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September 22, 2025 120 mins
Three of the biggest lobbies in Washington DC are sugar, dairy and meat. We should be forgiven for thinking that federal guidance to fry foods in beef tallow, drink more whole milk, and put sugar in Coca-Cola, are part of a corporate conspiracy of coercion to further undermine public health. On a positive note, more people are finally recognizing that America's health problems are a direct result of the excessive consumption of not only the above mentioned products, but of additives and chemicals, compounded by massive portion sizes, encouragement to eat additional meals, and sophisticated psychological techniques that are employed to mislead and gaslight the consumer into believing YOLO.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hello, anybody home today, I want you to open your mind.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
I've almost done on the conclusion that the story is subdambing,
that the mass of Apple people can't deal with it.
We are improvesis of developing a who series of techniques.
Two bid people actually to love their certitude.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
We face a hostile ideology, global in scope, atheistic in character.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Ruthless in purpose, and insiduous in methode.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Or we are opposed around the world by a monolithic and.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for expanding
its sphere of influence.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
To change the minds and the attitudes and the beliefs
of the people to bring about one.

Speaker 4 (00:47):
World socialist totalitarian government.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists.

Speaker 5 (00:53):
It is patterned itself after every dictator who's ever planted
the ripping imprint of a boot on the pages of history.
It's the beginning of time.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
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 and tools that conquest do that necessarily can
with barts and extortionions and foot there are weapons that

(01:21):
re simply fight stents prejudices.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
As you connect the dots between different people, organizations.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Religions, history, suddenly the picture starts to form.

Speaker 6 (01:32):
The Kingdom of God is within men, not one man
nor a group of men.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
Someone born in the United States is not more special
than someone born in Mexico.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
Someone who is white is not more special than someone
who is black.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
They're just vehicles for the consciousness to experience. They do
not want your children to be educated.

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

Speaker 3 (01:56):
It was learned that the aliens had men and were
then manipulating matters people through secret societies, witchcraft, magic, the occult,
and religion.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
They're reach into our children, music, television, books, right my
children's existence.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
How can I just still advise that are stand with
an efficiency.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
So if you have the opportunity to stand next to
one of.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
These machines, it feels like an altar to an alien god.

Speaker 1 (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 production of the army.

Speaker 5 (02:27):
Too many others know what's happening out there, and no one,
no government agency, has jurisdiction over 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 mankind in
the Twilight Center.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
About time some of you got acquainted with the real
hard truth. It's the haw that says I will not acquiesce.

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

Speaker 3 (03:00):
If you don't connect the dots, just a mass.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
Of what's all this about?

Speaker 3 (03:08):
You are listening to the Secret Teachings Radio. I'm your host,
Ryan Gable. Thank you so much for tuning in to
another new edition of TST Radio, new Monday through Friday,
every night of the week, brand new and independent and uncensored.

(03:31):
I'm your host, Ryan Gable. Tstradio dot info is the
website already. Gable at yahoo dot com is the email. Now,
this week is a little bit different. As I told
you last week it would be. It won't be much
different for you, but for me, it helps to explain
every little thing that goes on behind the scenes here

(03:52):
on The Secret Teachings. I will be taking a relatively short,
relatively long three and a half days of what I
guess you could call a vacation. I don't really get
the luxury of not having to work. I still have
to do the show ahead of time. So these episodes
of the Secret Teachings this week, most of them are

(04:15):
recorded ahead of time, and so there may be something
in the news that I miss. If you hear that
on any of the shows tonight, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday Friday,
will be back live. But if you hear that on
any of the shows and you're thinking, why didn't he
cover X, or why didn't he cover why? That's the
reason it's important to me that you as an audience

(04:37):
are aware of that, that you know that, and that
I'm at least attempting to communicate things that might sound
kind of kind of strange if I'm not covering them.
You know, I go out of town for two days
and anything could happen, and then I have a show
pre prepared on something random, and it's like, why didn't

(04:59):
he talk about it? Well, that's the reason why so
pre recorded shows and a live show Friday. If you
missed our Friday show last week, I hope you got
a chance to listen to it and watch it. But
if you missed it, please go into the archive. The
show is called Eyes Wide Open, and we did a

(05:22):
three hour presentation on Eyes Wide Shut. And it was
a strange show for me, one because that movie creeps
me out, but two because I kind of almost played
the co host role unintentionally. Our good friend and normal
co host, Mike d did a lot of the footwork,

(05:43):
a lot of the research, and relied on me for
the esoteric interpretation of the symbols and the scenes. But
I wanted to give Mike another round of applause for
that show. I thought it was fantastic. Thank you for
listening to the full show if you have, if you haven't, again,
check it out. It's free, or if you're a subscriber
to get the ad free show. It's been in the

(06:03):
archive all weekend. And if you've already listened, I would
like to see it on video. There's the free video
on YouTube and x and Facebook. Of course, it could
get taken down at any time, which is why we
just do the audio archive and I keep everything, even
the videos. I keep everything on several local hard drives

(06:25):
just in case anything ever happens, I have all of
it backed up. That's the reason I don't really go
out of my way to post additional content because things
get removed, and I think things will get removed more
and more over the next three years and into the future.

(06:47):
We will talk more about that this week on the show.
I have a show planned on the history of Antifa.
That is a show you do not want to miss.
Before we get started, since it is Monday, I wanted
to fill you in on some behind the scenes things.

(07:07):
I mentioned a week ago that we have a cash
app and a PayPal and a buy me a Coffee.
Usually takes about a week to two weeks, sometimes three
weeks to really get new things, whether it's a book
or it's show news or something. It usually takes about
that amount of time one week if I'm lucky, three

(07:28):
weeks to really get the idea into circulation. But we've
already got a people, a few people that signed up
for Buying Me a Coffee slash Buy Me a Books.
I wanted to thank them. Joey, someone was the name
they used, but it's Liquid Sunshine, who I know is
in our chat room as well. And Suzanne Button also

(07:50):
became a buy me a Coffee. I don't know what
you call that a patron, a donation, a membership. I
think I think it's called supporter. Whatever it is, though,
thank you so much Suzanne and Liquid Sunshine for signing up,
and Joey for signing up on our buy me a
Coffee slash buy me a book, or I think of

(08:12):
it as buy me a tea. Thank you so much
for supporting the show that way. And also I did
not receive a notification until I checked the app, and
our good friend Gary sent us a donation for being
correct about a lot of the things that are happening
that everybody else thought I was crazy for. Thank you, Gary.

(08:36):
Gary's been a longtime show supporter. We really appreciate Gary, Suzanne, Joey,
Liquid Sunshine, everybody who supports the show, which is why
I wanted to take just a moment here, and I
wanted to go through some of the recent subscribers and
people who have bought books. I've sold a lot of
copies of Liberty Shrugged recently. I guess people are wanting

(08:56):
to learn more about American history and civics. That's a
great book to do it. There are several listeners that
are using it in their homeschool class, which is a
big honor. But I wanted to go through the I
have my I guess you could say it's an archive
of customers recently, people that have subscribed or grabbed a book,
and I wanted to just name some names and let
you know how much I appreciate you supporting the show.

(09:19):
Jason Phillips, Michael Fibbs, Mark Finch, Ian Hurson, Mike Youngman,
Beverly Simmons, Rosaline Brown or Rosalina Brown, excuse me, Ashley Descheltel, Elvis,
Mick Schwartz, Michael Schwarzberg, Christopher Miller, William Carroll, Clarifa, Jay Adams,

(09:44):
Randy Keel, Julian Adams, Jacob Weiskhart, Elizabeth Hogan. Thank you
so much for either subscribing, resubscribing, or getting a copy
of one of my books. I have a few more
names on the second page here, pedro Osa, Michael Mitchalik.

(10:05):
I apologize if I pronounced anybody's name incorrectly. Joshua Miller,
Jeffrey du Boy, Richmond Tabor, Sarah Kirkpatrick, Caesar Schiavone or Schiavone,
Steve Braffennick, Leonard A. Sunshion or Asuncion Sunshon, Leonard Nicholas Moore,

(10:27):
Travis Kerfoot, Gary is in here again. Another tip of
the hat to you, Gary, Lisa Matthewson, Robert Edwards, Arthur Butler,
and Ken Hazel. And I do believe we might even
have a third page, yes, Catherine Carlson, James Stanley, Daniel Thompson,
Paul Bringard, Jerome Carrier, Daniel Narducci, Todd Sally, Eric Fox,

(10:55):
Christopher Sorling, Brian Pessick, Christopher Christopher Soorland's on here or twice,
Timothy Moore, Donna Ansel, Patrick Taft Junior, Timothy Pratt, Christopher Judd,
and Stephen Oliver. Thank you so much. If I did
not name your name, you're just on the older list.

(11:16):
But these are people that have subscribed or purchase books
since mid April that are at the top of the
list here for recent contributors to the show, thank you
so much for being a supporter and keeping TST Radio
on air. As you know, probably we have no absolutely
noboddy telling us what to say and what to do.

(11:38):
We have no money coming from any source at all.
There's no advertisers, there's no sponsorships. The only income we
have is when you listen to the free archive and
here those annoying ads, but Speaker pays us for that.
That's our main source of income, along side of all

(12:01):
the people that are just named buying books and subscribing
to the ad free archive at tst radio dot info.
That keeps us on air. And of course when kind
guests or listeners, kind listeners of the show do things
like sign up for buying a coffee or send us

(12:23):
a few dollars to help us out, like Gary has.
It's really not just appreciated, but it is the a
financial fuel that keeps this show on the air. So
I wanted to take a couple of minutes here at
the beginning of tonight's episode and thank everybody who has
participated supported us, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, and
remind you if you again want to speak with me,

(12:46):
you can do that on the Friday show. I don't
know if I'm going to keep my stream Yard subscription.
Had I bumped it, up to the full subscription, which
is twice the price, and it's kind of expensive. They
have an option for a webinar, and if I think

(13:07):
it's pretty simple. I haven't really looked at it, but
if I can figured that out, how to get the
webinar working, we could do a webinar and put it
behind the subscription wall on the website and then do
like a two week promo and then have a webinar
for two three hours where you can jump on and
you can participate and we can have a conversation. If
you're a fan of Ground zero plus, some of you

(13:29):
are hearing this show on that platform right now. That's
not our only platform. It's a one stream that you get.
But if you're hearing this on Ground zero plus, you
should know two things. One, we have the show five
nights a week. But two, you know that Clyde also
does the webinar or he does a it's a webinar option,
but he does the chat with Clyde, And that's something

(13:51):
that I might be able to do on my own
through this stream yard platform. So I'm thinking about doing that.
If you're interested in doing a secret teachings kind of webinar,
slash talk. We can set that up. Even if it's
twenty thirty people, It's still something that I think is
worth it to those of you who really enjoy the show.

