Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ah, run and away from jail.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
That's great. We are live. Let's go, doctor Peter Glidden,
it's been two weeks since we got to speak. I
hope you had a good time on your travels and
it was fruitful engagement and you had a good time
and all that good stuff.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Yes, good times for had I learned a lot of things,
spoke to a lot of people. I think, did some
good in the world. For year years ago, I was
lecturing all of the time. I was lecturing once or
twice a month for three years, all around the country,
and that gets old after a while. But I think
(00:48):
the last time I did a lecture like this was
a year ago, a year before to the same group.
They wanted me back, and yeah, so it's good. I
kind of missed the live stuff. It's a whole different
energy when you're in front of a group of people.
And yeah, that was good man. Texas. Texas was hot though.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
Oh yeah, still you're a Dallas area, right, So that's
a little bit northeast in the state, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
It was in the nineties.
Speaker 2 (01:19):
Yeah, Well, yeah, that's cool.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
I spent like I think the whole time I was there.
Maybe I was outside for twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
It's not an indigative to your northern blood, huh. Compatible.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
And there wasn't anything in the area that we were in.
It was a suburb, you know, we're kind of like
a business park area. There wasn't anything to see there
or do. It was just.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Freeways, go tannel in the parking lot.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Freeways and then then freeways and then a sage brush
and then some freeways.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
I haven't been up to Dallas, but I did a
walking tour and cross country trip through Texas. Yeah, and
I ended up going I think it was the I
ten or maybe it was. Yeah, So I went through
San Antonio, Houston, San Antonio, the place called Fort uh
(02:16):
Fort Stockton, which is in the middle of nowhere, and
then into El Paso, which was a lot. There's so
much in between those spaces though that has just looked
like desolate. It's mountains and prairies and coyotes and that's
about all you see. Lots of space in Texas that
I don't think is being used because I'm not sure
(02:36):
if you can do anything with the land as far
as agriculture, and there's no there's only so so many,
you know, miles you can go from a water source
with that irrigation before it becomes kind of pointless.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, and it was interesting. I had
a good time. I'm good to be back in the
saddle though.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
So it is ask doctor Glidden Wednesday, so it is
also your opportunity to get your questions in via phone
six one nine four to three one zero three three four.
Doctor Glidden on his membership site also has two additional
days that he does live question and answers Tuesdays and Thursdays.
(03:23):
We are in between those two days on Wednesdays, but
this is the only time you can actually phone call
discuss anything that you have. So it's a lot quicker
the reaction and you know, and that's this is why
we're here, so take advantage of this. You can use
the comments section, but it's better to call because it's quicker.
(03:43):
We don't have to wait for a response. There's a
delay in the feed and all that stuff. And I've
been looking at the news lately and not I don't
know if I would classify this as medical concerns, but
I'm definitely concerned about where this world is heading as
far as you know, commenting, scrolling, liking, any kind of
(04:07):
post that the governments of the UK or other places
don't like. People are getting up to two years to
five years or more in prison. These are the sentences
that they've laid out so far. I'm not sure what's
been convicted or not, but I know one person got
two years for writing a post about immigration and you
know how they how they harm women, and that was
(04:30):
like over a two year sentence. When I look at
that versus, you know, or in conjunction with what they're
doing here, with the buy up of a lot of
the social media, it doesn't sound like they're not planning
the same thing here. It sounds like that's exactly what
they're doing.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Yeah, you know, I have a friend, he's been a
long time friend of mine from his brother was a
chiropractor and he was very outspoken the same way that
I am. And he has a TikTok huge TikTok following.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Oh great, that's cool.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
And so every Friday I'm on his TikTok live stream
for about twenty minutes, and every single time I show
up on the TikTok live stream, they get a warning
message just because the stuff that I'm saying that's science
based and clinic be verified, but it's not mainstream, and
(05:24):
so TikTok gives him a warning.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Yeah, anytime I'm on YouTube with you, I have to
fight to get the get the show back on, and
the striker moved. It's been that's happened three times since
one of the times I told you about the other two.
I handled it out with quietly.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Yeah, we're not even close to having parody or freedom
of speech or medical freedom. It's all a shell game,
I believe, and it's nonsense. I was watching TV the
other day. I had a cancelation of somebody and I
so I had an unusually long lunch break, so I
got my lunch all together and I so I sat
(06:05):
down in front of the TV and turned it on.
And it was a local news station, right, and they
were interviewing somebody. I could only watch a couple of
minutes and then I turned it off in disgust. But
they were interviewing somebody who was talking about the new
trend in medicine, which was for people, you know, wealthy
(06:29):
people to get full body MRIs because the full body
MRI can tell you stuff that you wouldn't normally see. Right,
And then I thought to myself, Okay, so let's think
this through. So does that work? Number One, the MRI
is not cheap. Number two, they're going to inject you
with gandolinium, which is going to cause problems downstream, but
(06:53):
they don't care about that. And then if they do
find something, I mean, if you look hard enough, you're
going to find something in anybody, then you're going to
be entered into the medical mouse trap. They're going to
do more testing, more testing, more testing, and more testing,
going to crank up the bill until they come to
(07:14):
a diagnosis. And then you're saddled with a diagnosis. And
then the medical doctors who diagnose the condition don't know
what it was to cause the condition. They don't know
what to do to cure the condition. All they can
do is manage the condition with expensive pharmaceuticals and surgical techniques,
(07:35):
the intention of which is not to cure the condition,
but simply to manage it. And so over time you
get weaker and broker and weaker and broker and weaker
and broker until you go bankrupt and then you die.
So why get a full body MRI? I mean, if
conventional medical doctors practice curative medicine, that would be one thing,
(07:56):
and you know, let's go the more information the better.
But they don't. And this is the biggest message that
I have to bring to a sick and suffering, unassuming, uneducated,
populous is that your medical doctor doesn't practice medicine. They
practice allopathic medicine. And allopathic medicine is only good for
(08:18):
reductionistic applications like traumacare surgery, when it's necessary for most
of the conditions that most people go to the doctor
for most of the time. It's a dangerous, failed, archaic, ridiculous,
expensive methodology which is not intended to cure you or
to make you healthier. It's intended to manage your symptomology.
(08:40):
It should be illegal for medical doctors to advertise that
they practice healthcare because they don't. They practice disease management.
There's a gigantic difference between the two. By the way,
this is where the term wellness came from, which is
another pet peeve of mine. And every time I hear
somebody say the term wellness, I throw up in my
mouth a little. Well, why does the whole wellness industry
(09:03):
exist because conventional medicine does not promote it. Conventional medicine
does not make people well. Conventional medicine does not cure disease.
It does not even attempt to cure disease. It simply
manages the disease with drugs and surgery. And you cannot
drug and cut your way to health. You can't do it.
(09:25):
You cannot do it. This is why we have a
chronic disease epidemic. It's not because disease is hard to treat.
My colleagues and I treat and fix it all the
freaking time, and we have been for hundreds of years.
The reason that we have a chronic disease epidemic is
because the people that are in charge of medicine, who
exist in a self policing, self regulating monopoly mafia cartel,
(09:49):
don't know their ass from their elbow, and you are
much better off not going to see them than going
to see them.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
No kidding, and doctor Gluten and I don't mean to
interrupt a got more to say, but when it comes
to your website and your membership site, you're the monthly
fee is like less than one copey for some way
to mishandle and mistreat you. The annual is like basically
(10:21):
what you're insurance less than what your insurances build for
one visit to have them mishandle you and mistreat you
and poison you and suggest poisoning and suggest all these
other things that are going to cause harm down down
the line. It's it's a no brainer. You know. Don't
take your children to places where they're going to try
to pressure you into putting needles into their arms, and
(10:44):
don't go to places where if they are doing those
types of behaviors and also promoting the lightest crazed drug
from their pharmaceutical partners. You are a commodity. You're not.
This isn't healthcare. This is a business and it's run
that way.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Yeah, that alone, that's a great that's a great segue, Daniel.
You know, the the patient is not the customer of
the hospital. The doctor is the customer of the hospital.
The patient is the commodity that's traded. The patient is
there simply to jack up the bill. Like a perfect example.
So I was in Dallas. Have you ever talked to
Brian Artists?
Speaker 2 (11:23):
Yeah, yeah, we had him on. You were on with
him here actually once two yeah ago, Yeah, about forty
one times he's been on the show back in the day.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
Okay, so he was giving a lecture and here's one
of the time.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
You were, oh, this Dallas thing, he was there too.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Was this the AGES conference?
Speaker 1 (11:42):
No? Oh, okay, okay, this was the Mental Health Practitioners
American Mental Health Practitioners Conference.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
Yeah. I've got my I've got a different I've got
a couple of opinions. I'll just say as far as
he's concerned these days. But I'll just just a preface
in case your story goes that directors don't feel like
I'm a fan or that I wouldn't I would be
hurt by anything you might say next. That's all.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
No, I don't know that much about doctor. The information
that he delivered on nicotine was compelling.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
Yeah, that's pretty interesting stuff.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
Well, I think that everybody should try to. You know,
his recommendation is you get a seven milligram nicotine patch.
I think let me double check that. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Yeah, he said, if there are fourteens, you cut him
in half. Yeah, yeah, half.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
So it's three and a half milligrams of nicotine every day.
I would recommend everybody do that as an in house
experiment for you know, twenty eight days and see if
you notice a difference, because remember, with this type of medicine,
the proof of the pudding is in the eating. If
you change your diet in order to upregulate your health,
(12:50):
you expect your health to be upregulated. If you take
your nutritional supplements in order to upregulate your health, you
expect to see specific and measurable positive change.
Speaker 4 (12:59):
Right.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
This is not you know, subtle things that we're looking for.
We're looking for specific and measurables. And it would be
the same with nicotine. I'm going to try it.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
May I should say this thing. This is what Here's
the issue that I have with him. There's a lot
of them, but this is one of them. Throughout the
time that we've we were talking, which was almost every
Monday for quite a long time, at no point had
I ever heard him even approached the topic of nutrition
or central nutrients the way you have. But he had.
(13:33):
He'll throw anything out the wall. So he's partners with
people who make a thirty percent food grade hydrogen peroxide
and he makes a huge chunk of the change when
he sells that. So he recommends that, you know, he
also has his own line of supplements that, in my opinion,
are very very pharmaceutical like in nature, not truly vitamins,
(13:55):
and when confronted with the information, not confronted in a
negative way, but just when it was present to him
by doctor Monzo. The difference in the energetic you know,
photographs that you can see of certain types of material
that are claiming to be vitamins and then things that
are actually the true vitamin. And that's the difference in
the the vibrance of the energy that is coming off
(14:16):
of it. And then in the addition, and it's a
whole thing, you know that it's not like he swapped
out his formulas. He just kept on pushing the same
stuff he was doing before because it's money.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
Yeah, so I mean, you know, yeah, there's that and
most people I think Manzo and I are the only
ones who don't do stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
I know you are, as far as I can tell.
