Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yea ripped off news. You need advice, so you don't have.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Come running.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Just as fast as we can.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Shooter's gonna help coming man.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
This is the Troubleshooter Show. No Tom Martino, Hi, Tom
Martino here, Welcome to the show. Three O three seven
one three talks seven one three eight two five five.
Here to help you solve problems, answer questions, take complaints,
and uh, by the way, if you're joining us, I'm
and you stream normally. I'm at the mothership today, the
(00:43):
radio station. I am not at my satellite ship, which
is my lovely home studio, and I have a deputy
Chopper in the house with me and Deputy Dollar. You guys,
have any cases you're working on, the number to call
right now. If you're tired of being lied to, you cheated,
ripped off, where you just have an inquiry about something,
give us a call at three O three seven one
(01:04):
three talk three oh three seven to one three eight
two five five, or you can call three oh three
Martino three oh three six two seven eight four six six.
So if you're traveling this this year, I want you
to know that Delta is using AI to individually priced
(01:24):
plane tickets. Now when I talk about individually pricing plane tickets.
We're talking about individual prices on individual tickets for individual people.
So technically, if you and a friend were going away,
and your friend was making his own reservations, you're making
(01:48):
your own reservations, it's possible for the same exact trip,
for the same exact seating class, you could have two
different absolutely, two different prices. Why because they take into
consideration everything about you, how you've flown in the past,
(02:10):
where you've sat in the past, what you've paid in
the past, and when you're leaving, how many people are
on the plane, how many seats are left. Unless you
two bottom exactly the same together at the same time,
you can have a big problem. So thank you very much.
And I have doctor Joel Trudach as my guest today
(02:32):
from Denver Region. And there's a lot of things, by
the way, on the plane ticket thing that's Delta doing that,
and you can expect to see a lot of individual
pricing of not just airline seats, but almost everything. Individual
(02:53):
pricing is going to be a new thing. They're actually
going to assess your tolerance for pricing and how you've shopped,
your shopping history, and your strike price. What's the strike price? Well,
let's say I like looking at carscars dot Com. I
just like looking at them. So you see a car,
and then when there's a price drop, they tell you
(03:14):
there's a price drop. For each price drop, you have
someone else's different strike price. Everyone has a strike price
for everything they do, for everything they do, Chopper, when
you went out shopping for your car, I'll guarantee you
you had a strike price something you knew you would
buy at. Yes, I did, right, and you kept looking
(03:35):
for that strike price.
Speaker 4 (03:36):
And I found it. But you're right.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
Somebody else, how long you've been around, you know you
can move the mic to your mouth, please Jesus God. Yeah,
I mean it'd be different if you're a stranger off
the street, but you've been so anyway, if you had
somebody else looking at that car, they might have a
different strike price, which means they would buy it. Okay,
how much has to do the eBay bids? Everyone has
(04:00):
a strike price on everything for buying and selling, everyone does.
Every single person has a strike price. Don't ever say
I don't really know what I want to pay. You
do know what you want to pay. Now there's a
Sometimes there are balanced price strikes. What does that mean balanced?
It means with a car, for example, the strike price
is different depending on the mileage. Maybe, so for this car,
(04:23):
I'll pay this. For this, I'll pay this. You have
an absolute strike price for which you won't go over,
but never a lower strike price. So with airlines or
with anything with here's what they're doing. AI has the
ability to look into you, your purchase histories, the prices
you've paid for things. This is all available information, and
(04:48):
they will price accordingly. Now I'm going to tell you
something else. Credit cards are using artificial intelligence price you
as far as finance charges and credit risk. They assess
you as a credit risk based on purchase history. If
(05:11):
you make purchases, for example, that are so called black
T shirt purchases. You know guys in black t shirts,
and let's say they buy things like, I don't know,
just a bunch of weird stuff, maybe as opposed to
someone who buys Mackenzie Child for the kitchen. They have
(05:36):
what they call risk pricing, and they will charge you
interest based on your credit risk. But now your credit
risk is not just how you've paid in the past,
but what you buy. They think certain buyers of certain
things might be higher risk. I'm going to give you
an example when I said the black T shirt. People
(05:58):
who buy motorcycle parts or motorcycle souvenirs or you know, paraphernalia.
You know, you know, the bike crowd. They have certain
things they like. And then there are surfers, and then
there are people who do motocross. There are people who
do marine sports, and some of them are preferably priced.