(14:13):
And I mean that's I should note that you know
you only need In radio, they say, if you get
a phone call, you have somewhere around you know, a
hundred or maybe it was a thousand when I was
on CBS, like a thousand people listening for one phone call.
So if you've got loaded lines, you know you've got

(14:36):
probably tens of thousands of people listening, depending on how
many lines you have. And it's it's kind of similar
to a piece of advice I got a long time
ago about supporters of your show. You don't need everybody
donating a dollar or everybody buying something. You only need
a handful of people that really appreciate what you do,

(14:57):
who will continue to support you because they see value
in it. And so if we only have I mean
tens of thousands, one hundred thousand listeners around the world,
but if we only have you know, fifty people that
consistently support us, I mean that is enough to get by.
And those fifty people are instrumental and keeping this show
on air, So thank you so much. If you're one
of them. I think we have more than fifty people

(15:19):
that consistently support us in some way. But if you're
one of them, thank you. And if you can't afford it,
I know a lot of people lose their jobs and
have to cancel subscriptions. If you can't afford it's that's okay.
You can always listen to the free archive and then
you get the Friday show for free. You can still
get your TST fix one way or the other. Okay.

(15:39):
So I've spent about fifteen minutes on that. Let us
set that aside and let's talk about the main subject tonight.
I was trying to think what would be the best
way to start this show, and I was trying to
figure out what the best way would be because there's

(16:00):
really two episodes that I could not even squeeze, Like
there's only a little bit there, but there's like two
episodes that I could pull out of the subject matter
tonight that there are several different things that are going
on that are really really important in regard to I,

(16:21):
in my opinion, everything public health, civil discourse, spirituality, the supernatural,
and they revolve around I mean, really, if I'm being
if I'm being really raw, the whole idea for tonight's

(16:42):
show and are part two of this, which I'm hoping
Mike Dee can join me for part two he said
he might be able to. Was an email that I
got from a listener. And I'll probably reference this several times.
It's just an email that really inspire me. And it
wasn't even necessarily like a positive email. It was an

(17:04):
email from a listener named Daniel. And I'm not sure
if Daniel is okay with me using the full names.
I'll just say Daniel. It's also my middle name, so
it's not really giving anything away, but a listener name Daniel.
And people say things to me like this all the time.
They'll email me and say, you know, you need to
lighten up, or you need to you need to get

(17:27):
you know, you need to get something that makes you relaxed.
And so Daniel messaged me, and he messaged me after
the show we did. I actually don't recall the episode,
but it was a show probably two weeks ago. He
emailed me on three weeks ago, probably maybe three weeks ago. Yeah,
because this was on the twenty eighth of August, and

(17:47):
he said, based on what I had settled that show
about Coca Cola. He said, for real, man, do you
really think having a bottle of coke in your house
is going to make you fat? He said, you're such
an ass sometimes, chill. Not everybody is like you. Be
safe and be kind. I appreciate those emails. Obviously, I

(18:10):
can be an ass sometimes, but I'm also an ass
intentionally because I like to push the boundaries of what's
considered acceptable. I don't consider coke acceptable. But the point is,
when Daniel emailed me that, I fired an email back
and I said, no, it's not that I think it's
going to make me fat. I said, I'm repulsed by

(18:33):
Coca Cola. And let me explain why. I said, Coca
Cola is a disgusting company. They lie, they cheat, they steal,
they manipulate science, they poison people, they export disease. And
I told him, I said, I genuinely understand what you're saying,

(18:53):
but I think people need to be angry about these
kinds of companies. Reject them outright, I said, completely and totally.
And Daniel emailed me back and he said, thank you
for responding, and I know coke is not good, it's
not a good beverage, but I didn't know they were
such scumbags. Thanks for the information. Now, this is something

(19:19):
that we're going to go into more detail on in
the second part of tonight's show, hopefully with Mike d
But he's like a thirty seventy thirty. He can make
it seventy percent, he can't make it. But I told
him about the show and he was all excited. He's like,
I gotta do the Coca Cola show with you. So
we're going to try to save that for part two

(19:40):
if he can join us. Coca Cola. Though, this is
what struck me is that Daniel's email was really genuine
and a lot of people have that kind of response.
You hear me say something like Coke's disgusting, it's poison,
and you just think, well, that's Ryan being an ass. Again,

(20:00):
not everybody doesn't like coke. Most people like coke, so
you know, you just kind of being an ass. You're
not really appealing to your audience something like this, and
if you do it rationally like Daniel did, now I'll
respond back and we'll have a conversation. The thing is,
though I do sometimes live in a world where I

(20:23):
do not have any It's not that I don't have awareness.
I don't have awareness of the awareness. I'm aware that
I am very different than the average person. I am
aware that I am a very weird radio quote personality.
I'm aware that I do not fit into any of

(20:44):
the molds. I'm very aware of that. I don't know
if I'm aware that I'm aware of it, So I'm
not really sure if I'm consciously paying attention to the
fact that I realize this stuff because I think it.
To me, it doesn't matter, you know. To me, it's
not an identity. To me. It's like I don't like coke.

(21:04):
Let's move on. It's not like an identity for me,
and I think for some people it is. If I
say Cox gross, then by default it's like people think, well,
I'm drinking coke. He thinks coke gross, so you must
think I'm gross, which I think is a really kind
of I think it's an immature thing to think. But

(21:25):
I also don't know how someone is hearing it on
the show, So the context obviously matters a lot. Context
always matters, but context always matters a lot, especially when
you're making kind of offhanded comments like I had made
about Coca Cola, although I've done god knows how many
shows I've done on the subject in the past, which
is also another weird thing when you do like fifteen,

(21:47):
sixteen years of radio and people are new listeners and
they're like, you ever done a show on Freemason, You
ever done a show on Coke? You ever done a
show in the New World Order. It's like, yeah, week one,
we've done that before. I got to learn or remember
not everybody's heard sixteen years of radio. I don't even
remember what I talked about last month. I've had listeners
go and find things and I'm like, did I do
a show I don't remember doing a show on that?

(22:09):
Oh my god, did I interview that person? I don't
remember it? That person You don't always remember, even if
you're running and hosting the show. Okay, So anyway, the
point is I'm not aware that I'm aware. I suppose
they're conscious that I'm aware, and I don't really care
because it's not an identity for me. But when I
sit back and I think about this email I got

(22:30):
from Daniel, he just fired it off, probably didn't think
much of it. Short reply. I've been thinking about this
email a lot, and this is how I do shows.
There's one thing that I think that's a topic that's important,
and then I just pull it into a word file
and then I build on it. And usually whatever I
pull into the file becomes like a big story. There's

(22:52):
some recent news which we'll get to in a moment,
and I build it into a show. So I was
thinking about this Coca Cola thing. I thought, my goodness,
Daniel genuinely did not know that Coca Cola is like
a really bad company. Daniel genuinely did not know that

(23:15):
Coca Cola does some really nasty stuff, like they payoff scientists,
they lie, they I don't have specific cases, but I'm
pretty sure they break the lull. They pollute, And these
aren't the reasons like I hate coke because they pollute

(23:38):
or something like that. That's not why I dislike coke.
There's different reasons why I dislike coke, because the different
reason why I like dislike PEPSI there's different reasons why
I dislike soda or pop, depending on what part of
the country you're from. I always said, I always said pop,
and then I kind of started saying soda as I
got older, but I always said pop, but the because

(24:00):
you know, pops, shp pops. So I just don't like
these companies, but I also don't like the product. And
there's a lot of reasons I don't like these things
until you read about what these companies do. And again
we'll talk about Coca Cola in part two of this show.

(24:22):
But Coca Cola has worked, has spent money. Okay, so
you buy a coke and then they take the money,
and then they give that to scientists to publish articles
and to newspapers to publish those articles or to publish

(24:43):
their own articles studies as a post, articles that attempt
to convince you, who just gave them this money for coke,
that there's absolutely no downside of consuming coke. Of course,
that that's all based on the assumption that you're having
like a glass of it right now, and there's no

(25:05):
context for you're probably having more than one, you're probably
having it every day. You're probably drinking, as an American,
far more in excess of what any other country consumes
in a singular setting, lead and load in a week
or a month, and that's a lot of chemicals and
that's a lot of sugar, and that's a lot of problems.
And I don't frankly care if it's real sugar or not.

(25:30):
We've talked about that recently. The only reason, there's one,
one reason that the current White House is pushing let's
use real sugar for soda. It has nothing to do
with health. It has nothing to do with making America
healthy again. Instead, it has everything to do with the

(25:54):
sugar industry deals that the White House has worked out.
That's what it's about. It's about the sugar industry. It's
not about making you healthier. In fact, it's quite the opposite.
It's about making deals with the sugar industry pretending like
they want to make you healthier, as if drinking soda
at all is quote healthy. And then I speculated that

(26:16):
if there is a change in sugar content, they're probably
going to increase the amount of sugar in these products,
especially because high frutose corn syrup and other sweeteners depending.
I think most cokes use like a high frutose corn
serp or something like that. Different sodas as well. Coke's
not the only one, but these these products use a

(26:39):
lot of different sweeteners and most of them like HFCs
is way sweeter than sugar, So we're to an as
I think aspertain they estimate is like six hundred percent
sweeter than sugar, and HFCs, I don't know if it's
that high, but it's it's markedly higher than sugar. So
they're going to probably have to add some other kin

(27:00):
or a lot of additional sugar in order to get
the flavor profile to be the same, because they tell
us it's gonna taste the same. So no big deal,
But that all comes from sugar industry deals that the
White House has worked out. It's not about health about
and it's not even really about say it's about business.

(27:20):
It's not even really about business. It's just about an
industry that has a stranglehold lobbyists and the and culture
of it on the country and on many countries. You know, famously,
Coca Cola is big all over the world. It's big
in Italy, it's big in Asia, it's big in Europe,

(27:41):
it's big anywhere you go. It's big in the America,
is everywhere north central South. In fact, I was on
a train the other day going to Tokyo, and I
had promised and I did not have the ability to
do it, but I promised Derek the Night Soccer that
I would get him a picture of this. He said

(28:01):
he's never seen it before, which really surprised me. I
thought it was like an ad that was popul there
in the US. But there was an ad on a
train that had, you know, Coca Cola, and it says
real magic, and then it's also trademarked. Real magic is
also trademarked. But you see that, And I'm sitting there
on the train and I'm thinking, you know, when I

(28:21):
think of magic, I think of a different kind of magic,
and I also think of broad casting the spelling of
a article, which is a ritual enchantment, It is a charm,
it is an incantation, and that's being broadcast on the television,

(28:47):
or that's being broadcast on your social media whatever. Piece
of paper on a train and a little plastic cover
that says Coca Cola, it's real magic trademark like blue
Chickens trademark, Blue Avians trademark. Coke Cola's trademarkets real magic.
So nobody else can use that statement. So I saw that,

(29:12):
and I wanted to get a picture for Derek because
he had said he had not seen that image. I
didn't get a picture because it's there were people around,
and it's not some it's very extremely rude to take
pictures on the train. I'll get a picture next time
of it, but probably just look it up online too.
Real magic, And I thought about it. I thought, well,

(29:33):
coke really is magic. It's magical how a company can
be so deceitful, how they can lie so much to
so many people and yet still be so popular all
over the world, and how you can have people that
listen to shows like this can't assume because you're a

(29:53):
listener that you've heard all my shows. But you listen
to shows like this, and you've heard probably me give
in depth presentations on things like this, and yet you're
still unaware as our as our friend Daniel is that
Coca Calla is a bad company. It's really crazy. It's
it's crazy that I on the show, I think about

(30:15):
it like this. I on the show can say something
like I don't want coke in my house, right, I
don't want coke in the house, and that is enough
to get people to just like kind of freak out,
or I don't eat meat. I think meat's gross. I
don't like meat. People kind of freak out. I want
to cheat meat. It's like I say one thing on

(30:39):
a two hour show, five of those a week, and
like that becomes my identity. Yet Coke can pay scientists off,
Coke can lie to you, can steal from you, can
sell you a horrible product. And yet for some reason

(31:00):
people just like don't know about coke. You got to
have some pretty powerful pr to get away with this stuff.
And also it's real magic. It's real magic. In some ways,
Coca cola is better than some other beverages. I suppose

(31:23):
it depends on you ask, but coke cola is probably
something better to drink than dairy. And then you get
into the weeds of that and it's like, well, there's
a difference between whole milk and other milks, et cetera. Yeah,
but we're talking about generalities here, and it should be
assumed that a cow that you raise on a farm,

(31:45):
that you have a little bit of milk from here
or there, is different than widespread industrialization, which is where
ninety percent of the pop ninety plus nine find ninety
eight ninetynine percent of the population gets it from and
of course, just like the sugar industry, RFK Junior wants
to expand access to milk because that's the dairy industry.