And then there might be one DC doctor of chiropractic
that I would I would add if we had, if
we had the Golden Team, I think doctor John Bergman
might be the other guy. Yeah, not doctor berg Eric
berg is a different guy. John John Bergman is is
quite the character and he was very outspoken during the
(14:56):
whole COVID thing and uh yeah, really he's an interesting person.
I like to get them on the show too.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Yeah. So anyway, you know, I think that the nicotine
thing is everybody should try and see if you experience
a net positive from it. I think that's a worthwhile experiment.
It's inexpensive, it's not going to hurt you, and it's
worth running it up the pole and see if see
if it flies.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
So is this in reference to overall wellness or is
this in reference to nicotitic acetocholine receptors that haven't been
proven to even exist.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
Well, yes, it's to help increase brain function and cardiac
function and up regulate your immune system.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Right, Okay, so there's other benefits, and they're saying, like nicotine,
what used to be part of our diet. It's in tomatoes,
not not just tobacco and things like that. It's in
kale I think, and other different type of leafy greens.
So it should be something that's already part of our diet.
And that's why it Apparently there's an affinity for certain
things in your body. So if you have a if
(15:59):
there is such a thing as a receptor that binds
to things, it's going to prefer the nicotine over something
that could be toxic, I guess, is the bottom line.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
And there was data that was suppressed during COVID that
smokers didn't get it didn't get COVID.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
Right, And that's funny, Yah, just the obviously you'd think,
because you think they'd already have compromised lungs because it
wasn't really a respiratory issue, right exactly.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
I think it's a worthwhile experiment. I mean, one of
my greatest straints is my open mind, and I work
at being open minded. I do every day, I do
stuff to keep my mind open. So you know, there's
this one of my favorite sayings as well, you don't
know what you don't know, and it's usually that stuff
(16:46):
that will get you into trouble, right.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Yeah, they used to play like wet ground up kind
of like what they call it, like a multi type
of nicotine tobacco patches on snake bites.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Yeah. That's interesting.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
And yeah, so that's another that goes into the line
of the whole venom potentiality for some of these things
or synthetic venoms that are harming people.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Yeah, it's interesting. Some of the most effective homeopathic medicines
are made from snake.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Venom, some of them. Yeah, and then that's that's because
of law of similars. Now imagine what it was that
actually caused the symptoms in the first place. But maybe
it was a little bit of the same, right, you know.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
So anyway, Artists was given a lecture and it was
about this one patient that he had and the guy
was a was a really rich guy, and he'd been
to the mail clinic five times because he had a phasia.
And a phasia is an inability to connect your brain
to your your voice. So you could ask this guy
a question and he could write the answer immediately, but
(17:51):
he could not verbalize the answer until like one and
a half minutes has gone by.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
Look at brocos area of the brain type of thing, right.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
There was a delay. Right, So he'd been the male
clinic five times because he could afford it, and every
time they went, all they could tell him was what
he didn't have instead of what he had, and he
was spending massive amounts of money. Somehow he found his
way to Artists. Artists did a you know, a health
(18:20):
history review, and the guy was on statin drugs, oh,
and another blood pressure med but One of the known
side effects of the statin drugs I think plural that
he was on was aphasia. It was a known side
effect of the drug.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
How did the doctor not catch that?
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Five times?
Speaker 2 (18:41):
They can't go against their cult of their pharmaceuticals. So
if the pharmacy, even if it represents on the paperwork.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
It can't possibly be that right, right is the thought.
It's cognitive dissonance writ large, you know, you know, and
confirmation bias inside of self policing, self regulating monopoly. That
doesn't penalize anybody for giving doing the wrong thing. It
actually rewards them for doing the wrong thing. So anyway,
he took the guy off to his statins, and I
(19:13):
think it was three months. Everything went away, came back,
voice came back. He's like he was before. And here's
the kicker. They gave the guy the statins preventively.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
He didn't even need him he did. Oh my god,
well he didn't. Nobody needs them, right, I was about
to say that afterward.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
But yeah, he didn't have a hard condition. He didn't.
He did preventively. Oh, it's only a matter of time
until you know, you develop clog guarteries. So here take
the statin and that's how they think. And then they
didn't have the wherewithal to understand that his symptoms that
started three months after he started the statin drugs were
(19:51):
related to the Staton drugs. I mean, it was took
artists forty five minutes to figure it out. So but
my point in telling you this story is it's a
really great practical example of what I say all the
time that you cannot drug your way to health. You
can't do it. Thank God for insulin, I guess, and
(20:14):
thank God for Lyda Kane in general anesthesia. But you know,
it's not the gun, it's how it's used. It's not
the drug, it's how it's used. And the way that
the medical doctors use drugs is bad. It's a big,
bad voodoo daddy. And you should. You should in order
to upregulate your health, you need to come off of
your drugs.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
And cot think about it. Doctor Goodin knowing what you
know about the homeopathic remedies and how the love potentization works,
every single person who's on anything is being overdosed heavily.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
Yeah, that's correct. Yeah, And you know a lot of
the drugs they they understand maybe on paper how the
drug works, but they don't understand practically how the drug works.
And when you start mixing drugs together, they have no
idea what the interactions are. The most widely prescribed blood
(21:07):
sugar medicine in the world met Foreman. They don't know
how it work. They know what it does, but they
don't know how it does it they prescribe it anyway.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
Weld on one second, Christine, are you ready with you?
Speaker 1 (21:22):
And this is a shit show And this can only
happen inside of a self policing, self regulating mafia, which
is what medicine has evolved into. And the best possible
thing you can do, ladies and gentlemen, is fire your
medical doctor, immediately, get in touch with the pharmacists, come
off of your drugs in a safe and responsible manager manner,
(21:43):
and then treat yourself with alternative medicine that's science based,
clinically verified and attempts to cure the condition. That's a
good recipe for health moving forward.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
Check my link in this description of this video. Get
on doctor Glodn's membership slit and start learning and you
can just use it like a reference point when you
do have an issue as well, Like I did with
the kidney thing, and it helped me tremendously. The doctors
sent me away with Kyle and all and said, good
luck with that eraser size piece of jagged rock. You're
(22:16):
about the past. That was awful, But doctor Gooden, he
saved the day. And I can't thank him enough. But
he's gone. He's come through for me a few times
since then. When I had the inguinal hernia thing, he
helped me through that with the pain in the in
the recovery. Hello, Christine, how are you?
Speaker 4 (22:37):
I'm well, and thank you for taking my call.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
I appreciate it is this Christine most.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
I have been a lot of the medical system as
much as I can be most of my life. Every
now and then, you know, you get stuck there. And
the reason why I'm calling today is, first of all,
I am taking the Healthy Foundation pack along with glukojel
goold and as your copper ound. That's the kind of
copper you recommend, doctor Glidden. But I do have it,
(23:06):
and I'm feeling a wonderful different already after the thirty days.
But I do have a condition, and you're gonna love this,
doctor Glidden. I was diagnosed with about fifteen years ago
a condition called sweet or superventricular tech of cardia. Hey,
that's five time. And I was told that I got
(23:28):
it from drum roll I inherited when I was born,
or I got a virus yes from unicornis. After five years,
after five years of failed medication ablations, I finally had
one oblation because I was a nemotist. To my doctor
(23:50):
agendine know there was such thing as electro physiologist or
whatever he's called. I didn't know there was such thing,
and laugh in my cardiologist's face when he told me
I needed one. So the last of bla my hand,
which was five and a half hours long, he told
me he could only block three of the major pathways
in my heart and then sent me home and blah
blah blah. Well, so I really haven't had any real problems.
(24:12):
I do have breakthroughs every now and then. But I
was wondering if just anything I could take an addition
to this healthy foundation pack that.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Could help my heart.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
Or is I am I just stuck with scarring in
my heart for the rest of my life.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
Well, you're stuck with the scarring from the ablation for
the rest of your life.
Speaker 4 (24:30):
I know it, But the first one he did, the
first blaking he did. He said he'd never seen so
much scarring in someone's heart. And I became a nemesis
to him because he had like a ninety nine percent
cur rate for all the rhythmic patients that I was
not being cured.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Okay, So you don't the.
Speaker 4 (24:50):
Scaring came from to begin with, all Right, So.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
You don't have tachycardia because you have nerves in your heart,
which is what the medical doctors would like you to believe.
Speaker 4 (25:01):
Right.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
You don't get arthritis because you have a knee joint. Right. So,
and this is the this is the medical perspective that
they have, right, that the human body is a bag
of chemicals waiting to break. When it does break, you
just have to go in and fix it or replace
the part, or burn the nerve or replace the joint,
or remove the diseased organ surgically. And it's insanity, honestly.
(25:26):
So there are a number of things to do in
order to make your heart beat healthily and normally. So
the first thing to consider is from a historical point
of view, when did the tack of cardias start. Was
it related to the intake of any pharmaceuticals.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
No, I wasn't taking any pharmaceuticals. I was in my
early fifties, just starting to go through that.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
It's not okay, So we're getting feedback here. I think
her radio is on or her computers.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
Oh yeah, yeah, I was when I thought that was
talking to her.
Speaker 4 (26:09):
I had the pain growing up as a young girl
in my chest for my mom. That was always growing pain.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
So I slept it off.
Speaker 4 (26:16):
I went to five five children, and nothing other help happened.
You know, I don't know why this started in my fifties.
Maybe it had to do with the environmental things. I
don't know.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
So I went to the hospital.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Okay, So here's what I would recommend that you do.
In addition to the healthy Foundation pack, right, I get
one bottle of selenium per month.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
Just just real quick, if you Christine, if you do
have this plane in the background, just mute it while
you're on the phone so you can you know.
Speaker 4 (26:49):
I had it all, But you know, I keep getting
every time I log onto either rumble or get off.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
I got cha are either.
Speaker 4 (26:56):
When I try to calm that, I get a little
box that says created me the first time I was
on your side.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
So yeah, that's not me. That's the the enable button
is on there.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
Yeah, I got you, I know, and I'm just like, yeah, sorry,
I didn't.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
Mean to interrupt. I just wanted to make sure that
you could hear when he replies back to you, Okay,
go for it. Sorry, doctor Guinnon.
Speaker 3 (27:15):
I did.
Speaker 4 (27:16):
I am on the selenium because you recommended that for
a cybroid condition too, so I am taking that, but
I don't know how much you want me to take.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
So I would do two selenium three times a day
between meals for three weeks.
