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September 24, 2025 60 mins
For 15 years, we have been talking with our cohost Mike D about the common sense of reading labels and not trusting the standard American diet. We recognize that so many people genuinely have no idea that soda companies or snack companies, etc., are not just selling poison, but have engaged in actions that are morally reprehensible. Coca-Cola has paid scientists to lie about their product. The sugar industry itself has paid scientist off since the 1960s to point a finger at fat. It's not just foolish, but asinine that the US pretends at every level of society to have no idea why they are overall the fattest and sickest in the world.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, anybody home today, I want you to open your mind.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
I've almost told me the conclusion that the story is
subdamning that the massive Apple people can't deal with it.
We are in process of developing a who series of
techniques to bid people actually to love their certitude.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
We face a hostile ideology, global in scope, atheistic in character.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
Ruthless in purpose, and insiduous in methode.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
So we are opposed around the world by a monolithic
and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for
expanding its sphere of influence.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
To change the minds and the attitudes and the.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Beliefs of the people to bring about one world socialist
totalitarian government.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
It is patterned itself after every dictator who's ever planted
the ripping imprint of a boot on the pages of history.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Getting your time.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
If you can get people to consent to the state
of affairs in which they are living, then you have
a much more easily controllable society than you would if
you were relying poorly on clubs and firing squads and
concentration camps. Tools of conquest do not necessarily come with
bars and extlosions and fills.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
There are weapons that recimply fight prejudices.

Speaker 5 (01:24):
As you connect the dots between different people, organizations, religions, history,
suddenly the picture starts to form.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
The Kingdom of God is within men, not one man,
not a group of men.

Speaker 5 (01:36):
Someone born in the United States is not more special
than someone born in Mexico.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Someone who is white is not more special than someone
who is black.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
They're just vehicles for the consciousness to experience.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
They do not want your children to be objucated.

Speaker 4 (01:53):
They do not want you to think too much.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
It was learned that the aliens had men and were
then manipulating masters of people, both through secret societies, witchcraft, magic,
the occult, and religion.

Speaker 4 (02:04):
They're reaching to our children in music, television, books, right
young children's existence. How can I just still advise that
are stand with an efficiency.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
So if you have the opportunity to stand next to
one of these machines, it feels like an altar to
an alien god.

Speaker 5 (02:18):
Genetic powers the most awesome forced the planet's ever seen,
But you wielded like a kid that's found his dad's gun.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
You're the airport who has an ounce, but applying this
there is now in the prevention of the army.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
Too many others know what's happening out there, and no one,
no government agency, has jurisdiction out of the truth. Any state,
any entity, any ideology that fails to recognize the worth,
the dignity the rights of man, that state is absolute.
A case to be found under m from man guind
in the Twilight Center.

Speaker 5 (02:46):
A long time some of you got acquainted with the
real hard truth.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
It's the haw that says I will not acquiesce.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
Freedom is the free leader to be right, freedom from
the disasters.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
And if you don't connect the dots, just a mass of.

Speaker 5 (03:03):
What's all this about? You are listening to the Secret
Teachings Radio. I'm your host, Ryan Gable. Thank you so
much for tuning in tonight. Tstradio dot info is the
website already. Gable at Yahoo dot com is the email.
Social media links or x Facebook, etc. Are on our

(03:25):
website if you'd like to follow us, or if you'd
like to see what else is going on with the
show when it is not live Monday through Friday, brand
new each night of the week. If you're listening to
this on ground zero plus know that I might say
things that indicate the show is not exclusively on Ground
zero plus, because it's not. So if you hear an

(03:48):
old show or you're confused about why I'm maybe not
talking about something on the network, that's because the show
is independent outside of the Ground zero plus platform, and
so that you can find us on Speaker and Apple
and all these other places. It's linked up in the
show description below. It is linked up on our website.
It's pretty much all that you need to know about

(04:09):
the show TST Radio dot info and we are on
air Monday through Friday, independent but also on Ground zero plus.
Thank you so much, as I said for tuning in.
Tonight a part two episode from our Monday show where
I talked about a whole bunch of things over two hours.
Slightly different show than what we've been doing recently. This

(04:31):
was a I don't like calling it a health show
because it really wasn't a health show. It started out
with an email that I had received from a listener
a couple of weeks ago, listener named Daniel, who's gotten
you know, probably a smile on his face because I've
talked about him so much the last show. But I
got a listener named Daniel who emailed me and said,

(04:52):
I'm going to paraphrase this for time's sake, but he says,
you know, Ryan, you know I like your show, but
you really think that having like a Coca Cola and
your refrigerator is going to make you fat. He's like,
come on, you got you gotta be you got to
be a little bit less, you know, strict. And I said, no, no,
I don't think it's going to make me fat. I

(05:12):
think it's gross because Coca Cola is a gross company.
They cheat, they lie, they steal, they manipulate science, they
pay people off, they poison people. I said, you know
that being made fat, that's like the least of my concerns.
And you know, as as the political spectrum goes on
the other side, you know, the fact that Coca Cola

(05:34):
dumps some chemicals in the water and pollutes the water
also is like the least of my concerns. I'm I'm
concerned on like I guess, a moral level. I guess
I'm concerned on a human level, like Coke Cola's a
disgusting company, as are a lot of other companies. So
I sent that to Daniel and this is what inspired
the show Monday. He said, you know, I didn't know

(05:54):
Coke wasn't a good company, genuinely, like I had no idea.
Thanks for the information. I had no idea. And that
made me think. For a moment, I thought, and I
thought a lot more about it. I thought, while some
people genuinely don't know, like if I say, hey, coch trash,
they think it's like a personal opinion thing. And it's

(06:15):
not a personal opinion thing. Coke calls a terrible company.
There's a whole bunch of companies like this, And I
think more and more now it's being being discussed and
talked about with ingredient labels and the way in which
we have been lied to about food, about beverages, about health.