(32:09):
So none of this is really about health. It's really
about the sugar industry and the soda industry and the
dairy industry, along with all of the other industries. Which
reminds me of the last time we did a show
in this where I talked about remember that discussion we

(32:30):
were having as a country about these possible changes to SNAP,
and I loved what RFK Junior said about SNAP. And
they said, what makes you think people shouldn't be able
to buy junk food with it, mister Kennedy, And he said, well,

(32:51):
it's in the title SNAP. It's the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
It's like, yeah, it is in the name, and we
just pretend like we don't know what SNAP means, the
supplemental nutrition. Okay, junk food is not nutrition. It's junk.
It's in the that's in the name too, junk food.
It's in the name SNAP is not something that should

(33:13):
be used to buy junk food. It's all banks that
are that are subsidizing the production of these products. And
it's a similar reason to why there's so much cheese
and meat in everything, right, because those industries are subsidized.
There's also the history of cheese going back to World
War Two and the government having too much cheese, and
then government cheese and cheese. We had too much cheese

(33:38):
and know what to do with it, so we just
started putting it in everything. It's like that SpongeBob episode
where they sell pretty patties, these patties that have like
colors on them and they're dyed and and everybody signs up,
you know, to get a pretty patty and they make
I think it's the same as they make all this
money Spongebobs, like, we know what to do with the money.

(34:00):
We tried burning it, burying it. In the end, we
just decided to give it all away. That's basically they
do with the government cheese. They just gave it away
and they started putting it into everything, which is why
when you see like double triple meat cheese, supreme pizza
with extra cheese, and then there's cheese baked into the cheese,
and the cheese that's baked into the cheese is baked
into the meat, and then that's wrapped in a loaf

(34:23):
of bread and then we deep fry that and then
we stick it inside of the crust of the pizza,
and then after we do that, we put more cheese
on top of it. You know, that kind of a
commercial from like Domino's or Papa John's, Better Ingredients, better Pizza,
Papa John's. That's all industry, that's all marketing, that's all subsidy,

(34:44):
and that's part of the reason we have such you know,
problems with even just the perception of health and these
kinds of things. But anyway, the point was going back
to the Snap issue. You saw all of these influencers, right,
these influencers that are supposed to be independent voices.

Speaker 4 (35:01):
They're supposed to.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Be the symbol of free speech and free thought.

Speaker 4 (35:08):
And yet all.

Speaker 3 (35:10):
Of these different mostly right wingers went online and reported
to their following almost verbatim statements, you know, clown World
and some of the other of these profiles, almost verbatim statements,
and they went something like this, the government wants to

(35:32):
stop you from buying soda with Snap. That's a violation
of your most basic rights, which it's not. And it's
kind of weird that people that pretend to be like
I'm for the Republic. I'm for the constitution. Believe that
buying soda subsidized with tax dollars is somehow a constitutional

(35:55):
right or some thing like that. It's total nonsense. You
can still buy it. The government isn't stopping you from
buying it. It's just that they're not going to force
taxpayers to pay for it to subsidize an industry. You
can buy it. It's already dirt cheap because of the

(36:16):
subsidies of corn and syrup and sugar. You just don't
get someone else to buy it for you. That's the
only difference. But they all started pushing the same thing.
And then it turns out that it was the soda
industry that gave them, and we had the actual scripts.
I did a show on it a couple months ago,
the actual scripts where they were these people were given scripts.

(36:38):
None of this is real. None of it's real. These
all these influencers, and I don't mean, you know, silly influencers.
I mean all the name the people that every day
it's breaking news, this breaking news that my insiders, this
my insiders that my contacts in the White House, my
you know, conservative base, all the people that that that

(37:00):
you know, we help to get the president elected whatever.
All those conservative right wing people, they all work for
an industry. They get the script and they repeat the script,
and it's like that with everything. It's like that with soda,
which was just totally disgusting. It's people that supposedly are
voices of free press and free speech and free thought,

(37:24):
and they're just literally copying and paid, some of them
copied and pasted it. Literally they're copying and pasting talking
points from the soda industry. And then again, it's even
more ironic because we know that the left has no
idea what the constitution is. The right pretends like they do.
They tattoo me the people in their forearm, you know, underneath,

(37:47):
like an air fifteen and a skull, and then for
some reason they think that makes them an expert. And
yet they think that soda because they're paid to think
that it's somehow a constitutional right. It's one of the
most ridiculous things in the history of American politics. I
couldn't imagine, what couldn't imagine what our founders would think.

(38:09):
It's just it's embarrassing generations later. But it's because they're paid.
They're paid in the same way that the scientists will
come out and with a straight face say, oh yeah, yeah,
Coke calls great company. They don't do anything wrong because
they paid them to to say that. It's it's really
that simple. It's not it's not a complicated thing. It's

(38:31):
really really that simple. So the industries, they're like the
dairy industry, the ministry, sugar industry, they dictate to us
what is reality? You know what I mean. It even
contributes to things like social animosity, like racial animosities, because

(38:53):
if you look at soda companies, look got Sprite, who
does Sprite advertised to? I mean, I can tell you
right now, they don't advertise to quote white people. They
don't really advertise to you know, Asians. They advertise to blacks.
So every Sprite commercial there's like some black girl on

(39:15):
a skateboard, or some black family having dinner, which is
a pretty rare thing in America in general, let alone
a black family setting down in this big family, this
big house, very very rare, more rare than even quote
white people doing it. Because one of the divorce rates
where the children out of wedlock rates and black communities

(39:36):
they're abysmal. So they use that kind of I would
say even insulting image. It's disgusting. And we found out
in the RUD report that this is intentional. This is
where they send these companies send their money, is to
target these groups, which the RUD report from the University
of Connecticut you've heard me mentioned before, found that black

(40:01):
and Hispanic community specifically are targeted by these industries. And
that's for TV advertisements. That's for mostly TV advertisements, but
that's for other kinds of advertisements as well. And this
is Coca Cola. In fact, the report says this. It
says Coca Cola and PepsiCo brands were responsible for the

(40:22):
majority of marketing campaigns identified that targeted multicultural youth and
communities of color. Ethnically targeted marketing campaigns almost exclusively promoted
unhealthy products. So it's like, if you really wanted to
discuss some kind of like racial issue, that would be it.

(40:44):
That would be the place to start. But it's weird
that that's like the one thing that actually is like
in writing, institutionalized, and like nobody wants to discuss it.
You know, you don't see many black liberal activists. I

(41:06):
don't think I've ever seen one that we're saying something
like I'm saying it's weird because you get that in
a lot of a lot of ways, in a lot
of different categories of life. It's the same thing with
like birth in a hospital. You know, I think, for
like someone who's more of a naturalist maybe would be

(41:29):
considered like a hippie or kind of an old school
liberal or something. You know, if I say something like
I'm pretty sure that women aren't supposed to lay down
when they give birth. I'm pretty sure they're supposed to
stand up or at least find a natural position, a
squatting position that feels better for them. That's how women
have always given birth. And you only lay down to

(41:50):
appease the doctor. It's a business to make it faster.
That's why they give you the drugs. Although the baby
didn't come at this exact moment based on an estimate
we made seven eight months ago, so that means must
mean it's late. Let's induce with heavy drugs right now,
and the body's not ready, then it hurts more. And
if you say those things, you sound like or I

(42:10):
sound like some kind of feminists. It's like, that's not feminism,
that's history, that's science, and that's also just a fact.
It's just reality. It's it's also instinctual. That's a fact.
Some people might want to lay down, but like traditionally
it's not good to lay down. The opposite is true.

(42:32):
You know the woman that wants to stand up, like, no,
you're a lay of the bed, laying down the red
lane of the bun that you got lay in the bed.
You say that and people think, oh, there must be
a feminist or something. It's like no, you say, oh,
you know, they the Coca Cola, PepsiCo. They put all
their marketing money into targeting blacks and Hispanics and pretty
much anybody else who's not quote white, which is weird

(42:53):
because like in America, sixty something percent of the population
is not quote ethnical, as if white groups aren't ethnicities.
It's really weird the language that we've created for ourselves.
But in this terminology that they're using in the red
report from the University Connecticut, the idea is like non

(43:15):
white groups are targeted. Okay, well, wouldn't that mean that
this is like a literal, systemic form of racial targeting.
Why don't we talk about that? That's what gets me
is like, especially for liberals, like why don't you discuss
the Red Report, Why don't you discuss like women not
laying down in hospitals. To me, that sounds like true

(43:38):
racial justice and true like empowering of women. Do you
get what I'm saying. I hope that you do. Maybe
this is boring for some people, but I think it's important.
I think it's educational, and that's why I do shows
like this. It's not just cocolina and PepsiCo products, by
the way, it's pretty much any anything, any thing that's
not actually food. It's targeted specifically to those people. It's

(44:02):
why every time you go to a movie theater in
the United States, it's every Coca Cola commercial, every Sprite
commercial is a black family, or for Sprite, it's usually
like a girl on a skateboard or some guy dunking
up basketball, which also kind of sounds like, you know,
weirdly I guess know your audience, but the weirdly racial

(44:24):
to me because if that's not what this show is about,
but it just kind of seems like weirdly racial because
if you were to say, like, uh, what do you
know about people with dark skin out they play basketball?

Speaker 4 (44:36):
Like I'm so racist?

Speaker 3 (44:38):
Okay, what they do, but Sprite can use that image
to sell Sprite and it's just like, oh, that's their community.
It's just weird how we let companies do things that
nobody else could get away with because oh, it's coke.
So you know, they're like a family member. You know.
It's kind of like your racist Grant Paul or something,

(45:01):
and they love him, but they just are tired of
the rants. But it's like, at the same time, we
still love him. And that's what's happening with Coca Cola.
We know that they're bad.

Speaker 4 (45:15):
But it's just like it's okay, it's just an.