Speaker 4 (27:30):
Three times a day for three weeks yep.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
And then two selenium two times a day between meals
for three weeks, and then one selenium two times a
day between meals for the rest of your life.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
Two one between meals for the rest of my life okay,
one time, okay, two? And it is the selenium on
your side, the selenium I should buy.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Well, I don't sell nutritional supplements. No.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
The link the link to your side on your site to.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Yes, that's where you go to get it at I
will help. Yeah, yes, okay. Now the second thing is
good Herb's Heart Support.
Speaker 4 (28:17):
You can put that in good Herbs Heart Support.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
Get two bottles a month for three months, and do
four mls for three months. Yep, two bottles per month
for three months. The dose would be four mls twice
a day.
Speaker 3 (28:36):
Twice a day.
Speaker 4 (28:36):
Okay, two bottles a month for three months, four mls.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
You ever had you ever had a liver disturbance? What
problem with your liver?
Speaker 3 (28:49):
Liver?
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Not that I know of. How would I know if
I had that? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Well, you would have gone for blood work, they would.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
Have my liver's Okay, okay.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
You ever had a thyroid problem? Yeah, okay, So there's
a homeopathic remedy you want to get. I'm going to
say it and then I'm going to spell it. Are
you ready?
Speaker 3 (29:15):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (29:16):
Okay, It's called FLOORI de piedra. It's F like Frank
L like Larry O, like Oscar R, like Roger. Second word,
do you like David E? Like echo?
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Hey, hey, doctor Gooden? Is it possible that they may
have changed the good herb's heart support to circulatory formula?
Or is that a different thing? Okay? Is it's only
pulling up for me? Okay?
Speaker 1 (29:42):
The third Yeah, do you like David E like echo?
It's the second word. The third word is p like Peter, I,
like India E, like Echo, d you like David R
like Roger A like Apple floor pedro get that in
(30:02):
the thirty sea potency see like Charlie Pretty Sea. Take
two pellets once a day for a week, and then
two pellets once every other day over the course of
three weeks.
Speaker 4 (30:24):
So let's once a day every other day, yep, for how.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Long over the course of twenty one days?
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Twenty one days?
Speaker 4 (30:36):
You know, between taking all these and drinking all your juices,
that's all I do all day.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Well, you need to find a different way to do it.
Speaker 4 (30:44):
I know, I'm just joking.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Okay, good, So run that up the flagpole. See if
it flies back in a month and tell us what happened.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
All right, Well, thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
I appreciate it, all right, shape the trust, all right,
all right. So there's another thing I just saw here
called rise and Restore. Is that something that people can
get from my fel health dot com? Too? And it
is otherwise for supplements for sports or something. Is that
(31:20):
what that is? Or is that something else?
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Don't know, don't care?
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Okay, yeah, sounds good, Yeah, all right. So the number
is six one nine four three one zero three three four,
and I will be going over here real quick to
show you what.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
So love l la la la. I should have been
a singer, Daniel. I'm gonna quit medicine and go to Broadway.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
I try to get you. I tried to get this
thing started so that people could hear you singing, and
it took It was a really long delay before it
connected everybody. They would have heard, oh dain any boy?
All right? So this this is the link right here.
You used to look into the description of this video,
this video with this really awesome thumbnail here, so it
(32:08):
is join doctor Glydnin's membership site code ballbusters or twenty
five percent off. I don't know why he says it twice.
That's a weird old thing. But when you get over
here to get into membership site, you can go and
look at these individuals. Can anybody see what I'm looking at? Yes,
good medical Insight page used to be called medical Mythbusting.
(32:32):
Doctor Glitten named himself today as his subtitle as a
medical MythBuster, and that is exactly what he does. And
this information here is the foundational data that you need
to be able to add to your knowledge base so
that the rest makes sense when you're looking at the
(32:54):
health recovery protocols. Now, this is one of those things
where you can utilize it as Okay, what's going on
with me today? Do I really want to go to
my doctor? Do I want to set up that appointment
and have them misdirect me, misguide me and harm me?
And then also again, if they give you a diagnosis,
then you're stuck with that like a spell, and your
(33:15):
mind because of the conditioning throw our lives, will limit
what you think is possible in how you get out
of that paper bag of a of a diagnosis. I mean,
don't you agree with that, doctor Glynn. It's kind of
it's kind of like a mind trap when you have
a diagnosis.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
Oh here's something. I also just learned that the diagnostic
codes are all copywritten. So the I think it's the
AMA gets a cut every time any doctor in the
United States or anywhere in the world makes a diagnosis.
Speaker 2 (33:48):
That's, of course it is, because it's all it's all money,
it's all the I'm not saying that the money rules
the world. I'm saying money is a good way of
measuring how much human sufferings are causing. Because if they
have the money you don't, that's one. And if they're
getting it by means of harming you health wise, then
that's another way of measuring how effective they're being. I
(34:12):
mean even at everything down to the multiple multiple sclerosis.
Have you had any any experience with people who have
been on let's say recreational drugs or maybe even their
their psychiatric medicines developing two things MS or Crohn's disease?
Speaker 1 (34:32):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (34:33):
Yes, How prevalent is that with the and what what exactly?
Because I have a friend who is in his thirties.
Some guy gave him a like ay little John gave
him a bear hug, and he's split his abdomen, his
stomach lining because whatever he was taking was robbing him
of his Uh. He's had a prodent disease and he
was basically rudding from the inside out.
Speaker 1 (34:52):
One of the worst manifestations of the conventional medical model
is the psychiatric medicine. It's horrible the drugs that they use.
It creates more suffering than the person who has the
organic disease. And it's a big, bad, voodoo daddy psychiatric medicine.
(35:18):
You know, I used to be a fan of Jordan
Peterson until I figured out that he was in favor
of that shit, and someone told me on social media
he was rushed to the hospital about a week ago
with something. Have you heard anything about that?
Speaker 4 (35:32):
No?
Speaker 2 (35:33):
No, But there's a lot of things about him that
I don't particularly care for.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Sent I replied to the person who made the post
that I think was a friend of his. I said,
the conventional medical doctors are going to kill him, and
he needs to get in touch with me or one
of my colleagues. But I don't think he's going to
do that because the cognitive dissonance is written large in
people with liberal arts training, especially if there was a
(35:58):
professional degree associated with it.
Speaker 2 (36:00):
But and what did you say before, especially if it's
already in crisis mode time, Because you're when you're scared,
you don't look for anything but what you think you
are safer with because of your conditioning.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
See, this is the biggest problem that exists here. It
is all confirmation biased. Because you go to the hospital,
you go to the emergency room, you are surrounded by
hundreds of people, millions of dollars of high tech equipment.
You know, is a big facility, and every the people
(36:39):
that are there are all doing the wrong thing right,
but they don't know that they're doing the wrong thing.
They think that they're doing the right things. And the patient,
what do they know? Right, just by being in that environment,
you're going to do whatever the hell the person in
the white coat tells you to do. And that's one
(36:59):
of the reasons is why this is, you know, this mediocre,
machiavellian piss poor, a dangerous system of medicine that doesn't
cure anything, is able to persist. It's because of confirmation bias,
which is generated. But just by being in the hospital
in an environment with all of these people, and you
(37:21):
know the billions of dollars of research and money that
goes towards you know, cystic fibrosis and muscular dystrophe and
infertility and the Susan G. Coleman Foundation amiotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Let's do the ALS challenge. Remember that it's completely unnecessary,
(37:44):
meaningless and useless waste of money because you're giving it
to a system of medicine that does that is based
upon incorrect notions of the human experience. I mean, it's
like giving given a fisherman a shotgun. They're not gonna
(38:07):
it's not gonna help them.
Speaker 2 (38:09):
At all, especially if it's release.
Speaker 1 (38:15):
So the whole thing is is stacked against people like
me and alternative doctors. I even hate that term holistically
oriented physicians practicing curative medicine. The whole system is stacked
against us, and it's not going to change. AI is
going to up the ante. Bobby Kennedy's gonna make it
(38:37):
seem safer to go to that.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
He's been making statements about how he thinks everybody should
have certain types of shots. Now he's going that far
to say that, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
So we're on our own here, ladies and gentlemen. This
is not a problem. It's going to fix itself from
the top down.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
Do you think that part of this AI customized vaccine,
how are they're going to mix the potions inside of
the machine or whatever. I don't know what that really means.
Is a way to I guess shield for a mass
like like what they did with COVID shots. Right, A
lot of people get you know, get this shot might
(39:18):
be a couple of different companies, but it's basically you're
supposed to believe it's all the same stuff in there.
So now if they're customized and it harms you. Well,
that's just the one person that it did it to.
It's not an old group of people. So it's like
a way of like, yeah, you know, it's compartmentalizing the damage.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
It's the adjunctives usually that are in the vaccines that
are more of a problem. Well, now it's with the
m RNA, you know, the gene altering shit that they're
going to put in the vaccines. That's different. But in
the past, you know, with like the detap and the
influenza vacts in the non mRNA vaccines that they would
(39:57):
give to kids, it's the adjuvants that are in there
that harmful from aldehyde and mercury and oh.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
Yeah, potasium is it Hollis eighty or something like that,
something like that.
Speaker 1 (40:09):
It's crazy. It's crazy. And yeah, yeah, lots of things
that you can. Hesitation that I went to in Dallas
was by Sherry Tenpenny.
Speaker 2 (40:19):
Oh, she was there. Cool, you guys have been on
the You've got her on your show a few times. Yeah,
on his website by the way.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
Yeah, she was given to talk about all the crap
that they put in the vaccines, and you know how
they're all toxic. They're known to be toxins, and yet
they put them in any way. And if a nature
pathic doctor developed a treatment for a child that had
that ship in it, it wouldn't be allowed.
Speaker 2 (40:47):
Was was Mike Adams there too, because I think maybe
that's what he was presenting on his show. No, Nope,
that moment might have been that particular event.
Speaker 1 (40:54):
Didn't see Mike.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
So doctor Henry E. Lee I'm sure was there, right?
And maybe ed group were they there?
Speaker 1 (41:03):
No?
Speaker 2 (41:04):
Okay, all right, so it was just an artist.
Speaker 1 (41:06):
There was a psychologist who was there who was pretty good.
His name was McDonald. I think he was talking about,
you know, the mass hysteria that is transgenderism. Wow, it
was a good show. I enjoyed it. You know. The
thing about this is so honestly, except for me and Monzo,
(41:31):
we are the exceptions that prove of the rule. There's
a saying in my field of medicine, how many alternative
medical practitioners does it take to screw in a light bulb?
Speaker 2 (41:45):
Just one?
Speaker 1 (41:46):
But every other one would tell you there was a
better and a different way to do it.
Speaker 2 (41:52):
Well, here's the problem. Also is that you can see
it from the perspective of you might be this right,
but you're still this wrong. Yeah, or you're missing this
much more that would help this thing diminish. So yeah,
you can say, oh yeah, this thing works, but it's
it's like a band aid. Yeah that works too and better.