(06:38):
I just listened to this interview I gave I give
a brief comment on it Monday. But Michael Savage where
Michael Savage. You know, I'm not like a listener of
his show. I don't think I've ever really listened to
a show of Michael Savage. But he was telling a
very big radio show. He was telling them he said, look,
the problem is what we eat, and you can He's

(07:00):
criticizing the President. He said, you can't be make America
healthy and eat fast food every day and drink soda.
You just can't. And he's going to criticizing RFK Jr. Rightfully.
So he said, you can't be making America healthy by
doing some push ups to show people how many push
ups you can do. Like that doesn't make the country healthy.
This is all a big dog and pony show. It's

(07:21):
a circus. And so I added on to that for
Monday show, I said, you've got RFK Junior saying that
as long as we fry McDonald's fries and beef tallow,
I guess they're better for you. Still McDonald's, it's still
fast food, still junk. Now you have RFK Junior saying
that we need to drink more whole milk, And of

(07:42):
course you've had the President say that as if this
is like a big win. We're going to put sugar,
real sugar in Coca Cola. And then you learn that
the only reason they're doing that is because of the
sugar industry, and the deals the president has made with
the sugar industry has nothing to do with health. And
then you realize, even though Kennedy hasn't taken money from

(08:05):
reportedly from Big Dairy. The three biggest lobbies in Washington
are Big Dairy, Big Meat, and Big sugar. I think
the three of the top five biggest lobbies. And that
seems to be what is driving the quote Maha agenda.
It's all a circus. It's really just a show. It's

(08:26):
a production. And Americans health, American's health continues to suffer.
And you listen to what Michael Savage said. He said,
you know, you want to look at the people that
are the healthiest in the world. He said, this not me,
he said. It's well, he's specifically focused on Japan, he said,
because they got a new study out showing that the
Japanese lived the longest of anybody in the world. It's
because they don't eat red meat. It's because they eat vegetables,

(08:47):
it's because they eat rice, it's because they walk, it's
because they have like a cultural spiritual practice. Like all
of these things matter. And I don't know Americans, I
guess think that as long as they have a Bible
to church, if they go to McDonald's after, God will
help them not get fat or something. As if going
back to that email, everything's just about counting calories and

(09:07):
being fat and not about the poison that's in the food.
So this is something we've been talking about for so
long and probably one of the subjects that is the
closest to my heart. And I know it's also very
important to a good friend of mine, a co host
of ours, who was on the show Friday to break
down Eyes Wide Shut. Mike d is with us tonight. Mike,

(09:30):
I know we have a very limited show tonight, only
an hour, part two of this series that I'm doing
this week. But everything I just said, we have comments
on it. Some people genuinely do not know. I have
to consider that they don't know. Hey, this company is horrible.
They lie, they cheat, they still, they manipulate science, they

(09:50):
pay people off. Like it's not just about getting fat,
is the bottom line?

Speaker 4 (09:55):
Yeah. I mean, all you really need to do is
just do a quick search and type in water supply
Coca Cola, and you'll see that there's many spots all
over the world where they siphon the water from the
local people there because they use, you know, millions of
liters of water for their plants. So especially in Mexico,

(10:20):
Coca Cola actually uses forty seven billion liters of water
a year and its operations across Latin America. So it's
basically siphoning water from countries to use in their plants.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
I've heard about this. I think Nesslie does the same thing.
They'll go into small villages or small towns and they'll
just literally steal the water. Nothing could be more Bond villain.
That just sounds like the stereotypical kind of like Hollywood villain, like,
what are you going to do? We're going to steal
all the water?

Speaker 4 (10:52):
Yeah, And it's just not Coca Cola because they pay
off like the local politicians right out of the areas,
and the mayors and the governors and even the president
so called presidents of these countries. So they're all in
on it for being scumbags too, because they're taking the
payoffs from Coke to basically siphon their countries natural resources out.
It's crazy.

Speaker 5 (11:13):
It's crazy to know that and then to go to
say a I don't know a movie. We don't see
them over here in Japan, but in the US. I
used to go to movies all the time, and you
go to a movie and you see these commercials with
dancing cokes everybody's got a coke. Everyway's got their family
around them. It's usually for some weird reason. It's like
a black family drinking coke. It's always like a black

(11:33):
family drinking sprite. But you see those commercials, it's all
happy and there's advertisements even over here. Coke is magic.
It's just all marketing. It's all an illusion. It really
is like a Wizard of Oz thing. Meanwhile, Coca Cola
is actually stealing water supplies pain scientists off to not
tell the truth about what Coca Cola does to the body.

(11:54):
And just like a lot of other companies, including Gerber
and these other companies, we think we can try. I mean,
there's like lawsuits, class action lawsuits that are ongoing over
decades against coke. Simply Orange is one. You just pointed
my attention to the Simply Orange, which is a product
of coke. They're also being sued for the same thing
that you and I talked about fifteen years ago. They're

(12:16):
being sued from misleading the public about what it means
to have a natural product. I thought that was so funny.
Fifteen years later and there's a class action against natural
this or all natural or natural flavors.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
Yeah, yeah, they were acclaiming was all natural and then
just loaded with Pfast chemicals. Like I forget the amount over,
but it was a huge amount of p Fast and
that's simply simply.

Speaker 5 (12:45):
Orange, you know, yes, yes, And.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
They were getting sued across the board for that.

Speaker 5 (12:52):
I think Lululemon's also been sued over that too. Did
you read about that. That's the clothing company. No company's
been sued over that. Hey, you remember years ago, I'm
sure you remember this. Remember years ago we did those
shows on Subway how Subway didn't use like real bread,
that it was made with plastic, And then we found

(13:13):
out that the tofu, or rather the chicken was really
tofu at a lot of Subway restaurants. It's so weird
to think back over a decade, you know, you and
I said that stuff and it was considered so crazy,
and now it's like mainstream news.

Speaker 4 (13:30):
Yeah, Subway. There was something about their meats too, their
daily meats. But I mean, honestly, you know, again, we're
not trying to tell people what to eat, because that's
not my business. You can eat whatever you want. We're
just informing people of what is actually out there and
what's in the foods. But Subway, Yeah, I wouldn't eat

(13:51):
Subway if you paid me to.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
So P fasts for people that don't know what a
P fast is, it's considered it Forever can. But it's
a large group of synthetic chemicals. They use them for
like stain and grease resistance and P fasts. You could understand,
maybe more so why that would be in Lululemon products
because these are clothing items. But this they're putting that

(14:16):
in simply orange juice or other simple products. It's simply lemonade,
simply orange. You know, it's simply Forever chemicals, and then
you sell it as all natural. I mean, that's evil.
And you're right, it's not about people think it's about
telling an audience what you should eat. That's not about
what you should eat. It's about how you're being deceived

(14:38):
by really evil people that are poisoning you. And I
don't know why, but Americans in particular are just like
totally oblivious to why we're so unhealthy. And we have
to have commissions and reports and we've got to try
to figure it out. And if we just fried in
beef tallow and if we just drink more dairy and
if we just eat more of this, or take one

(14:59):
of the these pills, or how about ozempic. If we
take ozempic, that'll solve the problem. It's just we are
so naive, and I think our society has been totally sabotaged.
And at the core of it is companies like this,
the lies and the deception, the corruption of government officials.
It is. It is beyond reprehensible. I think.