Speaker 3 (45:18):
Old grandpa or something in the other room, and you
don't like it, but you listen to it. I don't
have like an old grandpa like that, but I've heard
other people that supposedly do or something. So that's I'm
giving that as an example. But this is in the
report if you want to read it. So I'm trying
to break all of this down slowly. Hopefully I'm doing

(45:40):
a good job. Let's use this to parlay into some
recent news. I listened to a very brief six minute
segment of Michael Savage. You know Michael Savage rate don't
listen to Michael Savage. Don't really have an opinion on

(46:05):
him one way or the other. I mean, I know
he's a very famous talk show host, don't really listen
to him. I probably heard him more than I can
remember on the radio when I lived in Florida. I
would assume he was probably on the conservative radio stations there.
But I don't listen to Michael Savage. I don't listen
to really anybody. Don't have time or I just want

(46:28):
to relax and do something else. A few people here there,
which is like another thing too. I realized with my
own show, I don't really have time to listen to
many other people, so I can't expect people to listen
to the entirety of my show either. But I listened
to this interview with Michael Savage, and I thought, this
is really good, and I was really surprised it was

(46:49):
actually on Info Wars. I saw the clip. I didn't
even know it was on Info Wars. But Michael Savage
was talking, and he was talking about the poor healthcare
system in the United States, and I thought, wow, this
is good, and it inspired me to do a segment
on this, and then that inspired me to do a
show mixing this with that email I got from a listener,

(47:11):
and so I wanted to play you just a moment
of what Michael Savage said, and then we'll go into
the details and some of these recent current events that well,
you should be very aware of this, specifically in relationship
to the background on Coca Cola that I gave you

(47:31):
that we'll go into more details in part two, because
there are things going on all around us right now
that everybody agrees is just okay, Like all these lawsuits
against Gerber and Simply Orange and all the Coca Cola lawsuits,
all of that stuff gets conveniently left out of you know,

(47:55):
commercial television, doesn't. It doesn't. It doesn't doesn't it doesn't.
It isn't that convenient.

Speaker 4 (48:02):
Why do you think that is?

Speaker 3 (48:05):
Probably because they pay those outlets to run advertisements for them,
and because they do that, they're not going to run
segments on how Coca Cola is being sued for xyz
whatever it might be. And there is a lot, a

(48:26):
lot of these types of lawsuits. I just saw one
on Simply Orange. Had no idea there's a Simply Orange lawsuit,
and the lawsuits were just updated less than a month ago,
had no idea anyway, Let's play this Michael Savage clip

(48:47):
and then I will comment on it. I think it's
really relevant to the show. TST Radio dot info is
the website. Our archive is there. You can also listen
to the free archive. It's on the website, but elsewhere
where you listen to radio shows and podcasts. Please consider
becoming a Buy me a Coffee member supporter, or support

(49:10):
us to cash, aff and PayPal. We are independent fifteen
plus years almost sixteen, five nights a week, uncensored. I'm
Ryan Gable. This is the secret teachings. Here's Michael Savage.
I'll comment on this after.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
A place genetically. This is how he can run like this,
twenty hours a day, no alcohol. Remember that doesn't drink alcohol,
doesn't smoke. People don't give him enough credit. Tree, he's
talking about buddy presidents, garbage. It's not a good national
thing to push while you're pushing Maha with the other hand,
that's not.

Speaker 4 (49:41):
A good thing.

Speaker 1 (49:42):
You got Kennedy doing push ups? Is that that doesn't
explain health just because you do push ups at his age.
We need to get much deeper into the ecology of
health rather than just doing push ups and showing your biceps.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
That's the first part. And I thought that a year
ago to years ago when we were really hearing about Maha.
And when I thought that, I said that before, and
that was a real fringe thing to say. I don't
know if Michael Savage has been talking about this, because

(50:16):
I don't listen to his show. If he has, good
for him, sincerely good for him. But when I hear that,
I'm thinking, yeah, I've said that for years, not just
because of Maha, but I've said equivalent things for years
similar to that. And maybe it's just me. Maybe it

(50:38):
is me. Maybe if I say it, it's like repulsive
or something. But if Michael Savage says that, you know,
he's got the built in you know, the Christian conservative audience,
so maybe they, oh, oh, yeah, he's Michael Savage said,
you know, Michael Savage said, yeah, makes sense. Now Michael
Savage said it, Maybe that's what it is. Not sure anyway,

(51:00):
He's totally right, Kennedy, doing push ups doesn't really change anything.
And the president pushing fast food and soda and making
it a joke. I mean, I'll give you an example.
Remember when they hazed RFK junior with McDonald's, and I

(51:24):
don't know how many of these people are left. They
went extinct very fast. But the president's supporters were like,
oh my god, this was like the funniest thing I
think I've ever seen. I mean, what a hilarious troll.
And I tried to explain to them, you know, that's
not a nobody's trolling anybody right, like they're actually sitting

(51:46):
down to eat that because that's what they eat every day.
You get this, right, Oh, Trump is trolling the people
that don't like McDonald's. No, he's giving free advertisement to
McDonalds and he eats that every day, so that that
really doesn't make any sense. It's I don't don't really

(52:11):
understand what you're talking about. That doesn't but it's brilliant,
you have to admit, No, I don't. It's not brilliant.
It's lunch. It's lunch. And you can see Kennedy. They
brought it to him, took a picture and you can
see him clearly sitting there like I'm not I'm not
going to eat this. This is this is not food,

(52:33):
and it's not Maybe he did eat I don't know,
but it's not a hazing ritual. It's not trolling. It
was lunch. That's what it is every day, because that's
what those people eat every day. That's why they're so
disgusting and gross inside and out and spiritually as well,
because that contributes to it. Which you know, we could

(52:54):
talk about that at the beginning, but you need to
build up the background for this to get to that point,
I believe, and this is not something you can reduce
to a thirty second talking point or a five minute
clip like this is a very complex, in depth subject
that needs to be really ironed out and stretched out.
So that's just lunch. It's not a hazing ritual. It's lunch.

(53:15):
And I don't think anybody would really question that now
because I think that a lot of folks are starting
to realize, oh yeah, I think he's really eating really bad,
and like that is kind of weird, Like you're promoting maha,
but you're also eating like this, something's off here, all right.
And then they announced that the president he's really tired,

(53:37):
he's gotten fatter, he's swollen, and they say that's because
he works hard. Well, I'm pretty sure he's probably always
worked that hard. But I'm also pretty sure that mixed
with the food that's contributing to the way that he looks.
I don't understand this thing that we do in the

(53:58):
United States where you know, if you had a car
and you ran it into the guard rail and then
you looked at the car and you saw this damage
to the headlight and the whole side of the car
was you know, like you got swiped and it's just trashed,
paints pilled off, it's a dented headlight, blown out. Maybe

(54:23):
you scraped up your hubcaps or something too. You just
rip the whole side of the car off. And we're
sitting here looking at it thinking and saying out loud, Oh,
that wasn't the guardrail. That's just that's how the car was.
And that's what we do to people like the President.
That's just how they were. That's their genetics. No, it's

(54:47):
because of their lifestyle, that's the reason. And the President
has always lived like this. This isn't something new that
he's doing because he's working hard for Americans. He's always
lived like this. That he's the quintessential American image on

(55:07):
death's door. A step severely overweight, eats McDonald's, drink soda
all day, every day, and is genuinely confused why he
is the way that he is and why everybody is
the way that they are. This is the guy who
actually said to the American people, we're going to figure
out why there's so many different diseases in the country, Well.

Speaker 4 (55:29):
We know why. You don't need a PhD.

Speaker 1 (55:31):
To know why.

Speaker 3 (55:31):
It's because of the way it's you, which is what
Michael Savage is saying here. It's not a good image
to promote this. You want people to get healthy, It's
not a good image. And what this tells me is
if if people like Michael Savage, which again I don't
listen to his show, so maybe he does discuss this,
But if people like Michael Savage, which I consider to

(55:52):
be I mean, I know who he is, very famous guy.
I consider him to be kind of like the you know,
the Maine conservative sort of information source. And if people
like Michael Savage are noticing, are you also noticing? Are
we going to do something about this? You know? And

(56:16):
then it's this other weird thing we do where you know,
there's one person listening to my show right now who
will email me and say, why are you just repeating
Michael savage talking points? And those people, do you want
to choke because those people genuinely think Ryan only says
these things because he listened to Michael Savage. Have you

(56:40):
ever thought that it's at least possible that I've had
my own thoughts and that I've been saying them for
many years before this ever became mainstream. Do you ever
think about that? Guess not, because they think if Michael
Savage says it, that must be the sol of the information.

(57:01):
So that's the that's the well, that's where they're going
to go. It's very weird. I've noticed this. Here's more
of what he had to say.

Speaker 1 (57:08):
But we got to be very careful about bad diets
and health, which the president must be a little more
careful about pushing because people look up to him as
I do, with his political stances, and we have to
now understand that just because he eats McDonald's and fries
doesn't mean you should or you can.

Speaker 3 (57:29):
This is the craziest thing about the United States and
about humans. Because a president eats McDonald's, people apparently think, oh,
I can eat McDonald's too, and I can also make
America healthy by eating McDonald's. It's really sad. It's actually

(57:52):
kind of depressing. It makes me feel as if I
should just say, wow, I need to lay down. I
have a headache. That now, even the Michael Savages are
pointing out, you can't make people healthy by eating at

(58:14):
McDonald's every day. You can't make people healthy by advocating
for people to just continue to live the same lifestyle
that's making them sick and then play a game of
how do we fix this? It's really simple, But I
guess it does not. I guess it does not come

(58:39):
into their conscious awareness. They do not realize, oh, this
is the reason why. And I just imagine people sitting
at a table eating this stuff thinking, we really got
to figure out why everybody's so unhealthy. Well that's the reason. No,
this can't be, No, this can't be the reason. This

(58:59):
is McDonald's. Everybody eats McDonald's. It really is. I mean,
this is not a joke, it's not hyperbole. It really
is idiocracy, it really is. You want us to put
water on the crops, you mean, like out of the toilet. Yes,
you should put water on the crops because they will grow. Yeah,

(59:22):
but Brondo's got what plants need, it's what plants crave.
It's got electrolytes. Okay, but what are electrolytes? So they
use to make Brondo? Yeah, but why do they use
them to make Brondo? Because Brown's got electrolytes. We are
actually having that conversation, you know this, right, It's not

(59:43):
just a movie. We're actually having that conversation right now
about the president and McDonald's. Nationally, you look at countries
like India, They've got social caste system classes. Women get
grabbed in the street and dragged home to be wives
foreign women. You have feces in the street and people

(01:00:06):
taking dumps in a sacred river. And I feel still,
I still feel that this problem in the United States
is more embarrassing than that. I think because the Indians
kind of own it. They're like, yeah, my feet smell, yeah,
smell like garbage, but whatever, you're coming home to be

(01:00:29):
my wife. Americans are like genuinely confused. My doctor told me,
if I just eat, you know, three thousand calories of
McDonald's every day and cut down for my normal ten thousand,
you know, I should lose all the weight and I
can still eat the McDonald's every day. Like that's the
kind of math redoing, That's what it is. Americans are