Better example is if you're giving your body the raw
(42:15):
material that it needs in order to fix itself. Do
you really need the food, great hydrogen peroxide? Do you
really need to listen to that? Or can you sustain life?
And then every once in a while when it's necessary,
get the proper homeopathic by describing your symptoms and you're
good to go.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
You're my best student, Daniel, hands down. Yeah, you get it.
A few people do. A few people get it.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
There's still people that want the magic pill and the
magic the magic potion and the magic you know for procedure.
What do I do? What do I take? It's like
the essential nutrients that your body's been starved. That's that's
what you take.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
Oh it's too expensive, I can't afford.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
That, all right? Right? Well, I mean I.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
Just got that from I gave free advice to a
guy at the golf course. He had some type of
trauma to his achilles and he no it was this
about a week ago. I said, so I sent this
guy the protocol. Well, here's what you do. This will
fix it. And a couple of days ago I go
back after work to try to.
Speaker 2 (43:15):
Verticals a zion guys. There was the protocol for him.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
Yeah, and he said oh. I said, did you get it?
Did you start it? And he said, oh, I couldn't
afford it. I said, well, how much is he pay
for medical insurance every month? And his eyes glazed over
and we weren't going to go there. This is the
other thing, right, this is another I mean, it's like
(43:38):
beating a dead horse every time I talk about this,
but it's worth mentioning over and over again that the
socialization here, the pro MD socialization, is so complete that
people pay hundreds, if not thousands of dollars a month
in medical insurance premiums over the course of their lifetime.
It's a small fortune. If that money was invested instead
(44:00):
of given to the mds, everybody on planet Earth would
be a millionaire. But it's not. Instead, you give it
to a system of medicine under who's tutelage and care
you got sick. Nobody seems to question that. And then
you get sick, you're given a diagnosis. Oh I feel
so much better now my illness has a name. But
(44:20):
the medical doctors don't know what caused your diagnosis. They
don't know what to do to cure it. So all
they can do is medicate it and surgery it, and
then you get all the side effects from the drugs.
The original root cause of the problem is not fixed,
and then you go bankrupt and then you die.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Doctor Glinden, we need to try to address this with
a term, because everybody loves the little labels, right, it
should be the fragility myth, because you know, they tell
you it's aging, it's just a progress like you just
caught something. And that's why the doctors can never get
on top of it because once they start working on you,
it's never an improved movement. If it is, it's temporary,
(45:02):
and then it just progressively gets worth in their care.
So it's it. But you're you're, you know, rationalizing this
as this is just my time to go, or never expect,
never you know, expecting that you're being poisoned at your
weakest moment and the things that you actually need to recover,
and I've even mentioned and you're not receiving because you
(45:24):
have no idea that that's out there. And that's where
the ninety es centrals come and that's where the advice
from you comes from. And even if you've got a
personal appointment with you, you're saving your life in the
long run and your and your money in the long run,
just for like an annual, like not even annually, a
(45:46):
couple of months of insurance. You're probably, I mean, that's ridiculous.
How much cheaper it is to survive than it is
to just go through their process and die.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
You're right, You're I mean, you couldn't be more right.
And that's a bridge too far from most people, because
for most people, the mere thought of canceling their medical
insurance creates too much anxiety. I can't do that. What
do you? What if I'm in a car crash? What
if this? What if that? What if I get heart disease? Well, yeah,
(46:15):
what if you don't want to go to these people?
Speaker 2 (46:19):
And the and the and the probability not so much
the car crash, but the heart disease is going to
be highly increased if you keep going to your doctor, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (46:25):
That's true, and then correct and if you continue to
go to your medical doctor. You will get dementia. Right,
because you.
Speaker 2 (46:36):
Know who Jim Brewer is, the comedian he he was
in Saturday Night Live. He played good boy everyone. But
he's he's uh, he's active on Rumble and YouTube. He's
got a big following and he talks about some really
interesting things. You probably appreciate and respect this. He still
has some great areas of like. But his family it's
(46:57):
not because it's genetic everybody, because they're put on Staten's.
His mother and father went out with dimension. He had
to in dementia. He had to wipe their butts for them.
I mean, this is a very undignified way to leave
the planet. And they were. They left at a at
a pretty young age, and it was just the decline.
And then he had his I think it was his niece,
(47:19):
Patty On and the same thing happened to her mother.
Let me get this, we got another Colorman.
Speaker 1 (47:24):
It's Stanton drugs.
Speaker 3 (47:25):
Drunk Christine to accept press one man.
Speaker 2 (47:32):
Is this the same Christine or is it a new Christine?
Speaker 3 (47:36):
It's a new Christine.
Speaker 2 (47:37):
Hey, new Christine? How are you? This is the show?
Go right ahead and ask doctor Glending your question, right, now, yes,
right now, No, we're on right now.
Speaker 3 (47:48):
It's kind of well, it's kind of broad. I have
a blastia type and vision problems.
Speaker 2 (48:03):
You're popping and breaking a little bit. But it's okay.
We'll just have to deal with it. Are you still there?
Speaker 1 (48:12):
Yeah, So you have roseesia, and what's the problem with
your vision?
Speaker 3 (48:19):
Just for old old age kind of stuff. I had
good vision life and then getting into late thirties and
needed help focusing up close. A muscle issue, the tiny flex.
Speaker 1 (48:37):
So okay. So the basic understanding here and this methodology
is that the first thing to consider when somebody gets
sick and they're given a diagnosis like roseesia or anything,
is it the reason that this thing has happened?
Speaker 3 (48:58):
Right, you're like like wah, wah wah, Like Charlie.
Speaker 2 (49:05):
Brown, you can't hear me. You can't hear us? All right, Well,
then that's a connection issue. You have to call back in. Okay,
that's that we hear it fine on our side, all right.
Speaker 1 (49:19):
I'll answer the question. You know, maybe she's listening or
can listen to the recording. The first thing to consider
when you're saddled with any type of a diagnosis or
you have any chronic set of symptoms. Is that the
reason that this is happening is because you're unconsciously eating
food that's causing inflammation. You need to clean your diet up.
The easiest way to begin that process is to eliminate
(49:40):
the twelve bad foods. You can find that list on
my website. Number one. Number two. You have to fill
up your body's nutritional tank with the essential nutrients that
it needs to keep every part of your body healthy
the way that God intended it to. If you're airing
your tires is too low, the tire's going to roll
right off the rim. There's nothing wrong with the tires,
(50:00):
just didn't have enough air in it. So our first
blush intervention is the Healthy Foundation pack. One Healthy Foundation
packed per month for three months, and eliminate the twelve
bad foods. That's it. I don't care what you have,
I don't care what diagnosis you've been given. That's what
(50:22):
you start with. And if you're over two hundred and
fifty pounds, you should do two Healthy Start packs per
month or Healthy Foundation packs per month. And there's the
twelve bad food It's easy breezy, lemon squeeze. Those are
the first two things to do. You don't have a
bad gene. It's not because you're getting older, it's not
because of chemtrails. It's because your body has run out
(50:45):
of the NUTRIENTSID it needs to keep itself healthy. And
your medical doctor doesn't know his ass from his elbow.
Speaker 2 (50:52):
That's Cremo in the comments saying and they eliminated the
whole bad foods for four months now got a lot.
I would imagine that just by itself, the wheat, barley,
ryan oates, they're soaked in so many things they're process
not I'm just a gluten but I mean you're talking
about glenf fosse and all kinds of stuff that you're
(51:13):
also eliminating from your diet. That I think that's a
huge That's got to be huge for most people. And
if rosetia or skin irritation or eruptions is a thing,
then it's probably horrifically Uh you know it's well it's
phygiometically benefited by not taking that stuff anymore.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
Well, you know, one of the things I don't talk
about a lot, and I don't know why, but a
really interesting nature pathic healing intervention is fasting. I have
a colleague he's a chiropractor. He has a facility in
(51:56):
California somewhere. It's called True North, and all he does
is fast people. You go there, you put on a
medically guided fast. You know, they take your blood work,
your blood pressure, they take your vitals regularly, so you
know you're not going to die. And the stuff that
people are recovering from is remarkable, just from stopping eating
(52:18):
food that's got crap in it. It's a remarkable thing.
So you're absolutely right. When you alter your diet and
stop eating things that are hurting you, then well, guess what.
Your things start to fix themselves because they can. And
this is the fundamental concept or foundation principle that underlies
(52:42):
the nature pathic method. The principle is your body knows
how to fix itself, it wants to fix itself, and
it's trying to fix itself. Your medical doctor does not
believe in any of those three things. Your medical doctor
does not believe that your body knows how to fix itself.
They do not believe that your body wants to fix itself.
And I do not believe that your body is trying
to fix itself. They do not believe those things. That's
(53:05):
why they fail, and that's why we succeed.
Speaker 2 (53:07):
We discussed that bag of chemicals concept too, and I
think that all comes from stems from Darwinism and then
just s trade into pasture after that, where you're treated
like you you're not you know, you need intervention otherwise
you're just a haphazard bagachemicals. And if that's the way
people perceive it, they're always going to try to use
(53:29):
oppositional Galen style methodology against it, like war model, to
suppress it rather than try to strengthen it so that
it can handle its own affairs.
Speaker 1 (53:38):
Hundred correct. It's an incorrect philosophy which informs the ineffective treatment.
And even though the treatments are ineffective and ineffective and
ineffective and ineffective and ineffective and ineffective and ineffective and
ineffective and ineffective, the people that are prescribing the ineffective
(53:59):
treatment have been brainwashed into believing that it's the best
treatment money can buy. And it's a ship of fools,
which leads to my favorite quote of all time from Voltaire. Oh. Yes,
medical doctors are people who prescribe drugs of which they
(54:20):
know little to treat diseases of which they know less,
in human beings of which they know nothing.
Speaker 2 (54:28):
That's a very perfect example or a description of the
applied galen the philosophy or theory on people. It completely
misses the point, misses the boat and direct and a
complete inversion of what is true.
Speaker 1 (54:48):
And the fact that the people prescribing these treatments don't
see that is mind numbing. Yeah. I mean, it's like
everybody in the world gets up and believes that the
sun rises in the west. That's what it's like. Everybody
(55:10):
believes the sun rises in the west, even though it
clearly doesn't. Everybody believes it. That's what this is like
in medicine, because everybody believes this methodology even though it's incorrect.
They can't see it. They can't see the failures.
Speaker 2 (55:29):
They can't That's why they couldn't have anything that they
to compare their method with. That's what they had to
suppress and beat it. Like, if it was the better
superior method, why do you need to police the other
ones out of existence?
Speaker 1 (55:43):
And it was the better superior method, why do we
have a chronic disease epidemic. It's like with physics, why
did physics stop progressing right before World War Two? Why
why have there been no more breakthroughs?