Speaker 4 (15:22):
Yeah, what people kind of don't realize too is like,
so they eat something or whatever and like, you know, well,
it's not getting me sick. But all these things, these
chemicals and these poisons take time to develop, and you
can just see it from the rise of cancers and
everything else. It's not like you're gonna drink one simply

(15:44):
orange and then the next day and wake up and
have prostate cancer. That's just not how it works. But
of course you drink it over a long period of time,
you're gonna get it sooner or later, right, I mean.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
And you know they did, they did the same play
orange with that because Coca Cola about honest Tea, which
you and I famously talked about a long time ago.
Honest tea is it's like the same thing with the
name Honest Tea simply orange using psychology to deceive you
and poison you.

Speaker 4 (16:16):
Yes, here's another thing too. Pure Pro makes water filters.
They make them for your shower and they also have
like a standalone containers. So recently, I guess maybe a
couple of months ago, Culligan bought pure Pro water filters

(16:41):
and then discontinued their shower filters. So they basically bought
a company and then just discontinued what the company was selling.
Now there's thousands and thousands of people out there that
can't get the filter for they're a shower filter because

(17:01):
it's no longer available. And if it is, it's sold
out everywhere.

Speaker 5 (17:05):
Are they making their own filter or they just stripped
the filter from the market.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
Now they just they pulled it. They pulled and will
not be manufacturing the pure water filters at all. And
they don't have any that fixed in the current you
know what you use for it. So they basically left,
you know, thousands and thousands of people out in the
cold because a company went in bought the company and
just then discontinued the filter. It's crazy, I.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
Mean that's kind of similar to what we had discussed
before the show tonight, just discussed for a few minutes
about how Microsoft word, how you can't actually own that anymore,
you have to rent it, and then how video games
and other products you buy them. Oh, it's so convenient
to have it on your Xbox or so convenient to
have it on your tablet and you don't have to

(17:53):
you don't have to worry about having a disk or
a drive or something to insert. And then at one
point or another, maybe the license in licenses run out,
or maybe company just decides to pull it, and then
it just gets deleted from your system and you can't
access it even though you paid for it. You don't
get a refund, they just pull it.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
Exactly. It's the same thing with these music services like
Amazon Spotify. Yeah, you can down you know you can.
You can pay for it, and then you can download
it like to your computer or whatever, then import it
to your own MP three player or whatever. If you
leave it on their service and try to stream that
app in your car, they make you pay for a

(18:34):
subscription service, so then you can't. If you don't, then
you're limited to the how many times you can fast
forward through a song. You're limited to how many songs
you can play in one folder. It's just I mean,
if you want to talk corporate capitalism, that's that's it
right there.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
You know, it's pure evil and you'll own nothing and
be happy too.

Speaker 4 (18:59):
Like a movie on Netflix, to say you have a
Netflix service or you have some other service. When you
have all your you know, you've got your movies on
there that you love.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
No.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
Sooner or later they remove those movies and sometimes the
movies aren't available ever again. So unless you have a
hard physical copy, you're screwed.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
Yeah, same thing with books.

Speaker 4 (19:19):
And that's and that's why these gen zs are like
they're buying DVDs like crazy. They're buying physical media.

Speaker 5 (19:27):
Again, it's kind of cool over here in Japan. That's
a big thing you can still buy. I mean, they
have massive sections of DVDs and CDs any electronics store,
any like mall. It's kind of cool to see that
because in the US, you go to the store, there's
there's usually no options for any of that.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
No. No, I remember years and years ago Best Buy
pulled all their CDs and all that stuff out.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
But this reminds me of something else too, because on
the subject of I guess companies or patterns of behavior
in a society in regard to food and whatnot. Over here, Mike,
when you go to the store, yeah they have Coca Cola.
They go to a big store. A lot of times,
little convenience stores might sell it Coca cola too, like

(20:14):
seven to eleven, of course, but most of the time
what they're pushing the biggest products are tea. So like,
culturally people here drink tea, all kinds of tea, green tea,
black tea, non caffeinated, roybos tea, things like that. And
that's not just a japan thing. That's like a I
think an Asian thing, and it shows in the health

(20:39):
profile of a country. You know, Yeah, people drink a
ton of coke here, but it's nowhere near compared to
what Americans drink. And that this is a big part
of the problem. It is a I don't think people
want to acknowledge it because it's a big problem. But
it's a cultural problem as much as it is a
company like Coca Cola lying and buying off scientists and

(21:00):
stealing water supplies. It's a cultural problem, and we can
solve it as individuals, but we have to make decisions
that are going to be They're going to be difficult
because we have to we have to wean ourselves off
of addictive substances. Like it's whether it's a cigarette or
it's a it's alcohol or it's soda. Soda is an

(21:21):
addictive chemical substance just as much as the foods that
are manufactured with an MSG, for example, to make us
want and crave more. I mean is I think it's
at the core, it's a cultural problem. We have to
fix the cultural aspects of this. No, no Maha Commission
is going to fix it. No President, no Kennedy is

(21:43):
going to fix it. I mean, maybe they can help,
but they're not going to fix the problem. In fact,
it appears that they're making the problem worse in my assessment,
What do you think of that? I think it's a
cultural issue in large part.

Speaker 4 (21:53):
Yeah, I think it's not going to be solved until
people stop buying what they're selling, right, that's the only way.
People like you don't really see that much today, but
back in the day, people would wear like coke shirts
and Pepsi shirts, and I was thinking, like, you're promoting
a product that is actually poisoning you. You know. It's
like I can't even I can't even look at a

(22:15):
can of coc because it's got thirty six right grams
of sugar, thirty four grams of sugar something like that.
I mean that's enough. Did you drink it? You melt
your teeth off?

Speaker 5 (22:24):
Yeah, And it doesn't solve the problem by just putting
sugar in it. I mean I feel like, in fact,
I talked about this Monday because high fruit toase corn syrup,
which is I think primarily what they've used in Coca Cola.
Because it's so sweet, you're probably going to have to
add more sugar, like real sugar to it to equate

(22:48):
to the sweetness that you had in the previous product.
So I think that adding sugar to it might actually
end up being a worse decision because it's probably they're
probably going to have to add additional sugar to it.
It's probably the sugar content's probably going to go up.
I was thinking that that might actually be the case
that would make it a worse product than it was before.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
Yeah, I mean you might be right. I mean I
don't it doesn't matter to me. I'm not drinking it.