(01:00:52):
the six hundred pound patient in doctor Nail's office. I
love that show. And the present is the enabler mother
that's sitting there feeding the kid. A lot of us
are enablers. We can still eat it. It's fine. Now
that's the problem, you know, Like again, most people can
see this everywhere in the world. This is why people

(01:01:17):
think Americans are dumb because these aren't problems. You hear
me reference It's always Sonny in Philadelphia all the time.
We played clips of it on the show Friday. There's
such a great episode where some of the characters switch
roles and they live out the They live out for

(01:01:37):
a day. They live in the shoes of this other character.
And one of the characters you know that he's dirty
and dumb, Charlie. He is telling the girl who's changing
places for m D. Her name is d. He's telling
her like how he lives his life and how she's
supposed to get ready to go to bed at night
and all this, and so she has to like huff

(01:02:01):
a bag of glue, eat a container of cat food.
And she's like, why would you do these things? He said, Well,
because you know you got you huff the glue and
you eat the cat food and it's you know, it's
like some chemical reaction. You know, your stomach feels bad
and you just kind of got to pass out and
go to sleep. He said, why would you do that? Though,
He's like, well, you're gonna wait, You're gonna want to

(01:02:22):
huff that glue and eat that cat food because here
about twenty minutes, there's gonna be about a thousand cats
outside the window. Me Alan all Night said, why do
you have a thousand cats outside the window nights cause
he's got ten thousand rats in the building. And and
then you know, Danny DeVito comes in. He he eats
the cat food real quick, and he's taking a piss
in like a bedpan because they're too lazy to walk

(01:02:43):
down the hall. And I'm just watching that episode and
it's so funny because when I see that this this
is what I think about because kind of the the
climax of the scene is when this girl says to him, so,
you know, these are not real problems, right, these aren't

(01:03:03):
real You know that nobody else does this, Like, these
are not real problems. You make these problems up. You're
eating cat food. That's why you're sick.

Speaker 4 (01:03:13):
You're huffing glue. That's why you're sick.

Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
These are not real problems, and that's I love that scene.
It's one of my favorite scenes from that show because
this is exactly what we're dealing with here in the
United States. This is what we're dealing with. We're dealing
with people that genuinely do not know. Go back to
Michael Savage in a second. I found that clip. I've

(01:03:37):
got to plate it's so funny.

Speaker 6 (01:03:40):
This is cat food, Charlie, what dude, I can explain
it all right.

Speaker 3 (01:03:43):
There's some sort of weird chemical reaction that happens when
you can buy cat food, beer, and glue.

Speaker 6 (01:03:47):
It makes you feel like extremely sick and tired, and you're.

Speaker 4 (01:03:49):
Able to fall asleep.

Speaker 6 (01:03:50):
Why would I want to make myself extremely sick and tired.

Speaker 3 (01:03:52):
Because there's gonna be about fifty cats held outside that
window all night long, and you have.

Speaker 6 (01:03:55):
New idea how that fifty cats can be. Okay, maybe
there wouldn't be cats surrounding your bill if you don't
have open cans of cat food everywhere. I for the
gotchelly on the summer window because I have ten thousand
rats running around my building, d okay, yelling the reason
to do the things that I Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:04:11):
Yeah, these are not real problems. I think that's somewhere
in the scene there. She says, these are not real problems, Charlie,
these are these are things that you make up. These
are not real problems. So maybe it's your problem, you
know what, oh your here it is.

Speaker 6 (01:04:27):
Yeah, those aren't real problems, Charlie.

Speaker 4 (01:04:30):
What do you mean they're not real problems?

Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
Those problems up.

Speaker 6 (01:04:32):
You choose to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:04:34):
This is exactly what I'm talking about this scene right here.
I love this episode. This is exactly what I'm discussing tonight.

Speaker 6 (01:04:42):
But I don't know as much as you did.

Speaker 3 (01:04:45):
Really well, that's probably way too much glue for you. D.

Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
Hey check it out.

Speaker 5 (01:04:50):
You just had yourself a glue o D.

Speaker 4 (01:04:52):
And those are pretty regular in my life. So you
learn another lesson.

Speaker 6 (01:04:54):
Don't do too much glue or your night sucks. Hold
on a second. You're saying that your life is so
terrible because you eat rat cheese and cat food and
huff glue all day long. Uh yeah, those aren't real problems, Charlie.

Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
What do you mean They're not real problem?

Speaker 6 (01:05:07):
Solves the problems up you choose to do that for
solutions to problem.

Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
My god, you know what, that is exactly what we're
dealing with here. I love a little bit of comedy
to break things up. That's what we're dealing with here.
Why are we so sick? Why are we so ober weight?
Why do we feel so bad? Why are we so inflamed?
Why can't we sleep? Why are we so angry all
the time? Why are we fighting all the time? Why
do we have so many problems? And it never occurred

(01:05:34):
to us that we've been huffing glue and eating cat
food and rat cheese and we think these are solutions
to problems. I feel depressed. I'm gonna get myself mcflurry,
i feel sad. I'm going to drink a soda and
have a cheeseburger, like these are the things that are
causing the problems. And then you gotta go. You have

(01:05:54):
to go to the next layer where people try to
use that justification of well, you know, other people eat
this stuff. Yeah, but every other country on the planet
eats a fraction of what well, maybe you except for
the British some European countries, but they eat a fraction
of what you eat.

Speaker 4 (01:06:13):
A fraction of it.

Speaker 3 (01:06:15):
Tiny fraction. I just saw the Halloween candy bags they
put out over here in Japan. They have to be
approximately twenty percent the size of American candy bags. So yeah,
people eat the same stuff, but they get very small
portions of it. So what you consume in a year,

(01:06:38):
it will take them approximately a decade to consume. And
by you, I don't even mean the audience, because I
know that most of you are not the people I'm
talking about. But I am speaking as an American collectively
about Americans. But again, these are not real problems.

Speaker 6 (01:06:56):
Uh yeah, those aren't real problems, Charlie, They're not real problems.

Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
These are not real problems. You make these problems up
and we do. Let's go back to Michael Savage.

Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
Simple, simple, There's much more. Look, I could do hours
on this. This is my subject, Alex, This is my topic,
you know. But there are ways to One last thing.
They just did a study. The longest lived people on
Earth right now are Japanese. Japanese women. Eighty percent of
the people over one hundred and japan Or women, and
all of them have one thing in common. They eat

(01:07:29):
almost no red meat, by the way, and very low
salt intakes and right now, oh, how dare you say
that we're all into the carnivore diet. The worst thing
you could do. I have study after study after study.
Carnivore diet dangerous for most people. Sodium and sodium sodium.
I don't care if it's Himalayan salt or assault from
the Gulf of the Paradise in Heaven. It's still sodium,

(01:07:50):
sodium sodium. If you know basic chemistry, it's still sodium
no matter where it comes from. And sodium changes your
blood pressure and raises it. So the women and the
man in Japan will live over one hundred have low
salt intake and do not eat much meat because they
don't kill the cows. In Japan. They live largely on fish, vegetables,
and rice period. They also meditate. They also do some

(01:08:13):
mild exercise every day along the lines of the tight sheet.
So there are other aspects other than food and diet.
This spiritual element, to me is perhaps the most important
part of survival.

Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
And he's right about that. And maybe I need to
listen to Michael Savage sometimes because if this is what
the guy's talking about, I'm on board. This is dead accurate,
and it has become a lot more mainstream since I've
been criticized and kicked off of radio networks.

Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
Over the years for talking about stuff like this.

Speaker 3 (01:08:46):
I guess this is a mild subject in comparison with
all the other stuff, but it's getting more mainstream. I
think people are realizing what's happening here. And I also
think it's funny that he mentions that the people that
live the longest are the Japanese. Because when I say it,
I hate America. If Michael Savage says it, I mean,

(01:09:08):
does he hate America too? Now, it's just a fact,
and there's a lot of reasons for that. I think
that the context that might be missing from what he's
saying is that people over here do eat, actually actually
eat a lot of salt, but they eat different types
of salt, like different salts in a different context, like
miso soup. And think about miso soup is you don't

(01:09:28):
eat a giant bowl, you eat a very small bowl,
very small amount. If you ever read the work of
doctor Michael Gregor, he's a very strict family. He has
family lifestyle medicine or just lifestyle medicine. He's a great
author great researcher, great doctor terms that he pulls all

(01:09:53):
the medical references and reads through thousands of them before
he publishes a book. I've read all his books. They're
really great. Have not read his vaccine thing because I
disagree with him on that completely, But in regard to referencing,
like the actual studies on these types of subjects sodium,

(01:10:14):
he wrote in his book that he was really surprised
that miso because he's a big proponent of not eating
a lot of sodium, like Michael Savage is saying, but
he was saying that miso doesn't actually have the same
effect that other products with lots of sodium in them have,
and as a doctor, he was shocked by that. It

(01:10:36):
didn't make any sense, Like, how does this thing that's
primarily salt not have the same effect as if you
were to eat salt on French fries, Like it's the
same or more salt. And it comes down to a
few different things. It comes down to one, you eat
a very small portion of it, not a basket of fries. Two,

(01:10:59):
the context and the ingredients, the you know, the the
it's fermented food has something to do with how it's
processed in the body, and I think that there was
I don't have his book in front of me. I
had to get rid of it when I moved because
it was so big. But he I think there was

(01:11:20):
a third reason that he described, And so that's interesting
because me so is not. It is a Japanese food
and they've i think, perfected it, but it's a Chinese
food traditionally. And then you have the Koreans, and nobody
makes fermented cabbage like the Koreans, and you have these

(01:11:41):
fermented and they're not the only people in the world
that make fermented foods, but just examples of foods that
I like. The Germans have sauer kraut. I do like
sauer kraut. I think I like kim chi little bit better.
The point is the fermented foods play such a dynamic
role in health, and I am always shocked to I

(01:12:06):
watched a documentary the other day about gut health, and
I'm like thirty percent of the way through it, and
I realized, I've seen this before. This is really familiar.
I've actually seen this documentary before. But it's about the
gut and the brain and how the gut is your
second brain, or really your first brain. Because your stomach

(01:12:30):
is what tells the brain what to do. You know,
I'm full, I need food, And the brain also is,
you know, kind of secondary to the stomach in other
ways too, because we say things like I've got emotionally,
we got butterflies in our stomach. We have a feeling

(01:12:52):
of being gutted when something really awful happens, I just
feel gutted. I've got butterflies in my stomach. These are
not brain things. These are stomach things. And we have
a whole bunch of microbial life in our bodies, on
our bodies and in our stomachs. And if we don't

(01:13:13):
feed them things that they need, they may produce chemicals
that make us sick. If we feed them things that
they like fiber, for example, then they provide us with
beneficial protections. They reduce inflammation. This is all part of

(01:13:33):
a much more complicated process that even if I could
explain it in medical or technical terms, it would be
irrelevant to you as an audience because it's all you
need to know is you don't need to know the
whole metabolic process. You just need to know that you know,
broccoli is definitely better for you than McDonald's so's to

(01:13:54):
keep it really simple. You don't need to break the
whole thing down to this reductionist science that we do.
But the stomach is really important. It's way more important
than what you select with your brain, which is a
lot of that's from the stomach anyway. And it just
shocks me that documentary I watched about in twenty twenty four.
I had seen it. I think when it came out

(01:14:15):
I watched it again, forgot I had seen it. And
what is considered like microbial gut health is a it's
very popular, but is a recent discovery. And that's a
really shock that should that should be shocking to anybody

(01:14:36):
who learns and understands what I'm saying. We are just
figuring out in the twenty first century that the stomach
is as or more important than the brain if we're
talking about food selection, lifestyle patterns, being sick, et cetera.