Speaker 2 (55:58):
Why because the Germans won the war. That's a conference
that's pretty thick.
Speaker 1 (56:07):
So I think that, you know, I think that the
trend here is to alter the human genome and you know,
to make us different, genetically, different than we are now
towards some end. I think that's the I think that's
the long game here, that.
Speaker 2 (56:27):
There's a way to commit genified right, that's another way
is to alter them rather than just completely wipe them out.
You change.
Speaker 1 (56:33):
I don't think it's genocidal. I think they're trying to
change the human condition genetically, and I don't know what
they're trying to change it into, but I think that
that's what they're trying to do. They're trying to alter
the nature of the human being, and they're going to
(56:54):
do it with gene therapy, which is going to be
delivered through MR and a ship. I think that's what's
happening here. And one more reason to fire your medical doctor.
Speaker 2 (57:05):
We got to be the docile. We have to be
the docile cows for the for the for the masters.
Speaker 1 (57:13):
Human half snake.
Speaker 2 (57:15):
There you go. That's it's interesting thought too, doctor Glidden.
I appreciate your time. I appreciate you every time you
come on here. You hope to see you again next week.
And we'll keep shipping away at this for the people
who are wanting to benefit and better themselves and their
health and their family sealth through the method is that
(57:38):
you don't have a trademark or on this. This is
just the truth of it. So few people know it,
and this is our job to try to explain it
to those who are willing to listen.
Speaker 1 (57:51):
It's always a pledge to Daniel, keep up the good
work done. Ever stop, God willing the creek don't rise.
We'll see in a week, thank you, sir.
Speaker 2 (57:59):
All Right, guys, I'm gonna show you his website now.
I wish I had found a doctor Lytton years ago.
The non natural path nature paths made me go broke. Yeah,
well there you go. You think you're going to the
right people, and then there's only one doctor Glidden and
there's only one doctor Manzo, and that is uh, that's
why we're here, and that's why I'm thankful and grateful
(58:19):
that I know both of them. And it's been it's
been quite a ride the last couple of days as
far as the show is concerned, and I honestly, if
it wasn't for doctor Glidden, I don't know if I
because Doctor Glyndon and doctor Manso are the two people
I pretty much prefer talking to over just about anybody,
and the last two days have proven that to me.
(58:43):
I had a horrible experience. I'll just leave it at that,
and was face to face with the demon and other
people would say, oh, you should keep that going because
I keep that up there because you know he's such
a big part. I I took it down because I
was disgusted. I couldn't even listen to the watch the replay,
(59:03):
and I'm gonna I'm gonna represent it, but I'm gonna
present it the way. First of all, this thing, not
not my broad caster, but stream Yard sabotaged my audio
because there was a stupid checkbox that I decided to
check off that suppressed my audio when the when there
was other noise. So because I couldn't shut him up
(59:26):
or get a word in edgewise, it made all of
my stuff garbled. So there was that. So even when
I was trying to make a point over the top
of the person who wouldn't stop talking. It came out garbled,
and that was because of a setting that decided to
turn itself on on on Streamyard. I hate Streamyard. I'm
(59:47):
contemplating going to Riverside, but I don't know. I don't
think it's gonna be any better. There is no integrated
You can't integrate your chat, so I'd have to jump
around from tab to tab, and I don't like. I
don't like searching and hunting and pecking when I have
somebody i'm talking to, So I find that to be
(01:00:08):
kind of rude to be. I mean, I gotta do
what I gotta do because I'm running the show as
well as talking to the person. I don't get a
chance like a lot of people on their show is
to just talk to the person, you know. I don't
have a crew. Yeah, so it's uh, I'm multitasking as
I do this, So sometimes it sounds like it looks
like and sometimes I am a little distracted because I'm
(01:00:30):
reading a comment seeing if it's something I need to
present to people, or I'm going to a different tab
to find something else, or a different set of non
integrated what do you call it? Chats that I can't
get to all fit on this page. So to have
that completely removed for riverside seems like it's it's stupid,
(01:00:54):
Like I don't understand why they would. That seems like
a basic thing that you would want Chat to be available.
It seems kind of ridiculous that it's another feature. Anyway,
stream Yard has done nothing but sabotage me since I've
gotten it, So it not only did it wreck the
(01:01:15):
show itself and one and only time that I'm going
to ever talk to that demon, but now I have
to go through the whole thing again and go through
the whole process all over, because I'm going to be
presenting it as a Rumble Premium only and a Patreon
(01:01:35):
only video, and it's gonna be with my commentary and
probably Jack's. We have a lot to say about this
particular demon individual who has given the opportunity to act
like a human being presented with that in mind, So
let's just not go down to the stupid path of
(01:01:56):
propaganda BS, and let's just be ourselves and be Herens
totally ignored and rejected that premise and went back into
twenty No, I'm sorry about twenty eight to thirty minutes
of nonsensical distraction, bullshit about Charlie Kirk and wasted that
much time on that nonsense topic and then acting aggressive
(01:02:22):
when I told him that he's wrong about his h
I knew what I saw, Yeah, sure he did. Yeah,
because you're a control an information controller. So if you
haven't seen it, too bad, you know, too bad. It'll
be popped up on the other two and it'll be
in the premium only. Though the original one is on
(01:02:42):
premium only on FTJ Media, it's been switched over. I
don't want anybody to even see it, honestly, but there
are some things that he revealed about himself. So that's
the only reason why I'm going to be repurposing that video,
because he needs to be seen for what he is,
and people like him need to be seen for what
they are. They're not organic. Something is putting them where
(01:03:04):
they are so that they can influence. And this ship
has to stop and people's in that out. You know,
demon is correct. He sold us so a long time ago,
so you know who I'm talking about. You get a
lot of credit for the attempt, and thank you, Crimo.
I appreciate that.
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
I'm thinking whatever I said, I see your name. I
know it's there's an agent there, so it's not the same.
But Michael Crimo from like Forbidden Archaeology, that dude's cool.
That was a that's a really great book anyhow. It
actually kind of can help fill in some of the
(01:03:44):
information for the for the British edit too. But yeah,
that was that was a hell ride. And I couldn't
believe how much of a lack of a human being
or a real person he was, and how much of
an obnoxiously arrogant, self centered pushy thought he was going
to run the show condescending at times, and some people
caught it, some people didn't, and then other people we've
(01:04:06):
thought that he was talking about me when he was
referring to something else. But he was like, we work hard.
I work hard, I work hard. He like it like that, Like, yeah, okay, buddy,
you're yours, your special boy. You don't do anything. You
show up, you read what they told you to read,
and you do it, and you and you walk away
and you act like you did something you don't. You
don't do any research. It's like the guy is just
(01:04:28):
a flimsy caricature. Anyhow, That's not my biggest concern with
that person. But let's get back into what we were
talking about here. I'm gonna present the screen and I'm
gonna show you how to do this, and you need
to do this. It needs to be done. Show this
is like an IQ test thing. Honestly, I'm not trying
(01:04:49):
to be rude, but it is what it is. If
after everything that you've heard and there, you know that
there's or you should at this point know the integrity
of us, doctor Claid, doctor Manso. So what I'm about
to say to you comes from people who are honestly
(01:05:10):
in the know. They have the knowledge the ability to
help you. It's not because, like I said, the reason
why I said the whole thing about the trademark is
that this is natural health. This is the nature of things.
This is the natural order that's being ignored and suppressed
and denied by the system of quote unquote health. You
can't have health if you're ignoring the way nature works.
(01:05:34):
If you're trying to fight nature, who do you think
is gonna win? You're gonna end up killing the person
through fighting nature instead of working with it to make
yourself better. Now, this is the link right here. The
other way to do this is to go to Simper
fryllc dot com. And now let me show you this.
(01:06:03):
Here's my website. There's doctor glidden. Click doctor Glidden. When
you get into the thing, you'll find it's just gonna
show a little bit whatever. Right, you go in there
and you sign up. I can't go through the process
because I'm already in it. And you use code B
(01:06:23):
A A L B U S T E R S
you'll get an additional twenty five percent off. Now let's scroll
down and don't get scared of this because you got
to look at this in a proper way. It's gonna
be twenty nine with my discount code a month, but
it's going to be cheaper over on this side. Right,
and again I think it. I think it takes a
(01:06:46):
hundred bucks off or something like that. Again, you're going
to be spending less. This is annual, by the way,
and this is just this is monthly, So twenty nine
or that that's less than a copey for most people.
I've never seen a cope undred fifty dollars and maybe
there's forty thirty dollars ones. I don't know. I don't
go to doctor. So it's been a long time since
I've had experiences of this. I know that my parents
(01:07:07):
were putting in a high premium a long time ago,
like forty or fifty bucks, and then maybe it was
twenty five after that. I don't know. But still the
whole point is what you're being built from your insurance,
what your insurance costs you is. This isn't saying to
replace that overnight, but once you understand that you're feeling
better and that these things aren't issues anymore that you're
(01:07:28):
concerned about because you're wondering what's happening to you when
these symptoms start to go away. Because you're taking the
property Central Nutrients and you have doctor glidden at the
ready on his where is it Q and A's on
Tuesdays at this is Central Tuesdays at eight and most
(01:07:51):
of the time it's eleven. That one is eleven thirty
and on Thursdays at eleven am Central. This is what
they look like. I guess a second because it needs
to catch up, all right, And then you have the
(01:08:11):
chat Here another little thing pops up in the bottom
left end corner that says ask. It's an ask button
and it's green. You click that you type in your
question in your way, and obviously you send it, but
you keep the window open in case he asks you
any additional questions because usually this is a follow up
question as to what your symptoms are, a full, more
full picture, because if he's going to try to dial
(01:08:34):
it in with a homeopathic, he has to know specifically
what your symptoms are, not what they told you your
diagnosis is, because that's a generic thing that they slap
on people that have a group of a couple of
different things happening at the same time, and they'll say, Okay,
that's this name, this label, that label, because they're treating
it like an assembling line, and this isn't how health goes. Okay,
(01:08:58):
these names don't mean anything. They don't exist. They don't exist.
They are descriptions of what people are presenting or a
process that's going on inside of the body. It's not
a description or an explanation as to what causes it.