Speaker 5 (23:15):
Yeah, me either. Again, I don't know if people realize this,
but coca cola has on I don't know how many
occasions been caught pain scientists off to say that coca
cola is not a dangerous thing to consume or not
an unhealthy thing to consume. In fact, it's not just

(23:37):
coca Cola that have done that's done that, but the
whole sugar industry itself. Back in the sixties, the sugar
industry funded research that downplayed the risks of sugar and
encouraged people to believe that fat was the real enemy.
And that I mean, I'm sure a lot of people
that are old enough to remember remember that they remember

(24:00):
or a fat, fat, fat, fat fat. Do you know
where that came from? That came from the sugar industry.
It's not to say that you should be eating excess
amounts of fat or something, but the sugar industry literally
paid scientists in the sixties to tell people that the
real problem was fat. It wasn't sugar. You can eat sugar,
and you should actually eat a lot more sugar because
it's it's not as bad as fat. I mean, that

(24:21):
is just so evil.

Speaker 4 (24:22):
Oh yeah, yeah, they were pushing I think they were
also pushing that salt was bad for you. Actually, your
body needs a good amount of clean salt. That's the
salt is way better for you than sugar is if
you're going to compare the two, and they were pushing that.
You know, the problems with people's high blood pressure was
all salt related.

Speaker 5 (24:43):
Yes, all the problems in the United States that we've
heard of every time you turn on the TV, it's
milk's good, milk's bad, Eggs good, eggs bad, sugars good,
sugar's bad. All of this comes from industry funded studies.
And you'll notice that, at least I noticed that when
there is a contra virtual thing that happens within one
of these industries, like for example, Coca Cola manipulating scientists,

(25:06):
pain scientists off, et cetera, et cetera, that doesn't seem
to get the same kind of public attention. Just when
a company spends a lot of the money that you
gave them by buying their products on pain scientists off
to lie to you about how great their product is,
or rather about how bad it is, but to tell
you how great it is. It's just like an added

(25:28):
layer of immorality and evil, like that you give this
company money because of this product that you like, and
then they take that money and they give it to
a scientist to tell you that what you're drinking is
actually really good for you, it's not bad. I mean
that is it's almost like some kind of I'm not

(25:51):
sure what the word would be. It's it's a very
psychological thing. It's like then and then they're gas lighting you.
I mean that alone is a reason not to support
even if you want to drink it. Okay, fine, but
like that should be a reason not to support the
Coca Cola Corporation for the fact that they've done that
over and over and over and over again.

Speaker 4 (26:10):
I mean, yeah, I definitely want to support a corporations
that's selling poison.

Speaker 5 (26:14):
Yeah, but they're also lying to their customers and taking
the money they get and then paying scientists to lie
to the customers as well.

Speaker 4 (26:21):
Okay, I mean that's corporate capitalism right there, and that's
like the the bad part of capitalism. Is this this
corporate structure that is just infested with greed. You know, Oh,
we've got to you know, we've got to do this
because we've got a pair of shareholders really well why

(26:42):
do you pay your CEO like sixteen million dollars a year,
you know.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
But that's also the good thing about capitalism too. And see,
this is something that I don't think I don't think
it's discussed because you either are like pro capitalism, don't
criticize it, or your anti capitalism. Everything is a criticism.
I think Jim Maher's actually pointed this out to me
years ago, Mike, he said that capitalism. Yeah, you can

(27:06):
have crony capitalism, but there's a benefit to having a
capitalist society. And it's your personal responsibility because if you
tell the company I'm not buying it, well, they want
to make money, and if you're not going to buy it,
then they're going to change it so that you do
buy it. They're going to create a product that you
will buy because they want to make money. So that's

(27:27):
the positive aspect of capitalism. Yeah, these companies might be
greedy and disgusting and lie and cheat and steal, but ultimately,
at the proverbial end of the day, it's up to
you to say I'm not buying it until you make
a better product, or I'm going to support companies that
don't lie to me and cheat and steal. I mean,
that's the good thing about capitalism.

Speaker 4 (27:47):
The good thing about is it's a free market. Right
to the consumer, like you said, can put the company
out of business. But our people here sell misinformed that
they'll still buy gator Aid, even though Gatorade for years
and years had the yoga Mats chemical in it.

Speaker 3 (28:04):
Oh remember, yeah, Yeah, and the little girl. The little
girl found out about there were science class and then
petitioned to get it removed.

Speaker 4 (28:16):
Remember that, I vaguely I finally got They finally got
rid of it. For for years and years, they were
poisoning people with this chemical. Yeah, I remember Gatorade.

Speaker 5 (28:27):
I do remember that story. I think you probably brought
that onto the show and we talked about that a
long time ago. God, it's it's so disgusting.

Speaker 4 (28:35):
And I think at one point, I don't know if
they still do. I think Coke owned Gatorade at one point.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
I don't.

Speaker 4 (28:40):
I don't remember.

Speaker 5 (28:40):
I could look that up. I don't think. I don't
think Coke has ever owned Gatorade. Maybe they have, Let's
see if I can find it. You know, No, it
says they're owned by PepsiCo. It's another evil company.

Speaker 4 (28:51):
Oh there you go, I know one of them own that.

Speaker 5 (28:53):
Yeah, that's another weird dichotomy too. It's like I don't
drink coke, I drink PEPSI. Who gives a ship it's
still Oh they're gonna put real sugar in it. Who
gives a shit, it's still poison. But but they're gonna
fry the fries and McDonald's and beef talot. Who gives
a shit, it's still poison exactly.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
Or give me the blue gatorade, Give me the orange one.
Why are they colored like that because they have artificial
dyes in there that you should shouldn't be drinking. Oh,
give me the purple one. That's okay, it's to taste good.
It's purple.

Speaker 5 (29:25):
You remember that clear gatorade they came out with that
might have been the healthiest one.

Speaker 4 (29:29):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (29:31):
I used to drink that one when I played basketball,
because that's what they tell you. You play basketball, you
drink gatorade. That's the you know, that's the market for it.
And then I learned what it was and it's like
that they're poisoning me. They poisoned me all those years
I played basketball. That was poison. I should have drank
water because that's what my body actually needed. It didn't
need brondo, it needed water because I was sweating.

Speaker 4 (29:53):
Yes, here's a side note on food And I don't
know if this is true or not because I saw
it yesterday and I didn't get to do any research
on it. So this is just this is hearsay right now.
But Food and has come out to say this is
allegedly I don't I don't know if this is true
or not, but he's going to release a couple of

(30:14):
things if the US and Israel isn't back down. And
one of the things is that Americans have been eating
Americans in their food supply, which I found that was
funny because we talked about that. We talked about that
a long time ago with the McDonald's and the that
rabbi and we're talking about how there was human parts

(30:34):
found in food, especially like in the hot dog and
hamburger industry where they were finding you know, analysis of
human DNA, yes products.