(01:15:00):
Just think of COVID. Eighty ninety percent of the people
that quote tested positive with fake PCR tests were vitamin
D deficient, VITAMINIA deficient, and we also found that most
of them were also deficient in other vitamins. Ninety seven

(01:15:22):
percent of Americans are deficient in fiber. What do you
think that gut bacteria eats fiber. It cannot consume and
break down the excessive quantities of the things that we eat,
especially when they're highly acidic. And so yet you want

(01:15:42):
a glass of milk, you drink glass milk. Here's the problem.
We don't drink a glass of milk. We eat ice cream.
We drink that glass of milk. Then we have more
ice cream, and then we have a variety of dairy
desserts and very large portions of meat, and we're eating

(01:16:04):
things that are not, you know, packed with fibers. So
you end up having digestive problems because you're eating too much.
Even if it's like okay to eat it, you're eating
too much of it. And people just like violently reject
this idea. I'd say conservatives especially reject this idea. So

(01:16:29):
you listen to Michael Savage and he says, by the way,
the people that live the longest in the world don't
eat any meat. Yes, I know, we have Greek blue zones,
we have California blue zones. I don't know about the Rastafarians.
They probably smoke way too much weed to be included
in this, but they have diets similar to the Seventh
day adv Adventists, and that's something that often gets overlooked,

(01:16:54):
like they're everywhere in the world. You look where there's
a religious practice of spiritual practice where people eat this way,
they live exceptionally longer, which is also interesting for other reasons.
We're talking about technology. How many of these tech bros
are microdosing. They're popping like ten thousand dollars of supplements

(01:17:18):
every week trying to live forever. And you can extend
your life by approximately ten years roughly by just changing
your lifestyle. It doesn't even cost anything. In fact, it
saves you money. The solution to longevity is to save

(01:17:41):
your money, stop blowing it on things that you don't need,
and change your lifestyle.

Speaker 4 (01:17:48):
That is, you could add a decade or more of life.

Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
And that is just shocking that we're just now learning
about the stomach or just now figuring out that, Yeah,
maybe if we we live in a global society and
we look around the world and find the people that
live the longest, they don't eat red meat, and they
eat things that they're not supposed to, like the Greeks,
the eat a lot of fats, but one of the

(01:18:16):
things that the reason that people live long it's you know,
the Seventh Day Adventists. I think I'm more like them.
They don't eat you know, processed or that's a tricky
word federally, but they don't you know, they don't eat
like chemicals or like preservatives and additives, kind of like
the Rastafarians think a little bit more strict than that them.

(01:18:37):
The Greeks se a lot of fat people in Okinawa,
you know, they have a different lifestyle. People in Japan
in general have a different lifestyle. But really the core
of it is culture. It's community. It's fascinating too because
you know, the religion of the people that live x
amount of years in Greece as opposed to Japan is

(01:19:02):
worlds apart or California in Japan. And yet it's not
a religion. It's culture. And there are other factors, right,
you know, the way the Seventh Day Appentists live, the
way that people in Japan live, there's lots of reasons
for the reason for the for the the fact that

(01:19:26):
they tend to live longer. You know, walking is a
daily thing. Especially women don't tend to smoke as much.
I think people smoke a little bit less over here
than they used to smoke. But you know, there's all
sorts of different factors. You might be able to smoke
excessively if you don't drink and you live a much

(01:19:46):
more quote peaceful lifestyle. And like, these things all matter,
and the cool thing is it's all free, and I'm
actually kind of inspired. I'm happy that people like Michael
Savage have pointed this out and are making this obvious
and saying, look, you can't be in favor of making
the country healthy while you have one hand on McDonald's

(01:20:13):
spatula in the president's case, literally working at McDonald's. You
can't be a proponent of let's make the country healthy
and then back replacing seed oils with beef tallow, or
pushing and advocating as RFK Junior wants now to increase

(01:20:35):
the dairy consumption. This sounds like some kind of sick,
cruel joke. You increase the dairy consumption, and you through
subsidies and other things, and you make sure that people
suddenly think, well, it's okay to eat all this fast
food now because it's beef tallow. Hey, honey, let's get

(01:20:57):
another fast food today because it's healthier beef Tello has
nothing to do with the ingredients, has nothing to do
with nutritional value. It's just like, oh, it's beef tellus,
so I can eat it now. This is the opposite
of health. And so that brings me to some of
the current events. I don't know if you saw this,

(01:21:21):
but you've definitely been made aware on this show of
how the HHS has opened up, Well, they've reportedly shut down,
but they've also opened up and allowed for the expansion
of certain mRNA vaccine programs. I know, I know, you

(01:21:41):
read all the headlines and the reddits and the twitters
and all that stuff, and they all said the tiktoks
and you know, all the influencers they said, we're winning
and they shut down twenty two vaccine programs and it's
so amazing and maha all the way. Yeah, but it's
a language, and I know the language. You know the language.

(01:22:02):
Probably when I saw that article, I thought, Okay, they
shut down twenty two. How many did they start and
how many did they allow to proceed? There might be
a thousand programs they shut down twenty two. Great, are
they letting the other programs proceed? Did they shut down
smaller competition to larger companies, and that is, of course
what happened. They just let other programs proceed and shut

(01:22:27):
down twenty two of them and other programs, And then
it's also very much a lie because we learned. What
we learned was that then the ahahs in a press
release said yeah, we're also going to go into the
development officially of universal COVID and universal flu vaccines, the

(01:22:51):
very thing that we were told they weren't going to do.
And now, as of this past week, this is the
USA Today confirming this nap big national story, the RFK
Junior Vaccine Panel that everybody's like, no big deal, RFK
Juniors in charge. I'm just going to take a nap

(01:23:13):
because he's got this under control. It's in the bag.
And then you woke up from the nap and suddenly
RFK Junior Vaccine Panel delays Hepatitis B vote and thwart's
public health shakeup for newborns, and health experts quote unquote
are excited about this right because they're not going to

(01:23:36):
change the vaccine recommendations. Here's what the USA Today reported.
Health experts breathed a sign of relief or a sigh
of relief as members of Health and Human Service as
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior's vaccine panel voted to maintain
current guidance on a vaccine that has been recommended for

(01:23:58):
children four dec that's the hepatitis B vaccine, which has
no purpose except to enrich and put people's lives in danger.
And we were all just expecting this is one of
the silliest ones. They're definitely going to remove this. Nope, Nope,

(01:24:23):
didn't remove it. And I don't want to be told
that this is a troll. Okay, this isn't a troll.
You really need to like maybe become aware of what's
happening in reality and stop living in the Q fantasyland.
They've decided that they're gonna here's the tricky part of this.

(01:24:47):
They voted to maintain the current guidance and they're going
to vote on I guess they're going to vote on
it again coming up in I believe it's about am month,
about a month. And then you have to think, well,
that's also just a recommendation. So this is where it

(01:25:09):
gets even trickier, because yeah, the B vaccines on the list,
but it's also just a recommend dation and you can
opt out of it. I don't know how easy it
is to find this anymore, but I remember if you win.
I don't Actually they might have changed it to New

(01:25:29):
York too, But if you go to like New York
State Health Department, I'm going to type this in New
York State Health Department and you could do this for
your respective state Florida, Arizona, whatever, although Arizona you don't have.
You don't have those requirements anyways, you don't need to
do this, but New York State Health Department help be

(01:25:50):
Vaccine opt out Form PDF. Type that in, so whatever
your state is, Health Department B Vaccine opt out Form PDF,
and you can usually find it pretty easy, relatively easy.
I have been able to pull up the Department of
Health website with all their forms for New York. So

(01:26:12):
they did. I think they did change this a little
bit from when I had this before. Here's an influenza
medical exemption. Yeah, they did change this. Surprisingly, it's actually
become slightly more accessible. So I just found just by
typing that in for the state of New York, I
found the influence of vaccine medical Exemption statement for your

(01:26:33):
health care provider. You get that signed and they're pretty
strict in New York, so they've got a lot of
these opt out forms. But you can get the hat
B opt out form, so it's not really a they're
not forcing you to do it, so why would you
even have to opt out of it. It's just it's

(01:26:55):
very complicated, and I can't imagine how scary it is
for people that don't know anything about this and go
back to the email about Coca Cola. I mean, if
you genuinely don't know that Coca Cola lies, cheats, steals,
and hurts people and the environment. The environment too, the
environment's going to they're polluting. People might think I'm a

(01:27:19):
fan of pollution. I'm not. I just don't like Coca
Cola for other reasons. That's like the least of my
concerns is the pollution. Back to the point, these are recommendations,
the recommendations. So this is shocking to me that anybody

(01:27:40):
thinks like a recommendation is the law. It's not. It's
not the law. And I am shocked that. I'm pretty sure,
like ninety eight five percent of the American public thinks
that the word recommendation translates to enforceable law that will

(01:28:06):
result if you don't follow it in jail time and
finds you know what a recommendation is, right Like if
you go to a store and you ask the electronics department,
can you give me a recommendation on a TV? And
they say, well, this Samsung's nice, this LG is nice.

(01:28:30):
I don't know what TVs are anymore. Visio is that
even a company anymore? I don't know. And then you
choose when you ask them for a recommendation, they don't
force you to buy it. This might sound stupid to you,
but you need to understand, just like me. I need
to understand too, that nine out of ten people don't

(01:28:51):
understand this. So the very least I'm just giving you.
They're not talking points, but I'm giving you something to
think about for your own conversations. And I should go
back and I should mention this. I should, I should
reference this. When my son was born in New York
many years ago. I can't believe it's been so long. Already,

(01:29:13):
many years ago, you know, I went through every possible website, church,
law office. Nobody helped me, No buddy, the church didn't
give a damn. No lawyer was interested in it. Nobody
would even direct me in the right direction. So I

(01:29:35):
just that was one of the last times I trusted
anything or anybody. I was like, yeah, I'm just going
to do it myself. Getting contacted doctors and nobody would help.
So I did it myself, and I spent hours at
the library and I found all the forms. There's they're tricky,
they hid them, found all the forms. Argued with the doctors,

(01:29:59):
argued with the nurses, fought with them, had them team
up on me and beat them, feeding them, beat them,
beat them. I beat them all, beat them all because
I knew what the actual law was and they were
misquoting it. And in the end I was able to

(01:30:20):
supply that information to other people in New York listeners
of the show. In fact, I think we had a
few listeners in Rochester where I was living that nightmare
of a city, and they were able to use those forms. Likewise,
when either their kid or their grandkid was born. And

(01:30:40):
then after that, when we had the so called pandemic,
it was definitely a panic. It was a pandemic. It
was a panic. We had the panic COVID nineteen, the panic,
we'll call it. When we had the panic, what happened was.
I learned a lot about law that I didn't know before.
And we found all the ways in which to get

(01:31:03):
around legally, because it was all the everything that was
told to us was to get around the law in
the first place. So we went back around to the
front entrance of where the law is and we went
through and found the forums and how to show I mean,
I even pulled like the executive orders from every state
and I made that available to everybody, and we helped

(01:31:26):
so many people. I helped so many people. I'd stay
up for I don't know till one or two in
the morning, editing like a legal letter to make it perfect.
Wasn't making it even nobody paid me to do that.
I'm a lawyer. It's just like a community service. You
how much money I was making then that five years ago,

(01:31:48):
I was making like twelve hundred dollars a month with
working at a second job. That's what pisses me off about, well,
this business and the real world, because you can say
some nonsense about secret space programs or how you just

(01:32:13):
one day decided I'm just I'm just going to be
a conspiracy theorist. Then you make a million dollars overnight,
and it's like, well that's kind of weird. And I
provided a community service to people and I helped so
many people, so many listeners. We help people keep their jobs.
We help people. I like to say, we because you
know you support us, you support me, and that's what

(01:32:33):
keeps the show going. So we kept because you supported us,
I was able to do what I do. And then
so we helped a lot of people keep their jobs,
or masks or vaccines. My friend from high school, my
friend Joey, I think it was it was about masks,
it was about vaccines. Helped him with his job too.