So you can have all these different symptoms and somebody
(01:09:19):
else can have a diagnosis of the same thing that
you were given with different symptoms but maybe a couple
in common, and they're going to say you both had
the same thing, And then you'll write it off as well,
this is I have this symptom because of this reason,
or I never or you won't even think about it
at all, and you'll try to wedge yourself into a
(01:09:41):
box instead of realizing that it's because you're trying to
fit yourself into a definition of a label that was
given to you, rather than actually figure out what's going
on by simply setting yourself. So if doctor Glynnon says,
what are your symptoms, and you just list them honestly
as best as you can think, and you give him
(01:10:02):
that list, he's going to go into his database and
what he has available to him to find of the
six hundred homeopathic remedies that are out there, now, which
one has the similar when given to somebody who's healthy,
has a similar set of circumstances that people will experience,
(01:10:24):
so like cures like now this this is what they
call the law of potentization. So it's very very very
minute amount of this stuff, tiny tiny bit, but it's
the energetic you know, frequency or or or signature of
this uh substance, this homeopathic that when when given to
(01:10:45):
the person who has these symptoms, it's like it's like
given the key to your body. To unlock its ability
to fix itself. Now, what's going to help that, what's
going to help that process along? If he does pair
you with the perfect and you will you know, if
your symptomology is you know, correct, and you're describing it
(01:11:07):
like if you say headache and you said right side
but sharp, and its right side but dull, that could
actually throw it off. So because these other things that
would present these symptoms, I was gonna try to manchine
homopathic with are going to be precise to that, And
that's how they figured out which ones were you know,
the lossom whichs how that worked out. If you're taking
(01:11:27):
the ninety essential nutrients that your body needs to actually
have the raw materials to get to the process of healing,
that's gonna make that homeopathic. Because if even if it's
the right one, if you don't have the strength in
your body, and if you don't have the nutrients that
you need or the minerals that are required for your
body to actually carry on a function or or or
(01:11:48):
a you know, a system carrying out carry on its tasks,
it's not gonna be it's gonna be very weak, and
it's gonna be harder for you to recover. So having
the ninety central nutrients that we all need, we all
need to have these things out there ready so that
we're strong, then the homeopathic is going to work that
(01:12:08):
much better because your body will have the workers and
the material on the job site once it gets its
orders from the foreman, which would be like the homeopathic,
and sometimes the workers can do the job themselves simply
because the reason why you have these symptoms in the
first place is because they're an indicator, not so much
of a toxic overload or some other environmental whatever the
(01:12:32):
case may be. The reason why isn't usually as important.
But if it comes to it from a deficiency, then
taking that which you needed in your body for to
function properly will be all it will take for you
to get better. And he says eighty six percent of
the time or eighty three percent of the time, that
is all you need. And for all the other times
(01:12:54):
you talk to him, you go to his site after
you've been on the central nutrients for nine days, because
if you think about it, if you have been deplete
of nutrients for a long time and unaware of it,
and you've been having symptoms in the same recurring chronic
thing for years and years. Obviously, taking it once isn't
(01:13:15):
gonna magically fix all the damage that has been caused
to you in different functions of your body and its
ability to carry out these functions. Because of the deficiency
like that, it's gonna probably take a lot to build
up a reserve, and it's gonna take a while for
your body to adjust to having what it needs because
(01:13:37):
it probably already learned how to deal without it in
a way that's not optimal if you want to use
the word optimal, and it's probably not the healthiest way,
but it's because your body's always trying to fix itself
and still try to run its operations. It might have
already augmented the way it does things and it needs
to readjust to having when it needs to do the
things properly. So the ninety days is on. The ninety
(01:14:00):
essentials is important before you judge it up or down. Now,
I hope this all makes sense. I hope you understand
why this is so important. I understand and understand why
this is so unique to doctor Gliddon and his site
because the homeopathic remedies. Doctor Manso has got a great
thing going on with the energetic and this is all
(01:14:21):
very connected homeopathic remedy. He's even working with Andre Sayin,
who's like the mastermind of this type of stuff that
would would be the go to when it comes to
the touch points and nutrition as well, Doctor Monso together
these people, these two guys are friends, very good friends,
and they both respect and and and their and their
(01:14:44):
work checks out. And then I think the homeopathic and
this isn't just a think, It is a thing because
everything has an energetic frequency and energetic signature. The homeopathic
is like the material representation of what you can do
energetically too if you knew this sign if you knew
the proper frequency and signature. Right, So they confirm one another,
(01:15:04):
which is pretty awesome. So again the Q and A's here,
become a member, use my code, get the discount, but
use my code after you because this is how it
works to support the show. And it makes perfect sense
that you would want to do that if you want
to see more shows. Right, So you go to my
(01:15:28):
site and sometimes you have to hit show more on
the description. You can highlight this, right click it, hit copy,
and then click the doctor and then you're already here. Okay.
The other way to do it, of course, would be
just to go to directly the link here. You can
just copy it from here, right click copy. I got
(01:15:53):
rid of that and it came back. That is so frustrating.
I deleted the issue that it copied itself twice and
it's back again. How did that happen? Yeah, it's not
on here like that. I don't understand how it copied
itself to do that doesn't make any sense. All right, whatever,
(01:16:16):
it doesn't matter. Copy, recuick, copy, and then hit this
get into the thing however way it pops up, so
you can get into the membership stuff and then use
the code, paste it and you'll get the discount. There's
really no downside to this. Plus you're gonna get ten
(01:16:37):
percent off full script, and I think you can get
the homeopathics from that as well. If he recommends one.
You're gonna get two additional hours a week, two differental
times a week to have your questions answered live Q
and A with him. Plus you'll be able to sit
in on them, which is great. You'll have your access
to this healthy Recovery protocols that I've used I think
(01:16:58):
four times in it made your way twice for myself,
once for my daughter and once for Elijah, my stepson,
when they were experiencing something. I went to see if
there was something on this site that I could find
(01:17:20):
a video or find some information for, and twice it
helped me tremendously. And then the other time it was
for my daughter, which was a great benefit to me
because I'm a dad who you know, I'm a dad period,
and one who loves this little girl very very very much.
(01:17:40):
And the last thing I want to do is worry
about having to take her somewhere. Because here's the other thing, guys,
here's the scary thing about this world, the thing that
terrifies me. I've already moved away from a state because
I was concerned about what that state and their medical
institution was going to do to my daughter if I
stayed there. I had a business in that state that
I left, and I drove three hours one way for
(01:18:04):
five freaking years, and sometimes I would have to be
there two or three times a week that much driving,
then stay there for an eleven hour shift, and then
drive back home. So I was working because I was
if I was going to drive there, there's no way
I was going to also pay somebody to be there
that day if I'm already there, screw that. I'm going
(01:18:25):
to save the money and work the whole day. So
I'm from like ten am to nine pm and then
you know, closing, and then drive back another three hours
on the way home, which ends up being five or
six hours when you get down to it, because you're
tired and you're stopping and you're doing the rest stops
and all this litter crap. It was my life because
I didn't like the way the pediatricians were so adamant.
(01:18:51):
Pediatrician one old Jewish man with a bunch of buttons
on his old red hat. I remember, he's going to baseball.
App I guess that's what you know. You're you're the
nice old man if you look, if you put on
the nice old man disguise. But he was there during
the birth of my daughter at the grossmund Hospital, not
(01:19:14):
during the process, but when we went into another room
after the fact and we went downstairs or something other thing,
and then all of a sudden he shows up and
he's like, doesn't press anything that day. We just said hey,
and then so he I guess he was being assigned
to us at that point, and then when we went
to the wellness check, which of course he only that's
(01:19:35):
only that's pediatricians exist to give injections. They don't care
what it does to you. What they care about is
whether or not you comply, because if they keep a
certain level or a percentage, they get massive bonuses, and
that pays for their malpractice insurance and all kinds of
other things and gives them a life of luxury and fun.
(01:19:56):
And so it's not the patience that they give a
shit about. They give a shit about what they do
as far as their children, you know, being fully vaccinated.
Otherwise they'll even kick you out of their practice to
keep their to keep their numbers high. So I didn't
want anything to do with that. They try to get
us to give her shots on that visit, and I said,
(01:20:19):
there's no way you're ever going to do that in there,
and then he tried to come back with me like
hardball me and say, well, she's going to need them
for school. I said, then we'll home school. There's no
way in how you're ever gonna I know too much
about this stuff. I'm not some random jerk off. I
know that this is poison. If you don't know that.
That's on you. That's not my problem. But I don't
(01:20:40):
have to fall as to your ignorance to try to,
you know, because it's the popular stupidity or the popular
or ignance, or the popular deceptions. Let's say, let's say
it's deliberate. I don't care what your what your level
of comprehension is. I know what mine is, and that's
what I'm how I'm making my decisions on my daughter.
(01:21:01):
You're not gonna convince me from a position of lower
understanding that you know what's best for my daughter. You're
not going to do that. Poison is poison, regardless of
what the application of it is. So we left. So
this is my point. If you bring your children, you
bring your family, you bring yourself to the doctors, because
(01:21:23):
you have insurance, you know it's gonna end up happening. Eventually.
They're gonna say you have something. And when you get
stuck with that scarlet letter, you're not gonna hear anything
but the echo chamber from everywhere else about how it's
what the limitations are of your expected outcome. And if
(01:21:44):
it's something that starts with the letter C, they're not
gonna look for parasites. They're not gonna look for you know,
nutritional you know, solutions to it. They're gonna say chemo radiation.
And guess what's gonna happen If you say no, they
can criminalize you and not to mention the fact that
(01:22:05):
you're going to go bankrupt and be poisoned slowly to
death for the next couple of years if you laugh
that long. So I would recommend not letting that happen.
Don't get on their prescriptions, don't get involved. So if
you're not going to take their prescriptions or their advice,
you're not going to get your children poisoned by injection.
And you're not gonna, you know, allow them to scarlet
(01:22:28):
letter label you. Why are you going there? Are you
just paying your insurance because it's you're you're you know,
it's taken out of your check for your whatever you know,
job you have, or you are you? Are you doing
it because it's va and you don't really technically pay
(01:22:48):
for it if someone else does. Is it because you're afraid?
Is it? Or I'm not trying to tell you to
stop doing it. I'm just saying, don't let the fact
that you do. So how still have insurance deter you
from doing things that you know are the correct way
of doing things for yourself. Don't just use the doctor
(01:23:10):
because you have it at your disposal, because it's the
worst option. It's the worst, most dangerous option that has
some results that are that you can't undo. All right,
there's one. There's a couple of tricks that you can't
do twice, and that that of course is death. You can't.
(01:23:32):
You don't get to do that one over. So please,
if you have this, and yeah, you're smarter than a
fifth grader. Now, a fifth grader would understand self preservation too,
so I don't want to insult a fifth grader. But
this is this is where you would want to be,
and you would want to absorb as much of this
information as you possibly can, and you'd really want to
(01:23:55):
try to apply it to your life and your children's
and your family's lives as much as you possibly can.