Speaker 5 (30:46):
Yeah, yeah, I just brought that up ABC News. Now,
obviously human DNA could be hair falls off, but some
worker and it makes any of the food. But what
was really interesting, and I actually did a show in
this maybe four or five months ago. It's a controversial shows,
you can imagine. But yet this was back in twenty fifteen.
Some hot dogs and sausages contain human DNA, but you

(31:07):
know which products did not contain human DNA, Kosher products.
All the kosher products were one hundred percent free of
human DNA, but the non kosher products had human DNA.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Well, yeah, of course the chosen ones need to eat clean.
Everybody else gets the gooist, everybody else gets goys slop apparently.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
So yeah, but that's that's that's weird. I mean, that
sounds probably like some sort of nonsensical Reddit post or
QAnon thing. I doubt that that's true, but it is
possible that humans, just as a byproduct of accidents and
factories in the past, have eaten humans.

Speaker 4 (31:48):
Remember the pork industry was for a long time and
they probably still do it now. They were feeding pigs
pig meat.

Speaker 5 (31:57):
Well, yeah, the same thing with cows too, their feeding
that's what that's what led to, you know, matt cow disease.

Speaker 4 (32:03):
Yeah, and I'm saying if they do it to the animals,
quite possibly.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
And there was a book that I mean, I was
not confused.

Speaker 4 (32:11):
On the like the McDonald's signs where it says like
sixty billion served. I'm like, how do we have that
many cows? McDonald's are so gross. I mean, all that
shit is just horrible.

Speaker 5 (32:23):
I mean, there was there was a book written about
one hundred years ago. I think it's called The Jungle Where,
and I believe in that book it sort of broke
this story open that in the factories one hundred years ago,
people would fall in the vats and they would just
grind them up and serve them with the meat.

Speaker 4 (32:38):
That was Upton Sinclair was yes.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
So I mean that happens as just a natural byproduct
of industry with no safety regulations. So it's it's it's
definitely happened before. It's it is really weird. Two percent
of all samples tested had human DNA in them in
the hot dogs. You know, that probably would explain I
thought about it like this, I'm going to make this
statement and then I'd like you to comment on it.

(33:03):
But it's kind of like this, this combination of food colorings,
which we know create neurological issues in children, and we
know that it causes what we call quote hyperactivity that
we blame on sugar. When it's really food colorings. And
then we tell our kids, if you settle down, we'll
give you an M and M. It's like, well, the
eminem is causing the problem in the first place. But
the point is when you mix all of that together.

(33:25):
It's bad enough when you've got that in the gatorade
and the soda, and you got that in the in
the foods that people eat. But then when you mix
in the idea that it's very possible that whether we've
been eating, you know, cows at each other cows, or
pigs at each other pigs, or we're eating maybe there
are parts of humans or whatever the case might be.
When you have a you know, a condition like what

(33:46):
do they call that kurtz Felt Jacob disease? You it
drives you mad, it drives you crazy. It's a brain disorder.
It's caused by misfolded proteins. It can it can be
caused by eating eating like humans.

Speaker 4 (34:01):
Like cannibalism.

Speaker 5 (34:03):
Right, yes, the Kuru, I think they call it Kuu
disease because they eat certain parts of the body. That
there are parts of the body you can eat that
doesn't do this, But if you eat parts of the brain,
that's what it causes it's like mad cow disease. I
forget the technically, it's like spongy fold alitis or something.
I don't know the technical terms, but yeah, that's what happens.

(34:24):
And so it makes me think, hmm. The amount of
anger and fighting and just like snapping to you know,
from zero to one hundred and seconds and fighting over
absolutely everything, like animals. The food supply absolutely contributes to that.
And if there is any truth in humans eating human meat,

(34:47):
if you will, I mean, that would explain a lot
of American behavior if that is true.

Speaker 4 (34:55):
It's a pretty nasty industry. Even shopping in the supermarket,
you got to be very careful of what you're buying
and read the ingredients, and definitely stay away from the bakery.
As we've discussed several times in the show.

Speaker 5 (35:07):
That's one of the worst departments, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (35:11):
Yeah, as soon as you walk in if you haven't
been to publics in a wall and you go in
as the bakery is like right in the front when
you enter, and you just smell the just basically what
you're smelling is just sugar. That's what you're smelling.

Speaker 5 (35:23):
Yeah, it is. It is just sugar. Sugar, sugar, and
you can't smell it, but you can see the food colorings.
Cheh God, Publics is so disgusting. So I want to
go back to this idea though at the beginning of
the shows that I had a listener that said, you
think Coke's going to make you fat? Is that why
you don't want to have it in your house? It's like, well, no, coach,
just poison. But Cox is a disgusting company. Let's go

(35:44):
back to that idea. Like this guy really didn't know.
And a lot of people genuinely don't know. They listen
to what you're saying. They think, but I shop at
Publics every week. I like Publics. I don't like those
other stores. Publics is my store, or when Dixie or
Kroger or whatever, like, that's my store, and they identify

(36:05):
with the store. And if you say this store sells
poison and they lie to their customers, they're like, but
I shop there. And then you see them kind of
grappling with the idea of you basically telling them that
you're making a mistake and you're wrong, and people have
to recognize that and make a change, and I think

(36:26):
most don't or can't do that, and so they think
that you're attacking them. And many people listen to this
show and are drinking coke right now, and they're like,
these guys are crazy. I love coke. It's not about
what you love. People love heroin too. It doesn't make
it mean it's good for you. And if you say
maybe we shouldn't be giving narcan out to people, you know,

(36:46):
left and right, because we're encouraging the drug crisis, people
take that as an offensive thing. But narcan saves people. Yeah,
But the same people that sell the narcan are also
involved in selling the drugs that lead to people needing
the narcan. So's it's a vicious cycle that you're contributing
to the people that are selling the drugs, people that
are selling the poison that makes you need the drugs.

(37:07):
It's it's like a disgusting, vicious evil cycle that people
feel like selling the needles.

Speaker 4 (37:13):
We're selling the needles too.

Speaker 5 (37:16):
Yes, yes, that's another It's every aspect, every element of it.
But what do you think Afghanistan was all about? Is
about getting those drugs that that Israeli company helped to
drive into American I forget the name it. What's the
name of that, that Israeli company. Do you remember that
there's a drug company in Israel. I think Israel has

(37:37):
like the highest rate of opioid abuse outside of the
United States because of that damn company that was responsible
for taking what they found in Afghanistan pumping it into
the medical system, getting everybody hooked on drugs. Yeah, I

(37:57):
want to look up the name of that company.

Speaker 4 (37:59):
Going back to Coca Cola too. I mean, this is a.

