a histone.
You can't patent this and that. You can only patent that.
And that's why it's a money making thing.
(01:15:17):
It's a scam from beginning to end.
If any doctor tells you it's a genetics.
Walk away. Hide your wallet.
And your purse. Yeah.
Wow. The fires that was happening in
California, do you think they were on purpose?
Some of. Them yes no, maybe it wasn't a
(01:15:41):
bio weapon, I'll tell you that much.
It was mostly stupidity and and they don't care if it burns down
because now what? What is it going to turn the
Palisades into into 15 minute cities and you can't have a
private house anymore. You have to have at least four
(01:16:02):
families. All that stuff.
It's already in the works, you know, and Trump came out here
and said we're going to make it happen in one day, get back to
your house. It's going to be a year or more
and they're not even going to beable to get out by the time
California rules and the CoastalCommission and everybody gets
up. It's all phony.
I mean, this state is so it's such a beautiful state and the
(01:16:24):
food is so great. Here is why we're here.
But as far as the government, it's all criminal.
It's totally everybody should beput in jail.
Who is the maybe, maybe 1% savedand everybody else go to
Guantanamo or someplace? Yeah, we wanted to move a long
(01:16:45):
time ago to Napa Valley. I really fell in love with Napa,
but I really didn't like the politics there, so we chose not
to do it because of that, unfortunately so.
But yeah, Napa is beautiful. Beautiful.
Luther Burbank hung out there, too.
It's a beautiful area. Yeah, there she have to.
(01:17:05):
I had an opportunity to manage a$0.99 store up there one time
for my father-in-law, my second wife, but I didn't take it.
Petaluma I believe it was. It's they have natural Hot
Springs over there. They do.
I know I went to a hotel. Do you really?
(01:17:26):
That's pretty cool. I used to sometimes I would hike
up there in the middle of the night even I I knew the way so
well up to the Hot Springs and there were a couple of them and
that one time there was a huge Hot Springs here, but I forgot
what happened to it. It it's now on private property.
(01:17:48):
But one of the drawings for Santa Barbara was this huge Hot
Springs they had up not too far away from where where we live.
And now the Hot Springs, I used to go up there regularly and
soak and then sometimes go all the way to the top of the Crest.
So I would do 11 miles before work on some days.
(01:18:11):
I was in really good shape and I'd run down the hill.
I was my I, I loved running downthe hill, which is dangerous.
I've slipped it that. Is.
Kind of crazy. Uphill.
Don't run downhill. Downhill because then you could
just you would bound you take like 10 foot leaps, boom boom
boom down the trail. I get down really fast.
(01:18:34):
I knew you could. Wow.
Well Adam, this has been anotherfascinating conversation.
I truly appreciate the depth andknowledge and unique insights
you always bring to the topics. But before we wrap up, can you
tell our listeners where they can find your work, your books,
and how they can connect with you?
(01:18:56):
Facebook page is one place they can find out what we're doing
and everything. And solartiming.com.
Let me see. I think I even have a I reach it
here. Can you see that?
Yay, that's beautiful. And that's what the site kind of
(01:19:17):
looks like. So you can find it at
solartiming.com. And we're up to counting
journals and books and everything.
I'm well well over 100 so. Wow.
You you can spend several thousands of dollars on it if
you want it. I recommend the Mind Hacking
(01:19:38):
book as a. Number one, yeah.
The stolen nutrition book and for people who who really feel
they can do mesmerism or want todedicate it, then I have the $99
Mesmerism and Miracles books. But it's interesting to if you
just want to know about it. I probably have the most
(01:20:00):
complete history of mesmerism ever written.
I I don't know any other work that takes in such a wide
concept and puts it into modern perspective.
What is and what isn't and what survived correctly.
And that's because I was fascinated from Piatt when I
I've always been a library junkie and been.
(01:20:22):
Lots of libraries and once I found out that I could track
track this town on the Internet,I spent ask a vibrant gal.
She's seen me on this thing lateinto the night.
Sometimes she'll get up at 2:00 in the morning to go to the
bathroom and here I am on the computer.
So that's the way it is. It's just I'm a research junkie.
(01:20:43):
I love, I love information and Ialso love common sense and
practicality and good living too.
Anyway, we have a lot of books up there of various kinds show
up and look it over. We also have little tapes of me
talking little. What do you call those kind of
(01:21:03):
tapes, sweetie? That clips that that that Gene
snippets. Yeah, snippets of things.
Well, thank you again for being here and sharing your wisdom.
It's always a pleasure to have you here on this show and I will
(01:21:24):
send you the link and hopefully you can come back again soon.
OK. Looking forward to it.
And that brings us to an end of another episode.
I want to give a huge thank you to my special guest and friend,
Adam Bergstrom for sharing his deep knowledge and insights with
us today. His research continues to
(01:21:44):
challenge the way we think abouthealth, energy, and how our
bodies truly function. If you want to dive deeper into
his work, please be sure to check out solartiming.com.
And of course, I want to thank you, my amazing listeners for
tuning in and sharing and being part of this growing ohana.
(01:22:07):
We just hit 3000 followers and Icouldn't be more grateful for
your support. Now before you go, please take a
moment to follow, subscribe and need a positive review.
These reviews and ratings are what helps keep this show going
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Sure more people can find these important conversation.
(01:22:29):
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I want to thank you again and until the next time, stay
(01:22:51):
curious, stay awake, and stay sensible.
Bye. None.
(01:25:38):
None.