(01:32:57):
I don't know how many people. I mean paramedics, doc
even nurses, sports people, sports agents, just random people that
heard my show and were like, well, this guy's doing
this for free. What is this? And I just send
it to him and they could play around with the letter.
And it wasn't elleite. It wasn't like a legal law

(01:33:18):
office letter had letter. It was a personal letter that
I wrote and then you can just format it to
where you are and it worked. I think in one
or two cases it didn't work. Everybody else it worked,
like I help. We helped so many people with that stuff,
so many people to get out of their their masks

(01:33:40):
and their vaccine mandates and to keep their jobs. And
I do pat myself on the back for that. And
that's what real changes like, That's what real researches, and
that's what I think the duty of what my job
has become here on radio. How many people are doing

(01:34:04):
stuff like that, It ain't a lot. You got to
you gotta really appreciate the people that do do stuff
like that. I can't expect people to remember that because
I haven't thought about that or talked about that myself
in years, and it just popped into my head because
of this vaccine panel thing. We're talking about. Recommendation. That

(01:34:26):
was the big word. We recommend you wear it. Well,
that's okay. A recommendation isn't a law. And you had
people that genuinely thought it was a law, genuinely thought
it was a law. Again, these aren't real problem. We
create these problems. These are not real problems. They're not
real problems. So weird. I'll never forget that. The first

(01:34:50):
time this happened was the first time someone yelled at me.
I just thought, it's it's it's over, it's over. I
went to a grocery store in Rochester. I think it
was My goodness, what was the name of that store,
don't remember the name of it, but it was it

(01:35:10):
was close to the co op where I worked. It
was right down the road, kind of near Wagmans, one
of the I will give New York that they got
that's like the best grocery store in the world. Wagmans
is amazing. So anyway, I went to this other grocery
store and I remember walking in and I went to, uh, oh,

(01:35:31):
I don't know what I was getting. I think I
was probably grabbing a frozen fruit or something. I walked
over there and this guy sees me. Didn't work there,
just some ky well it wasn't anywhere near him, and
he just kind of yells out, you got to put
a mask on. So I'm not gonna put the mask on.
Not happening, leave me alone. And then the guy gets

(01:35:52):
in my face, takes his mask down, and he starts
screaming obscenities at me. Now, me being me, I don't
take that from people. And as my good friend from
high school Joey says, you know, I go from zero
to eleven or zero to one hundred and one in

(01:36:14):
under two to three seconds. I don't. I'm calm, I'm
really peaceful, but I have zero tolerance for that kind
of thing. I let that guy absolutely have it. I mean,
I said stuff to him. He probably thought I was
like a Satanist that was going to put a spell
on him or something like. I say some nasty stuff

(01:36:34):
to people because I just don't have the I don't
have the capacity to otherwise respond. In fact, that it
probably made more sense to the guy because all he
understood was yelling and screaming. Anyway, what was I going
to say, you know, sir, technically, legally, yeah, like that's
going to work. Nobody else understood technically or scientifically or legally.

(01:36:59):
I also love when people would quote like medical journals
because of what the headline said, but if you read it,
the conclusion was the opposite of what they assumed the
headline meant. And my boss at the co op sent
me a He's like one time he sent me an
article USA Today and it said about the study. The
guy's name was like Borla or something, bor Bla or

(01:37:20):
bor Bla and said, you know, mask study, not not
what I don't forget the title of it. And he
said see you should wear a mask. Look at this study.
And I was like, all right, I'll read it. I
was collecting mask studies.

Speaker 4 (01:37:37):
So I read it and he sent it to me
to give me to wear it.

Speaker 3 (01:37:40):
And the mask study itself said they didn't actually isolate COVID.
It was all just a sar's cove too. It was
all just like a simulation and a lab and there
was an assumption that there was a viral a viral particle.
I sent that back to him and I said, did
you read this, because this actually advocates for what I'm saying.

(01:38:05):
It's just this, all this stuff is so bizarre to me.
It's so weird. It's so weird that we live in
a world where this A lot of you live in
a country where this is not common knowledge. I don't,
I don't. I don't get it. Anyway, Yeah, the vaccine

(01:38:26):
panel for Kennedy, they it's a recommendation and they decided
to keep the same recommendation. Now they're going to vote
on it again. And this is just for hepatitis B.
It's just like the stupidest vaccine, stupidest vaccine, and yet

(01:38:49):
you can't even can't even change that. Well, but the
m RNA vaccine. Yeah, remember they may they're making universal ones.
Now you know what it is, really, it's it bothers me.
This is just for a moment. This is, I guess
a therapy for me to say this. But you know
what bothers me is when when I've done this for

(01:39:11):
so long, I've said so many things on air. You
could say something and be decades ahead, quite literally decades ahead,
and then somebody randomly says something on the Internet and
it goes viral and everybody's like, oh, that's where you
got the idea from. This is just so weird. We're

(01:39:34):
always waiting for some like official source to say it.
We're always waiting for some politician to point it out.
Somebody has to have royal blood for us to listen
to them. It's not even about having like a credential.
It's just, oh, there's a prince. Oh there's a president.

(01:39:57):
Oh there's there's a you know, a one of the
voices of our community. Everybody's in a community nowadays. If
you say anything outside of that, people genuinely don't know
what you're talking about. It's weird. Anybody else notice that
it's really weird? I bet you. Some of you have
had that experience. You've been saying the same thing for

(01:40:19):
years and then suddenly one day someone online says it,
and then all your friends are sending you messages. Did
you hear what sons and said? It's like I told
you that in twenty eleven, I told you that fourteen
years ago. Yeah, I've heard about it. I said it,

(01:40:40):
But this guy's saying it now and that suddenly makes
it true, don't I don't understand what is happening here.
It's so weird. Okay, So to transition into part two
of this show, which will involve our good friend Mike
d and hopefully if he doesn't join us though, Okay,

(01:41:03):
I'll do part two. We'll focus on coke and we'll
focus on the lawsuits and all that. But I wanted
to bring this back to your attention the Gerber baby lawsuits.
This is update. First of all, I was made aware
of this again by accident about a month a month
and a half ago by accident, because I was looking

(01:41:25):
up an article about breastfeeding, trying to find this old
article about the UN being shocked at the US recommended
that you don't breastfeed, you only feed your baby formula,
and I stumbled across a Scientific American article from two
years ago that said the same thing, like, you don't
have to breastfeed, it's not necessary for life or something,
whatever their argument was. And I stumbled across this Gerber

(01:41:47):
baby food lawsuit. It's so crazy. There are so many
people that have filed lawsuits against the Gerber Products company
alleging correctly that their baby foods contained dangerous not just
a little bit, but dangerous amounts of heavy metals. And
with so many people are reporting this, it's it's believed

(01:42:09):
that this is leading to developmental issues and babies and children.
And you think about that in baby food two three,
four years of masking garbage entertainment in garbage out, And
there's so many different reasons why there's developmental issues. Just
food coloring doesn't cause it a developmental issue, but it will, well,

(01:42:33):
I guess it could in the long run, but it doesn't.
It causes immediate right now behavioral issues. And I'm pretty
sure that the food color and industry is happy to
let the sugar industry take the responsibility for what the
color industry, the food scientists have done. Oh you know,
little Johny's unning around because you on sugar. Now Littlejohny's
running around because you pumped some sort of FD and

(01:42:54):
C food coloring into him because it was a treat
for being a good boy, for being a good boy,
you poisoned him, and now he's a bad boy and
now he's punished, and now you've created this toxic relationship
with little Johnny. And it is that simple, folks. That
is that is what's happening. Food coloring is poison. It
causes behavioral issues, and those are things we typically blame on.

(01:43:15):
You know, your adds ADHD adhd hhd HHD. They change
that like lgbtq ad d d d h d h
d d hdh d d d h It's like some
kind of computer code zeros and ones. It's I don't
know how many d's and h's there are, but there's
a bunch of them now. And of course these things
can also be you say, caused, but it's hyperactivity isn't

(01:43:40):
a disorder though, so it's not really ADHD. It's like
attention deficit hyperactivity. It's not a it's not a disorder.
It's not as it's so weird too, because if you
brought I've thought about this recently. If you brought like
a psychologist, like a mainline psychologist where they're used to

(01:44:01):
diagnosing every natural condition of humans as a problem that
you need drugs for, if you brought that person to
the country that I live in, they would diagnose virtually
the entire population is having extreme obsessive compulsive disorder. Yeah,

(01:44:23):
or people just like things organized and clean. It's so weird,
isn't it. You know, I've always been like that. And
I remember one time I had I had prepared like
Japanese food at my house and this person looked at
it and they said, oh, my god, I know why
you like their culture now. And I said why They said,

(01:44:46):
because they're as OCD as you are. And I said, see,
that's the thing. It's not OCD. It's just I would
prefer to have my food organized and to have things
set up, you know, upperly. Oh that's a mental condition. No,
it's a cultural thing. And it's also a you know,

(01:45:07):
a cleanliness thing. It's so weird too, because I saw
people at the store this week, and I saw this
with several people actually, but I saw this one woman
and she was buying she has slippers one but she's
buying another pair of slippers, and she you buy slippers
everywhere here, but he's got some slippers of the bathroom,
slippers for the house, slippers to take the trash out

(01:45:28):
slippers to this, slippers to that. And a lot of
people buy new things because they're old ones. Even if
they're not that old, they're a little dirty. So you
buy new ones. It's gonna be clean. And that would
be considered like, oh, it's a waste of money or
its although they're very frugal here, so that's waste money.
That's OCD. It's like, no, it's not OCD. It's that
people want clean living spaces. And it's so weird that

(01:45:51):
we've turned that, like ADHD into a mental disorder. Think
about that we literally as a society, and I say
that as we as an Americans. As a society Europe,
I think does it, but not to the extent that
the US does. We actually take kids that run and
play and we say, yep, that's a mental disorder, and

(01:46:12):
we never ever address the food colorings. It's just like, no,
that's a mental disorder. No, that's how kids play. And
anything that's excessive is usually because of some it's how
the parents behave one. It's also the things the kids
sees TV, for example, And it's also stuff that you

(01:46:37):
pump into them. Well, you know, little Johny will calm
down if I gave him M and ms. Yeah, but
little Johnny's all hyped up because you gave him M
and MS earlier. You'll be like seminims will calm down
a little bit. So you're just bribing the child to
like suppress their emotions and the chemical surge that they

(01:46:57):
have in their body. I mean, this is just this
is just bad. It's so so bad. It's the same
thing with OCD. Like I want my food organized. You
got OCD. No, I just like my food organized. It's
not OCD.