Speaker 5 (38:03):
Teasa sorry, Tiva Pharmaceuticals is the name of the company.
Go ahead.

Speaker 4 (38:10):
It's a very large, powerful corporation. Hence they're able to
go into foreign countries and take over the water supply.

Speaker 5 (38:19):
It's it's weird to me that Coca Cola, and it's
all part of the marketing, Like Coca Cola and other
companies have used money to use marketing to convince you
that they're like part of the family. So that if
someone says, hey, this is a nasty product and a
nasty company, and they lie and they cheat and they
steal among other things. Again, it's just like people feel

(38:43):
like you're attacking them, Like, no, but Coke's been part
of my family since I was a kid. Well that
may be, but it's still a it's still poison, and
you have to get over that emotion of the connectedness.
That's what they've sold you that through the advertising, Like
if you drink a coke, it'll bring your family together.
It's like, no, no, no, no, it's just marketing. It's

(39:03):
that's all. That has nothing to do with your family.
It's marketing. It's poison. Water can also bring your family together,
Tea can bring your family together. A lot of things
can bring your family together. Coca Cola is lying to you. No,
they wouldn't do that. They're my family. They have could
commercials with families. They love black families too. They wouldn't
lie to me. It's just that's such a weird thing

(39:25):
to me. I don't know, Mike, it's weird.

Speaker 4 (39:27):
Yeah, it's targeted advertising to people that they think are idiots.
Their main their main objective, you know. But it's funny,
like you know, maybe like a decade plus ago that
the soda companies were got out of what you know,
they're stayed in the soda industry, of course, but then
they started to get into marketing bottle water. You know,

(39:48):
remember that was like and they and that makes a
lot of up of the revenue. Now that it's the
bottle of water, they get tested if you do any
type of look up and research on the quality of
the water of those first off is recycled tapwater, so
you're you're not getting spring mountain water from those products,

(40:11):
You're getting recycled reserves Osymbosa's tap water. And then with
chemicals added into it. It's complete an art of garbage.

Speaker 5 (40:18):
For you, what an unbelievable scam that is too? When
a bottle water, I me, youwi as well just bottle air,
sell bottled air. I wouldn't be surprised. That's the next thing.
Tri cookes new bottled air.

Speaker 4 (40:31):
Bottled air, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 5 (40:33):
Doctor Pepper twenty three, twenty three different smells from around
the world.

Speaker 4 (40:38):
Bottle air, no chemicals, nothing strictly oxygen.

Speaker 5 (40:42):
Yes, yeah, bottled bottled air. Well, if they did bottle
air that you I don't know, I feel like it
would be you'd find that the bottled air was the
same thing that's in the coke. It's just like thousands
of different chemicals. They just take it right out of
the smog in Los Angeles and bottle it and tell
you that it's it's fresh air pay some scientists to
promote it.

Speaker 4 (41:02):
Exactly.

Speaker 5 (41:03):
It's evil. It's evil.

Speaker 4 (41:04):
And then of course that's like you know, these sporting
events and other things, they're charging like six seven dollars
one for a bottle of water that's basically poison. It's
it's crazy craze.

Speaker 5 (41:15):
It is.

Speaker 4 (41:16):
You might be safe for drinking a beer when you
are the bottle of water.

Speaker 5 (41:21):
Well, hey, that's why they drink coke in Mexico, isn't
it because of the water supply down there being so horrible,
so terrible.

Speaker 4 (41:28):
Yeah, the water, Yeah, the water supply, and the residents
have been asking the government for decades to putting like
clean weals and fix the water supply. Most of the
people in Mexico. You're exactly right, they drink bottled water.
They use bottle water for to bathe because the water
supply is tainted and the government does nothing about it. Now,

(41:49):
if you wanted to make yourself a populus to the
Mexican people, these drug cartels, I would start using the
drug money and build like a huge, great irrigation of
water purifying center for the people Mexico. And then they'll
they'll put you in the power immediately they'll they'll booth
the people off themselves, and so it's crazy, and.

Speaker 5 (42:09):
That kind of goes back to what John Perkins said.
You know, I don't know if you remember John Perkins.
We've had him on the show before, and you know
he was the quote economic hit man, and he talked
about how corporations like Coke, they would go into these countries,
these big fortune five hundred companies, they go into these
countries and they would basically steal the natural resources, buy off.
If they couldn't buy off, they would threaten, they might
send in the military. Eventually the leadership of that country,

(42:33):
and they'd get immensely rich and they would strip all
the natural resources away and people would be poor, but
they might have they might have Coca Cola to drink,
but they'd be poor and have nothing else in their
country would be blood dry, but at least they got
a Coke shirt and a Coca Cola. People are dying
on the streets.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
Yeah, you think that. You know, if you're Coke and
you're a billion dollar company whatever, you would put in
your plant there, But at the same time, you equit
it out by helping the people there and building wills
and trying to recycle as much water as possible for
the natives there. They, of course, they don't do that.
Do you think they care?

Speaker 5 (43:16):
Yeah, that's wild that I think it was. In twenty twenty,
there's a guy named Hugo Lopez Gattel. I don't know
if he's still in office. He was like Mexico's health
prevention something official. I don't know. I don't recall exactly,
but this guy said. I recall this because this guy said,

(43:37):
he's like, look, the problem in Mexico isn't Sar's cove too.
COVID's not causing the problem. It's coke. That's what's killing
people in Mexico. That's what's making people sick in Mexico.
It's not a virus, it's a company. It's a product.
Now they tried to silence that guy.

Speaker 4 (43:56):
Yeah, well, I do think the water spice is in
general by pollution and whatnot, But yeah, coke is causing
the people there to suffer, definitely of diabetes and other
health ailments because of drinking that garbage.