And you'd want to educate the new generation in your
own family what really health, what health really is, so
they don't fall into this thing. You don't want your
grandchildren poison because your your children didn't learn the right
way either. We need to stop the cycle, and we
(01:24:17):
need to stop it now, because they're taking our family,
the people that we love the most from us. This
has happened to me, it's happened to you. They took
my aunt because they lied it well I lied, but
they're they're horrific, horrific way of treating what they what
they decided to call a cute leukemia. We don't know
(01:24:39):
if that's true or not. We know what they decided
to describe a set of symptoms that could have possibly
been a simple fix, I don't know. But instead they
took a mother from her three children, oh and and
poisoned her and tortured her for two and a half
years before they killed her. And it was the point
it was the chemo and radiation that killed her, not
the cancer that was a no seam type of cancer.
(01:25:02):
It wasn't even like it was a tumor. We just
have to take the word for it that that's what
it was and assume that maybe they're not trying to
just milk her for money, because that's how they treat
human life. That's how the hospitals will treat a human life.
You got to understand where these people are coming from.
Allopathy is based on it's not just Galeen. Galen just
(01:25:22):
described it. It's based on this cult of pharmacia that's
as ancient as time itself. And they had a specific purpose.
They used it as a weapon against against the people
and guests who picked up that mantle. Oe they and
who do they not?
Speaker 1 (01:25:43):
Like?
Speaker 4 (01:25:43):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:25:43):
All other nations? I wonder why allopathy was enforced upon us?
And then the time for that it happened right nineteen hundreds,
post Civil war, after country with are you concerd YadA, YadA, YadA, YadA.
(01:26:04):
All right, So there you have it. There is there
is quite literally a cult at work. And then I
don't care if you don't believe it. It's the truth.
It doesn't matter if it's not popular or if it
sounds crazy. I don't care. It is the fact that
I'm being honest with you at work through your medical
institutions to limit your life span and to poison and
(01:26:27):
harm you and your children. If you don't like that
idea or that outcome, this is the site that you
want to be on. Okay, thank you. There. You can
just go to my site Stumper Fright, LLC. Or you
can click that link right here in any one of
these and Since we're there, let's just go to I
(01:26:53):
say this all right, so we're going to go back
to my site, ifulhealth dot com. E I F F
E l H e A l t H. Let me
take you can put on the screen. I think it might
have all listenings banners I have on FI fil somewhere.
So there you go see it?
Speaker 1 (01:27:10):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
Cool? Now the other option you can use code BB
five Bravo Bravo five for five percent off for life
for Maasure Well designed by doctor Alphonso Bonso, Whole Food
multi Vitamins and Whole Food ninety Central Nutriants. Okay, click,
that doesn't look like it's in stock yet for the
(01:27:32):
Alaska CAA liver oil. But let me show you what
is the Whole Food multivitamin. Now, let's take a look
real quick. Let's get a store. I'll just cook a knifeful.
Then maybe I can help you guys, because if somebody's
gonna say they're too much, then we can fix this
(01:27:53):
a little bit. Here. So you see this, you see
this right?
Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
What the hell? Oh, it's it's a whole thing. I
can't highlight. That's lame, all right, Well, anyway, you see
this right here right, eighty two ninety five. Let me
show you the equivalent in doctor Manzoland. This one. We're
here thirty nine ninety five. So it's half the price,
and you're still going to get your ninety scientil nutrients. Well,
you're gonna get this portion of it what would be
represented by the thing you're tangerine. You can get in
(01:28:18):
the hopeful multivitamin, and it'll be half the price plus
five percent off. Okay, now this full of acumic acid.
I would recommend getting both these, but if you can
do one or the other, this one's going to be
cheaper because it's going to be ninety day supply at
the very least. And I said olence in last episode,
and I didn't mean to say ounce. I meant to
say teaspoon. So it's either one sixteenth or one eighth
(01:28:43):
of a teaspoon that you should start off with. You
start off with one sixteenth and work your way up
to one eighth of a teaspoon, which is not a lot.
And if you're one person taking this, it'll last you
ninety days at the one eighth, which is the higher
amount tea spoon. So divide fifty by thirty and that's
what your total multi expense would be for this particular item.
Now this would be like would be lack this and
(01:29:10):
this is the thirty day supply, okay, so if you don't,
if you got a nine day supply with that, that
would be over one hundred this one. You see the
difference here, right Okay. So the other thing, there's a
whole food sea complex, which is I think a great idea.
There's the it's not there yet, they can bring it down.
(01:29:33):
Here you go. Here's the core copper. Ore is right there.
The core copper I highly recommend as well. And that's
because I've had a hernia. It's because I've had similar
issues and you'd want the elastin and also mylin sheathing
for your nerves. Lots of other things too. Coppers for energy,
(01:29:54):
for your ATP energy and your mitochondria, your cell energy.
You need the copper and you need it to help
balance out you're iron too. Otherwise you're going to be
fatigued and have oxidator stress. So core copper highly important.
Add on and then if you scroll down far enough
you'll find you find this one right here. I'd be
(01:30:20):
six supreme. Now I'm gonna this is this thing looks small,
but it's actually like one of those big container thingies.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
I have.
Speaker 2 (01:30:29):
I have some of those for different seulfments. I was
contemplating on mixing myself. I don't like people's I'm just
gonna go on a different tangent later. Else's shut out
for now. So the beyondas Geo Effects is sixty two
for a thirty day supply. I love this product. I
usually get two, three, four bottles at a time, and
I order other people in the house to use it.
(01:30:50):
But I also use it two or three times a day.
And I don't think that's what you're supposed to do,
but I do because I will take it in the
morning when I wake up, if in the night, if
I don't feel right, if I'm not sleeping right or something.
I feel as like I feel better when I do it.
And also I take it after I've worked out on
the elliptical because I've drained, I'm you know, pouring, you know,
(01:31:14):
sweat soaked shirt that weighs five hundred pounds. After I
take it off, I mean I really go at it,
and it's four miles, over a thousand calories and just
over an hour. I will take this afterward, because I'm
trying to replenish that which must most certainly have been
dissipated through the effort. There's seventy essential trace minerals in here,
(01:31:39):
as well as the magnesium and calcium. So I do
like this. I'm not saying anything negative about it. But
if you I'm on a tight budget crunch, this is
still going to be twenty dollars cheaper, and it's not
going to be the same you know, it's not gonna
(01:32:00):
be the same flavor or liquid or anything like that,
but it will do the same as far as getting
you what you need. As far as let's go down
and show you where is it. It's alf a lot of
description before you get to the actual stuff. There is calcium, phosphorus, magnesium,
the IP six itself, magnazium, and an acetol and these
(01:32:24):
are all things that are good for you. Right, Okay,
good enough, now you know. And it's BB five, Bravo,
Bravo five. It's right here, and it's right here. You
can highlight it at a copy and paste it there.
Make sure you use that. If you're going to do it, though,
make sure you use it. You're gonna give your discount
b B five, Bravo, Bravo five. Okay, Okay, as far
(01:32:46):
as the show and what's gonna happen with it in
the future, who are in the in the immediate future,
I'm gonna talk to Jack here in a little bit
and see what's up with him. I would like to
have him on for the the analysis of what a
(01:33:09):
train wreck talking to that demon is. And it was
an awful experience. And I have to say, I'm getting
to the point now where even when I here's the deal,
and I'm gonna make this very clear, and I don't
I'm not trying to look I'm forty six years old.
Speaker 1 (01:33:33):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
I don't care if my voice sounds young. I don't
care if I don't appear whatever the hell it is
you think I'm supposed to look like for forty six.
I ain't still am forty six. And I've read so much,
and I've experienced a ton. I don't sit in my
house and shelter in. I experienced life by engaging it.
(01:33:57):
I know a lot of things. I ever speak out
of an idea, out of anything that I don't know
about being true, and if it's something that has additional information,
I didn't know about. I'm not talking about it personal
experience wise, because obviously that is just what it is.
There isn't an argument there. If I've experienced it, then
(01:34:18):
then it exists. But as far as, like you know,
fine tuning an overall outlook of what you that's different
in your just adjusting and improving it versus being completely wrong,
there's very rare times that that's been the case. Because
I do my work before I open this. Okay, I
(01:34:39):
don't say things. I keep very quiet on topics I
don't know anything about. So when I'm asked questions about
something I don't know, I don't just come up with
bullshit like they tell you to do in school. I
just say I don't know. I said that that I
don't know to David Davis yesterday. I don't know anything
about that topic. I don't know. I don't know what
you wanted me to say. But even yesterday I got
(01:35:03):
argued with and you know, fair enough conversation, good enough person,
but a couple of things, and I'm not gonna and
I'm not even going to get into the I've never
heard anybody say this before. And if that's the thing
that I'm surprised. I went into the military to kill people,
(01:35:24):
so you wanted to legally murder people at the age
of nineteen. That's a strange thing to say to people.
Aside from that, it's a little interesting that someone would
argue with me just because I'm trying to do I
have to explain everything like in detail to people. Can
(01:35:48):
I ever shorthand things without having to go into this
in the beginning bullshit type of explanation. I have been
through an experience where cops most certainly did lie twice,
okay time very at one hundred percent legal substance that
you can order online, they tested and said it was
(01:36:09):
cocaine and it wasn't, so they tried to nail me
with that. They never got a chance to do that
that was something that was a supplement, and they lied
about it because they already had a preconceived notion. So
whether they did the test or not, or whether or
not they even do legitimate tests, I can tell you
from experience that they fucking lie. And I don't like
(01:36:32):
when people arguing me about oh that they test with
First of all, everything that they do is bullshit. Everything
that they do for forensics, anything is bullshit. Your analysis
is less than fifty percent accurate half the time. Get
it fifty percent half the time. And they a lot
of the blood stuff is bullshit, a lot of their
other tests, and they also falsify things. Well, they would
(01:36:53):
have told you these are not even direct markers. They
look for height into elevations at certain things, to back
to back. You know, what do you call it? Confirm
the existence or the presence of something. So it's not
as it could be something that also increases those markets
(01:37:14):
going out in your body stress this that the other thing. Prescriptions, supplements,
lack of a proper diet, a proper diet, you know,
any of these little things could alter levels of things
in your body. And they'll say, well, that's a market
for this. It's an indication because they've already had this,
this preconceived notion that this is what they have found.
(01:37:36):
They want it to be true, and they're going to
do whatever they can to make that true. I don't
understand how somebody could be that wrapped up in the
belief of the system still to think that they don't
do that and that that was kind of almost right
out of the gate yesterday. Well, they would that was
not true. Either you must have had a lot in
you if they pulled you up. Dude. I was walking.
(01:37:59):
I was walking in uh Mission Beach in Pacific Beach
one night. It was getting dark. I walked back to
my car and I'm naive, I'm stupid, I'm nice to people.
And there was a group of four guys. I didn't
think that they were cadets. I didn't think that they
were under you know, police doing a fucking sting operation,
(01:38:19):
but they were. And they were all walking around parking
lot trying to fuck with people. So there's bars out there,
and they were just kept on trying to get me
to have a swig of their vodka because it was
somebody's birthday. And I was like, this is fucking weird.