Speaker 4 (01:47:14):
It's so weird. It's so weird.

Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
We live in a society or I don't now, but
you do a lot of you live in a society
where I don't know how the rest of the world is.
But I can tell you this as Americans, as from
an American point of view, it's so weird to live
in a society where I don't even think it's a
cultural thing. But if you want to put trash in

(01:47:36):
a trash can and go out of your way to
do that, that's considered like weird. We live in a
society where if people wear their shoes inside and put
them on the couch or their bed where they sleep,
you're considered weird for asking them, why do you do this?
Why don't you take your shoes off before you walk

(01:47:57):
on the bed. For some reason, it's it's weird to
keep things clean. It's always made me so frustrated. You know,
you watch like these TV shows, stupid sitcoms, and unless
you're watching like Married with Children or something Married with Children,
everybody's a piece of garbage. It's one of the best
shows in the history of television. You know, Al Bundy

(01:48:19):
four touchdowns, one game. Everybody's a piece of garbage. The
mom's a piece of garbage, Dad's piece of garbage, the
kids are pieces of garbage. The dog's even a piece
of garbage.

Speaker 4 (01:48:28):
Everybody's just trash.

Speaker 3 (01:48:31):
In that show. It's so great. And you know, it's
so weird that you watch shows on TV and you'll
and you'll see like the guy is always you know,
he doesn't clean up. You know, he's stupid, and I've
just never experienced that. Every roommate I've have, every girlfriend

(01:48:52):
I ever had. I want to clean the stove. Why
you clean the stove? Why it's OCD Because it's a
it's a mess and I didn't make it. You made it,
and I should. I would ask you to clean it,
but you're too lazy to clean it, so I'm going
to clean it. It's immediate hostility. You're just obsessive with
compulsive It's like, why are we arguing about this, clean
the stove?

Speaker 4 (01:49:13):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:49:14):
I don't get this. Especially bread that always made me upset.
People just like leave breadcrumbs everywhere. Oh my god, we
have roaches, we have we have mice. Yeah, because you
leave bread out on the counter, you're just OCD.

Speaker 4 (01:49:27):
Well, you don't want the.

Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
Mice, do you.

Speaker 4 (01:49:29):
It's so weird.

Speaker 3 (01:49:30):
I maybe maybe you never experienced that, but it is
all that I ever experienced. Living my adult life in
the United States, people ask me, why do you clean
your kitchen? Why do you do your dishes immediately? Why
do you clean the floor? Why do you do that
so much? Because I don't want to live in a
dirty house, like I don't. Why is that a thing?

Speaker 4 (01:49:53):
I don't what?

Speaker 3 (01:49:55):
That's the society that is genuinely confused about why they're
so unhealthy.

Speaker 4 (01:50:03):
This is the problem.

Speaker 3 (01:50:04):
This is the problem. And this is a society where
you know, the face of infants. The Gerber baby is
being sued left and right by everybody, everybody over toxic
baby food. And this has been going on.

Speaker 4 (01:50:19):
Forever, forever.

Speaker 3 (01:50:22):
This stuff was going on when I was like an
amateur in radio. Now I'm a professional, and there's the
lawsuits are ongoing. Fifteen years later, it's just ongoing new lawsuits.
And now there's another one for simply Orange. I don't
know if you heard about this, but simply Orange. You

(01:50:43):
know that orange juice. It's simply Orange, right, like Honest Team.
It was honest until Coca Cola bottom. Maybe there's a
pattern here. Who owns simply Orange, by the way, and
they got lemonades, they got teas. It's owned by the
Coca Cola company, of course it is. And Simply Orange

(01:51:06):
is being sued just like Gerber's being sued. It's being
sued for consumer deception, false advertising. I love this false advertising.
The lawsuit contends that simply Orange or simply tropical juice
is falsely advertising as all natural. There's that word again.

(01:51:29):
That is my nemesis, and free from synthetic substances despite
containing PFA's consumer deception. It is alleged that the company
misled health conscious consumers by promoting the product as natural
and simple while failing to disclose the presence of harmful chemicals.
You think, but see, that's the problem health conscious consumers

(01:51:55):
like all the people that are supporting Maha. And what
do you get out of Maha? You get beef towns,
you get more dairy, you get more sugar. You notice
that those are the three main things, right. Kennedy's promoting
more beef, more milk, and Trump's been promoting more sugar.

(01:52:16):
Those are the three three of the top five biggest
lobbying groups in Washington meat, dairy, sugar, sugar, dairy meat,
dairy sugar, dairy meat, dairy sugar. And they just happen
to be that The main things that we're focused on

(01:52:37):
is make America healthy. You got to open your eyes
to this. They're pushing the same things they've always pushed,
except under the name of health. It's what every company does,
it's what the government does. Apparently, beef tallow is better.
Don't worry, it's good. Drink more dairy. It's just like

(01:52:59):
a an advertisement. It's an advertisement. I was just I
paused there for a second. I was just thinking of
another there's so many good episodes of this TV shows.
Just another episode. It's always sutning in Philadelphia where they
go to trot for the Philadelphia Eagles, that's if I

(01:53:21):
can find it. And they they're promised a speech by
Donovan McNabb and this act, this guy shows up. He's
clearly not Donovan McNabb, but everybody thinks that he is.
And the main characters like this is you know, this
isn't Dona McNabb, right, And rather than he rather than
saying anything to them that's even like football related, it's

(01:53:45):
just like a plug for McDonald's. It's it's so it's
so funny. I'll play this because this is like, it's
exactly what I'm talking about, where the government is promoting beef,
tallow dairy and sugar and coke because that that'll fix
all of her health problems. Let's see if I can
get this play.

Speaker 1 (01:54:06):
We're doing these trial for you because you're harassment and
your love for.

Speaker 4 (01:54:12):
The New Kids on the Black Movie. You paid your
thirty dollars feet we promise you a key note.

Speaker 3 (01:54:17):
Speaker bringing Donald McNabb all right, bringing up d drives
up in this crappy little car charm? Is that here?
That's cool? This is this is the epitome of the
moham movement.

Speaker 5 (01:54:35):
Donald McNabb, Hey, guys, I'm Donald McNab.

Speaker 3 (01:54:43):
I played quarterback for the Philadelphia Eagles, and I'm here
to tell you that you can too if you start
every day with a hearty breakfast from McDonald's.

Speaker 1 (01:54:52):
I like the new sausage egg mcgriddle value mail available
now for limited time for under five dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:54:58):
Remember, guys, real chair eating McDonald's.

Speaker 3 (01:55:03):
I'm loving it.

Speaker 6 (01:55:04):
Can they have the check?

Speaker 1 (01:55:12):
Donovan McNab, It was like a McDonald's guys, mccosmey show
from mcgo.

Speaker 4 (01:55:21):
It's just it's like it summarizes my show in like
a minute. That's it.

Speaker 3 (01:55:26):
It was clapping, yeah, Donovan McNab, Yeah, great, we eat
McDonald's and we'll be football players like that. That's not
Donovan McNab. That was a McDonald's pluck. This isn't making
America healthy. This is like a big meat plug. This
is like a big dairy plug. This is like a
big sugar plug.

Speaker 4 (01:55:45):
No, no, no, no, it's it's we're making it healthy.

Speaker 3 (01:55:48):
We're making moalthy healthy. No, you're doing what simply orange did.
You're telling people this is all natural, which means nothing. Nothing.

Speaker 4 (01:55:57):
It means nothing.

Speaker 3 (01:55:58):
All natural means nothing. The same thing with all these
other words. Simple. Yeah, I could call it Ryan's Organic
Health Snacks and that's the name of the company as
the most processed food in the market, but it's Ryan's
Organic Health Snacks. It's like, there's ways to fix this,

(01:56:22):
but who's going to fix it? Look at the slobs
in Congress and anybody who's suggesting we should fix it.
They treat them like their enemies of the state because
they kind of they kind of are when the biggest
lobbying groups are beef and dairy and sugar and all that.
So anyway, the point is we got a lot of

(01:56:43):
problems and they're not being fixed because we refuse to
address the root source of the problem. And that is
a fact, and you can take that to the bank.
All right, Thank you so much for tuning into the
show tonight. There will be a part two of this.

(01:57:07):
Hopefully we have a co host for that part two episode.
I'm Ryan Gable. Please remember that you can listen to
this show Monday through Friday. TST Radio, dot Info, the
spreaker apps, Spotify, Apple, leave us a review on Apple
if you haven't done so already, that would help us
out immensely because it helps with the show availability and

(01:57:34):
I don't pay for availability, So help us out anyway.
You can help us out with buy me a coffee,
You can help us with cash, app and PayPal. Thank
you so much. If you've already done that, really appreciate it.
It keeps us on air. We are I' just gonna say,
we're like, we're like the ogs of this. We've been

(01:57:56):
I've been doing this, We've been doing this for so long.
We're the Jesus of this. So thank you so much
for supporting. You know, one of the solid foundational shows
to all this stuff that I don't know, whatever the
whatever the community is. We're one of the old school shows.
If you don't know that, take a look at our
catalog and I'm proud of that. Ardiegable, Yahoo dot com,

(01:58:19):
TST Radio Edit and Foe, thank you so much for
tuning in. We do have actually a few new reviews
on Apple, so thank you. If you've left to review
the recent one I see is from fly Boy forty four. Oh,
this is a kind review. Ryan's ability to see things
from the other side point of view is amazing. He
has the ability to take what seems like the most

(01:58:41):
solid conspiracy, and by the time he points out a
few things, you realize that the whole concept is total insanity.
What a kind thing to say. Thank you, and also
x G thank you. Oh and then here's a bad review. Oh,
this one's great. It's very lengthy, though. Yeah, here's another. Okay,

(01:59:02):
I want to read. It's just too long and it
does it's not relevant to the show. This is a
great negative review, though, maybe I'll pitch.

Speaker 4 (01:59:09):
On another show. I love these negative reviews.

Speaker 3 (01:59:13):
Yeah, I got so, I got I got married, and
I moved to a culture that suits me. And apparently,
according to this individual, I've fled the United States in
order to escape the Trump administration and to escape to escape,
and not to help help the poor Americans. That's that's
my job, to help help you, not eat McDonald's. I

(01:59:37):
can do that remotely. I'm having a blast. Thank you
so much for supporting us TST Radio edit. I already
gave a Yahoo dot com you support us we'll can
continue to be here five nights a week. And for
those listening on Ground zero plus, tip of the hat
to you, thank you for listening. Talk to you in
the next broadcast. Part two,
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