Speaker 5 (44:12):
Yeah, well, I mean, what do you call it when
Mexico has the highest per capita soda consumption, and that
is of every country in the world, and they have
the I think the worst obesity crisis. It's seventy five
percent of adults, which is worse than the United States.
Seventy five percent of adults are absolutely obese. In the US,

(44:33):
we play around with words. We like to manipulate words,
so we'll say, like there's super morbid obesity, and then
there's like morbid obesity, and then there's regular obesity. So really,
in the United States, like sixty sixty two percent of
Americans or obese, but in Mexico it's three out of
four and soda definitely contributes to that. And what's weird
to me, Mike, is that you will look at that

(44:55):
and seriously say that, no, soda has nothing to do
with it. But then you look at other countries that
have these very long life spans and everybody's relatively thin
and healthy, and they don't really eat or drink any
of this stuff. And we genuinely tell the public, like
government officials, companies, it has nothing to do with what

(45:16):
you're eating and drinking. Here's ozimpic. I mean, it's just
downright evil. It's manipulating, it's gas lighting, it's lying, it's deceiving,
it's just wickedness, and the general public genuinely does not understand,
apparently that the problem is what you're eating. It is
what you're drinking, or more importantly, what you're not eating
and what you're not drinking. And we make fun of

(45:39):
we make fun of vegetables, we make fun of like rice,
we make fun of like I don't know, even fish.
But as long as you got your red meat and
your dairy and your soda, we're good to go. You
don't think that's what's causing the problem, But we tell people, no,
that can't be causing the problem because these industries love
you and because you know, men eat meat and children
should drink cow's milk, and it's we've poisoned ourself to death.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
Yeah, for sure, man, I think it still has. Coke
has phosphic acid in it, which lowers your bone mineral density,
hi to your to your teeth, So you're basically bathing
your teeth in like an acidic solution, softening the enamental,

(46:27):
making them, you know, vulnerable to cavities and decay.

Speaker 5 (46:32):
It quite quite literally melts your melts your teeth, just like.

Speaker 4 (46:36):
I said a couple of minutes ago. And then you
got the caramel color, right. I think they still have
that in there, right, the caramel color, which is.

Speaker 5 (46:48):
A very dangerous carcinogen. Yes, so it literally it literally
melts your tea.

Speaker 4 (46:58):
Oh man, it's just it's so bad for you. It
should actually, you know, it should be banned. But again,
now you're speaking, you know, like a fascist. You're you're
banning products from people.

Speaker 5 (47:13):
Well, I think it's funny that because.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
No, actually, actually you're banning my choice. That's your choice
to poison yourself. Maybe you should you should let someone
ban it.

Speaker 5 (47:24):
Well, see, I think I think that's a funny comment
because when you have a company that works with the
government and there's lobbyists and there's revolving doors between the
industries and the regulators, that's actually the definition of Mussolini
fascism to argue that companies should be regulated, and maybe
that it shouldn't be like subsidized like Snap. Coca Cola

(47:47):
is subsidized with Snap. You can buy coke with Snap.
And when Coca Cola heard that, the the one good
thing the Maha movement did was to cut off Coca
Cola from food stamps. I don't know if they've done
that yet, but that was the plan, and so Coke
and the whole soda industry sent out these talking points
to all these conservative influencers who all posted the exact
same identical thing on social media. This is eliminating your

(48:10):
freedom of choice. It's like, no, you can still buy coke.
They didn't ban it and round up all the Coke
executives and shoot them. They didn't pour out all the coke.
What they did was they said, you can't subsidize a
corporation like Coca Cola that's poisoning people. Because I did
love what Kennedy said. They asked him, they said, why
do you think coke shouldn't be or why do you
think soda shouldn't be on the SNAP program? He said,

(48:32):
cause it's in the name Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and
it's not nutrition. And it just shocked people. What do
you mean it's not nutritious? Like there must have been
people walking around every day thinking drinking a coke was nutritious. Mic,
It's like your story of the orange soda at work.

Speaker 4 (48:48):
Yeah. I mean, man, there is a lot of just
misinformed getting into the spiritual aspect. And I mean there's
NPCs out there, many many I personally think.

Speaker 5 (49:04):
They're Coca Cola's number one supporters.

Speaker 4 (49:08):
Yeah, they're on a program and they just run the
script and they don't think. They just do. There's no
deductive reasoning. They're just NPCs. Man.

Speaker 5 (49:21):
How was my Kennedy voice? Was it halfway decent?

Speaker 4 (49:25):
I think it was pretty good. Let me let me
try one healthier alternatives to coke, just spring water with fruit.

Speaker 5 (49:33):
Let's get a little bit a little bit better. I
think we've had a better connection night. The last time
you tried to do a Kennedy voice, it didn't. I
don't think it came.

Speaker 4 (49:40):
Through water fruit confusions.

Speaker 5 (49:45):
So my we only have a few minutes left here
in this part two episodes. Let me explain to you,
very very quickly the way that I view this. When
I'm sitting here and I'm talking about conspiracies, Coca Cola
engages in conspiracies all the time to deceive the people
that support them, to deceive the world. When I'm sitting

(50:06):
here talking about like corruption. When talking about corruption, co
Cola is a corrupt company. You want to talk about
racial issues, social issues, Coca Cola held classes on why
white employees were like subhuman. If you want to talk
about like spiritual things. This stuff literally eats away your
brain and your body. It eats away your stomach, and

(50:29):
it corrupts your stomach. Acid, which has a direct I say,
it eats the brain. It has a direct connection to
the brain for everything. Fullness cues when you have butterflies
in your stomach, when you feel gutted, when something horrible happens.
Coke just destroys all that, as do all these other products.
I mean, coke cola has everything. It's it's got the

(50:52):
spiritual aspect, it's got the corruption, it's got the conspiracies,
it's got all that stuff. It's got the New World
Order written all over it. It's it's just like all
the stuff that you're interested in and tuning into a
show like this, Why they don't want coke cole I
love Coke Cola. It's it's more than that. You have
to think outside the box. You have to think in
more complex terms. Not everything is just like a black

(51:13):
and white political issue. It's part of that NPC thought too. Again.

Speaker 4 (51:17):
Yeah, I agreed to one hundred percent.

Speaker 5 (51:20):
Our country has commissions that are trying to figure out
white people are so sick. We know why.

Speaker 4 (51:28):
Yeah, I don't want to put this in like an
blaming an age demographic, but if you look out the boomers,
I mean they basically bought everything hook line and singer
that the government threw at them. There was Yes, I'm
not saying every boomer there was critical thinkers, but a
lot of the mass population of boomers, you know, they

(51:49):
believe what's what's the articles in the New York Post
that a weapon that Iran had, Iraq had weapons mass destruction,
That drinking coke is great for you that believe everything
your government it says, you should salute the flag. We've
done nothing wrong. The United States is the best, best, best.
Every country is worse, worse, worse in that generation cheese, milk, bread, Yeah,

(52:10):
that generation really. I mean, then you look at it now,
a lot of those these boomers are still around, but
they're they're you know, they're they're the heads of these corporations.
You know, they're in their sixties, you know, running these things,
and they have the same kind of ideology, you know.
I mean, you can look at it as almost like
a selfish generation. And again I'm not speaking for every

(52:32):
boomer out there, but I'm.

Speaker 5 (52:34):
Just you're pissing off eighty percent of the audience.

Speaker 2 (52:37):
I'm just U.

Speaker 5 (52:39):
We'll just talk.