I'm like, yoh, come on, we're going to go to
a party. Yeah, here, just have a little bit. Celebrated
(01:38:40):
his birthday with us. And I'm like, I don't even
know you, dude. But they're like and and finally I
was like, I'm my collars right there. I go, okay,
see ya. That was and then they I was like
so about this, and I was. I was on my
way to my hotel, but I was like, so, what
are you talking about party? And like, well, and they
were like, I just drove off. I'm like, that's really strange.
(01:39:03):
A police car told me after the fact, after they
pulled me over that they followed me from the beach
when it was kind of like a fifteen minute drive
to get to my hotel. They spent all that time
behind me. And when I went hotel, circle has two
turns in it because it's like a horseshoe, I turned
my blinker on and I decided, no, I'm not going
to go that way. Mind you. The only thing I
(01:39:24):
had was that drink, because I at that time, back
in the day, I still drank, but I didn't drink
anything that night. I was walking on the boardwalk and
then they did that thing, and I said, okay, so
they knew that. They already knew because this was part
of their operation. This was a setup from the fucking beginning,
and because I already had two DUIs from very well
(01:39:45):
spaced out from New York, it was zero tolerance and
they fucking put me in jail over this. Later on
for work furlough for fifty four days and twenty nine days,
I was in fucking San Diego. Connie jail, and he's
gonna say that, I, oh, I must be lying. I
must be lying. I'm the fucking I'm the instance zero one.
(01:40:08):
I'm the deceitful, deceptive, scheming, you know, extortionist here right,
that's me. I'm the I'm the bad guy in this
situation that these cops did, right. They helped me for
fucking ever. They maybe go through the stupid you know,
roadside macarena to prove to them that I you know,
And then they did the breathalyzer three times and they
(01:40:30):
said breathe harder, like I can't as as hard as
they can breathe because they weren't getting what they wanted
out of it. And then they said, we're gonna take
you for a blood test, and they said, no, enough
is enough, put handcuffs on me and had me go
get a blood test. And then that's how it went down.
I go to the trial. It was zero talents because
there was already two uh occurrences in the past, and
(01:40:52):
I got fucking put through the system. I lost the apartment.
Actually the apartment was a house. I rent at a
house for me and my early wife in this beautiful
place in Ramona up on a hill. It was on
a winery with goats that you would, you know, eat
(01:41:12):
the grass between the the vineyard rose on a hill.
Funny enough, when you look down the hill, this isn't
there anymore. It's a different name. It was called Daniels
gas Station, Daniel's you know what do you call it?
Convenience store or whatever? In gas station right down from
the hill for me. Beautiful scenery, really nice landscaping. They
(01:41:36):
had like these trees that made an archway. They were
like they were like tailored and like woven into each
other so that they made like an archway when you
drove into the driveway, cobblestone driveway, like well, little tiny
stone driveway. Beautiful area. The house was awesome, and I'm
like thinking, this is just gonna be like New York.
(01:41:57):
You know, you pay the stupid fine, you go through
the stupid bull shit. And I had already told him.
And if you guys watched the last podcast with with Seth,
you'll you'll see where one time I was already leaving.
I was a mortgage consultant at the time I was
leaving the bar, and I was I had already called
for like a taxi because there was no I don't
(01:42:18):
think Uber even existed back then. Called for a taxi
and I was waiting for it and some guy asked
me for a ride and I recognized him as being
a neighbor. So I was like, I was actually going
to just get a get a you know myself. I
was going to get a tat cab and I was like, fine, whatever,
(01:42:38):
I go too freaking blocks and to take one right
hand turn, I get pulled over. That was the other
d ui, you know the other ones. So anyway, so
they give me for this and they throw me in jail,
and that was that was that was that was New
York's response. And I have remember the freaking little demon
bitch Asian lady that was saying like they're, you know,
(01:42:58):
condemning me. I did this. If you want to see
liberals in action, go to a court. Do you want
to see complete demonic human beings go to court? And
I thought I had representation because there was a public
defender there. But they're just there because it's like it's
like trick, they're not there on your behalf. They didn't
assign themselves to you. They weren't assigned to you. They
(01:43:21):
just needed somebody for their the way California works to
be standing next to you when they when they were
so I didn't even know. I didn't have any representation,
it's all. It was all fucking smoking mirrors, and I
ended up getting nailed horrifically bad. So when I say
in shorthand that they lied, they'd rather than go through
(01:43:41):
all that, well, it's you obviously follow in something.
Speaker 1 (01:43:45):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:43:45):
It's like you're you're a little fucking kid. Now, I
don't care how fucking big you are. You're a little
fucking kid talking to an adult. Mind your fucking manners.
So you know, after that experience with with with faggot
who who will not be named, and then and then
seth right after that, I'm if it wasn't for doctor Glidden,
(01:44:08):
I'm fucking done with guests.
Speaker 1 (01:44:10):
Man.
Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
The lack of intellectual like peers is awful because people
won't even they don't want to. I don't care if
they don't know me. You don't ever start off criticizing
and assuming that somebody is retarded. If I'm speaking on it,
I know what I'm talking about, don't you know. I'm
(01:44:36):
gonna give if you want the benefit of doubt to
you given to you when you say things like I
could have a lot, I could have a field day
on the whole. I wanted to be part of the IDF.
But I didn't do that. I didn't. He said to
them his mind exchange. Fine, that's that's I'm gonna accept that.
But then also to say that it's not a cult,
(01:44:56):
it's not a set and could as these Jews have
been around the Jews whose existed after Jesus, because that
was their distinction. They didn't accept their savior, they didn't
accept the guy. So to say that their ethnicity is
fucking wrong. I don't care what anybody says about that.
It's not true. It's one hundred percent not true. You
(01:45:18):
can't have it's a cult with blood lines from this
ancient cult that I talk about in the British da.
I don't talk about the spoken of the British in
mystery and because of civilization and throughout history, this Serpent
cult or the Saturn cult, those lines, those blood lines,
and it doesn't matter if even the people don't recognize
(01:45:39):
or remember what the roots are, it doesn't matter. They
put on Judaism as a shield and carried on. They
carried on through Rome before they were called Jews as
the Saturn cult. And this is a thousand or more
fifteen hundred years after maybe even more now, probably like
(01:46:01):
two thousand years after what happened in the DA This
cult has been around, it is doing this the moon
veneration or moon worship. Saturn and the moon are intertwined
in the symbolism and the serpent because of what they
do with the venom, and that's their symbol, that's their totem.
(01:46:22):
And also the wolf, and you'll see sometimes you'll find
these images of a wolf headed man with a snake
wrapped around him. That's the same freaking representation. It's not
because there was anthropomorphic people out there. It's because it's
representing what these people are through their cult animal totems anyway,
(01:46:45):
these bloodlines and through it because it was a matriarchal cult.
They go through the lineage of the mother to determine
whether or not you're a Jew. That's just the word
that they use. Now, there's no ethnic the genetics, even
though that's another Jewish lie, fake science bullshit, that doesn't
(01:47:07):
mean shit. Really. There's a few things that make sense
about it, but not all of it, and what they
use it and to try to apply it to doesn't
make any sense. There is a great difference and a
huge variant. So the same thing with like a diagnosis
with a label. If this was an ethnicity, everything would
(01:47:30):
have to be this would be like, and it's not.
It's not. There's a lot of variables because there was
a lot of different types of people in this cult
and the bloodlines of that cult. There might have been
very close ethnic arrangements there too, in addition to the
fact because they live in the same area, in addition
to the fact that they were a cult and that
(01:47:51):
was their actual identity. But that's superfluous because anybody, I
can't say that I'm ten percent Catholic, you can't say
that you're ten percent Jew. It doesn't make any fucking sense.
You can say that you're that far removed from that cult,
but that's not a fucking ethnicity. It's not an ethnicity.
(01:48:14):
There could be groups of people who have the same
ethnicity and a lot of them that are also carrying
out the masquerade of Judaism, but that's not the same
thing as happening because that group of people won't be
the same as that one. The Kazarians won't be the
same as the Ashkanazi Turks. The Ashganazi Turks won't be
the same as the Sephardics and all the other crypto
(01:48:35):
fucking bullshit in between. They're not all the same. Some
intertwined with Gothic Aryan people or Indo Europeans, some didn't,
some intermingled with more Arab type people. They're not the same.
And some of them were Phrygian and some of them
were these Turkish people, which would be the Ashronazis, because
(01:48:59):
you know that's where they originated. Well, that's where their
cult was when when we came around. So to argue
things that I know, and I've studied a whole lot
more than somebody else has, oh, they absolutely are on ethnicity.
You don't fucking know that. Because you can't know that.
You're trying to oversimplify a very complex question. And then
(01:49:22):
you're trying to argue it as if you know what
the fuck you're talking about, and you don't. You don't.
You didn't put their time and effort in it that
I have and you haven't been able to. And it's
not the it's not the comprehension level isn't compared, and
it isn't isn't matching to even look at the information
and see what there is to see there. So as
(01:49:44):
much as I'd love to make a new friend, I'm
sorry if I have to call out when people and
I look at me, look at me now, because I'm
polite at the moment. Do I want to experience and
through this, No, but it has to be called out.
I'm sick and tired of this fucking It's like I'm
(01:50:07):
literally handling and this is what I said. And I
don't know if anybody saw the thing on Davis. I'm
tired of handling children and you know, like being the
the mental capacity of children. I don't want to do
it anymore. Everybody's on their fucking own. I thought maybe
being on these shows would help get enough people awhere
to where catastrophic, harmful things wouldn't happen to my family. Yes,
(01:50:31):
it was a very selfish reason, but if it if
it saved my family, But I say yours and yours
and yours and yours. If people got up and rose
up and said no more and just did not comply
to the system, you know, our belief in it is
what keeps it going. And obviously you can we can't
even break you through free from the medical stuff. How
(01:50:53):
about hell are we gonna get your your concepts out
of your ass for the religious lies that you've been taught.
And those are the two things that are killing everybody.
So if so I tried, I give up. I don't
give up, and I don't Actually I didn't give up.
(01:51:14):
I'm just giving up on the wrong, on the on
the on the waste of the time. Stick up, dog?
What is that picture off? Hold on, I gotta get
a BIGERD picture that mat me. See, I can do
this style here. That's a classic boom. Is that supposed
to be a really nice mustache or is that a microphone?
(01:51:36):
Because if it's if the mustache is supposed to indicate
something that then that's not correct. He's not the bad
guy in the situation. So you know, find whatever Joseph
Stalin's features were putting on her or something. All right, Yeah,
it's yeah, it's creta Hitler, which means you'd be a
good person. That's my point. You're fucking up there, buddy.
(01:51:59):
All right Later,