Speaker 4 (52:40):
I'm just talking. Well, I'm just talk it.

Speaker 5 (52:42):
Let me add let me add another another group to
this list, because gen Z is also part of the
problem too. They have by far the highest rate of
consumption for energy drinks, the highest rate of consumption for
flavored drinks. Gen Z is responsible for the promotion of
some of the worst chemical products on the market. I

(53:03):
mean millennials too, I'm a millennial. I think I'm a millennial.
Millennials too, I think they're just a few percentage points
behind gen Z. Something like the Boomers gave us the milk,
cheese and dairy and Coca Cola, and now the gen
Z's millennials.

Speaker 4 (53:18):
But the gen z s seem to be more aware
of other things. I mean, they're they're aware of health issues,
they're aware of the political aspect, they're aware of issues
of what really caused World War one, world War two.
So yeah, I agree that that's one of the things
that I see though as a negative, is these these

(53:39):
energy drinks, but a lot of them come and go,
you know, they stay for a little bit and then
they're gone. So hopefully that kind of dies out. Yeah,
because the amount of health problems with the these energy drinks.
And I see a lot a lot, I see a
lot less kids vaping nowadays. Two that's gone out of
style because of that's straight poison of putting metal in

(54:01):
your lungs. You're better off smoking cigarettes.

Speaker 5 (54:03):
But you know, energy drinks literally, if you drink enough
of them, if you drink what the average gen z
drinks for energy drinks, it literally eats your stomach away.
And there are so many people that have drunk so
many energy drinks that at some point you start to
cough up and vomit blood. There are so many medical

(54:25):
cases of this where the energy drinks have literally eaten
your esophagus and your stomach, and now you have trouble
digesting food and swallowing because it's just eaten away the
lining of everything. That's like an a recognized condition of
energy drink consumption. That's crazy. It's almost worse the cigarettes.

Speaker 3 (54:43):
You got it.

Speaker 4 (54:43):
I mean, you've got these people that own these companies
like Logan Paul I believe he owns Prime Energy Drinks
and he's, you know, a YouTube star. He made his
money off being a YouTube star just doing stupid stunts
and I mean craziness.

Speaker 5 (54:58):
Man, Well, we have a polluted and poisoned state of
mind and body, don't we. And then hey, you still
got the Gerber Corporation. Gerber still being sued as of
September sixteenth, being suit over that heavy metal and the
toxic chemicals they have in the Gerber food. And yet
you know still see commercials Gerber it's what babies need. Well,
they don't need all the heavy metals and chemicals.

Speaker 4 (55:19):
Yeah, we have a picture of a healthy baby on
our label.

Speaker 5 (55:21):
See we care, Yeah, we care. They've been sued as
long as I can remembers bones. Yeah, it was like
a skeleton of a baby on that package.

Speaker 4 (55:33):
It's like it's like the specter of death on it
with a sickle.

Speaker 5 (55:38):
I'll say one positive thing and a final comment. We
have to go. We're done with the show tonight. Only
one hour, part two of this of this little series
this week. But RFK Junior says again to shock it
shocks people. I was, oh, what are you talking about?
He said, we need to re examine infant formula in
the United States and we need to change it and

(55:59):
figure out why it's filled with so many toxic chemicals,
and it's so weird. It doesn't matter what your politics
are for someone to say that, he's totally right, by
the way, for someone to say that, and then like
the whole country, everybody on every side of the political spectrum,
what's this guy talking about infant formula that's for babies?
What do you mean it's got toxic chemicals in it?

(56:20):
It says it on the side of the container, and
people are like genuinely shocked. And that just kind of
takes me back to the main point tonight. Like a
listener genuinely had no idea. Coca Cola is a terrible company.
People genuinely have no idea. Baby formula is poison. People
have no idea. And so that's why I do shows
like this, because people genuinely have no idea, and we

(56:40):
try to inject some humor and stuff like that, but
it's people don't have any idea, So we have a
responsibility to give you an idea. That's why I do this. Mike,
final comments and thanks for joining us, by the.

Speaker 4 (56:50):
Way, Yeah, no problem. My final comment would kind of
would be in line with what you just said. Read
the label, I mean, and a lot of the stuff
they have to put what's in it, and they think
consumers are so stupid that they'll they'll put it on
the label that it's got poisons in it. But they're like, yeah,
they'll buy it anyway, because guess what, we have this

(57:11):
cool color graphic on the front of it, and we've
got these commercials that were pumping out of this happy
family watching football on Sunday, all drinking coke. It's you know,
how could it be bad for us?

Speaker 5 (57:23):
Yep? And hey remember the RUD report from the University
of Connecticut with I think they did it with some
quote African American group, salut, I think some black group.
They found that Coca Cola, all these energy drinks that
we consume fast food type products. I don't think fast
food companies per se, but fast food product type products

(57:46):
that these companies inject eighty percent of their marketing. I
guess ad money they put all of that eighty percent
into black and Hispanic communities. If you want to talk
about like some kind of systemic racism, you'll find that
at Coca Cola. You'll find that at the Mars Corporation
and all the other discusting companies that intentionally target people

(58:10):
with dark skin to sell them this trash and this poison.
And then you wonder why blacks have like one of
the highest rates of disease in the United States, or
Hispanics are so overweight and fat. It's because of these companies.
So if you want to fight racism, well there's one
place to start. If you want to fight, like, I
don't know, corporate greed, start with the Coca Cola. I

(58:33):
don't know how people can like drink coke and drink
Starbucks but also fight the man like that is the
man you're drinking the man. It really, it's really so weird,
so weird. Anyway, that's my thought. That's the show tonight, Mike.
Thanks for joining us. I appreciate it. We'll do another
show on a Friday sometime soon. That was a great
presentation you gave on Kubrick. By the way, thanks again
for that. People really liked it.

Speaker 4 (58:54):
Oh, thank you. I've got two more ideas. I'll share
it to you offline. That's for future shows.

Speaker 5 (59:01):
Okay, great, great, fantastic all right, Tstradio dot info, rdiable
at yahoo dot com. Only a one hour show tonight.
Very busy this week, but tomorrow and Friday will be
normal shows and Friday will be the video stream. Tst
radio dot info, like I said, is our website. It
has everything on it that you need to know about
the show and also if you are able to buy

(59:26):
us a coffee, that would really support us. The links
are below, buy a book or subscribe to the ad
free archive if you don't like the ads, which who does?
I don't like the ads either. It's all on the website.
Tstradio dot info. Thank you for listening, Stay safe, stay
in form, stay healthy. We'll be back tomorrow night with
a show on ancient history and megalithic sites and a

(59:51):
new discovery at Go Beckley, Tepe.
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