(06:21):
You may have someone who charges white you know, or
black tie events, and they literally are looking at your
personality as a person to see what the hell and
how you should be priced. I know that sounds hard
to believe, but it's absolutely true. Okay, having said all
(06:43):
of that, if you want to have an intelligent discussion,
call me. If you have a problem, question or complaint,
call me. And also, I decided I'm also going to
open this up to why am I special? Now I've
done this before where people call in and tell me
why they're It's kind of like an Instagram post a
Twitter post, but it's live on the radio. And what
(07:06):
I mean by why you are special is if you
have a product or a service and in business and
you think you're special, I want you to call me,
and as you've heard, I'm in a very creative mode.
I know people think that's crazy, but you know a
few years ago I started Wave eight Wealth Management, and
I have my Troubleshooter network, and along with Mark and Suzanne,
(07:27):
we have a bunch of other companies and I'm in
a creative mode. So if people call, I'm telling you
right now, this is like a mini shark tank, except
it's just me and Mark. I'll you know, Mark, We'll
be in on it most of the time, but sometimes not.
We want to help fund business or help them with
(07:47):
the back end. This is free of charge, by the way,
the helping on the back end. So if you're in
business and you're struggling, we have advice for you too.
Three zero three Martino, you can call twenty four to
seven and get in on the show. We have such
a vast number of people who delay listen. They listen
on the treadmill at night, or I listen sometimes going
(08:08):
to bed. They listen all kinds of times. They download.
We have tremendous downloads. And then of course some of
you stream, like my YouTube morons on YouTube. Those morons
stream and they all talk to each other. It's a
little club, and I affectionately call them morons, So listen seriously.
In addition to consumer problems, questions and complaints, I want
(08:30):
to know if you're starting a business or an inner business,
if you're special, why and maybe you can get some
help from us with no charge. I'm Tom Martine. This
hour brought to you by Waterpros dot and at the
best water systems at the lowest prices bar none. And
I mean that, you know, it takes something for me
to say that. I don't just say this out my whatever.
(08:52):
I say it out of my heart. You can get
water systems, but they're not going to take out Forever Chemicals, plastics, Irene,
soften and purify and drinking water for thirty nine ninety five.
At waterpros, you will you know, plumbers will try to
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even come close. Waterpros dot net Paul the Waterman, my
(09:13):
friend three oh three eight six two five five five four.
That's eight six two five five five four. Go with
a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel roofing dot com.
You don't pay a cent until you're content. Time for
an insurance check up free, no obligation. In comparison, call
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Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens of
insurance companies find out now three all three seven seven
to one help. You'll think you're his only customer when
you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot com
to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi on Tom Martino
(09:55):
your troubleshooter three oh three seven one three talk seven
three eight two five y five. McKay has an issue
with h HVAC. So is it the air or the
furnace part?
Speaker 5 (10:08):
Dear, it's in the air handler, is what it seems like.
There's an issue.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
Okay, so you you noticed it when it started getting
hot and you couldn't use your air well Whenever.
Speaker 5 (10:19):
I used it, it works like it cools it down,
but there's some smell that comes through the actual HVAC system.
So it smells like.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
Oh, that's easy, that's we've heard right. No, it really is,
it really is. There are people are used to this.
Speaker 6 (10:36):
Now.
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Part of that could be you have moisture in your system,
you know, uh huh yeah, and if you do, by
the way. It's a good idea. I mean, there's nothing
wrong with moisture, but you can dehumidify if you want,
or there are things you can do for the duct work.
You know. Let me see who I'm going to call
for this. Let's see you have you have? So the
(11:02):
main symptom is what? What's the main symptom that?
Speaker 7 (11:05):
Like?
Speaker 5 (11:06):
For me, I get asthma symptoms whenever there is a significance.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
But I mean, what do you see around the house?
Why did you call me? I mean why all of
a sudden? What was the issue itself?
Speaker 5 (11:17):
I get it. No, this is a new belt. There's
been a large amount of dust and construction that's coming
through the system. Yeah, and there has also been then
the moisture smell, and the apartment complex has made it
very clear that I should be the one who pays
(11:39):
for uh now, for that's what I.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
Want to know. What do you want them to do this?
See I'm asking why you called? What do you want
them to do?
Speaker 6 (11:48):
For sure?
Speaker 5 (11:49):
Well, so they are. They had told me that they're
going to let me out of my lease okay by
the end of the month, and.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
I well, there's certainly a way we can make that
happen if in fact, you know, I'm lately I've been
getting so many people hitting my QR code. I put
up a post on how to use the Warranty for
Habitability Act, how to use it and it truly does.
(12:19):
It truly does help. It'll help you get your landlord.
Did you sign me? But it must be against the
habitability standards, and I don't. You still haven't told me.
So let's walk through this. If I walk into your apartment,
what will be the problem? In other words, what is
the problem? I like, like, like, do you see mold?
(12:40):
Do you do? You tell me the issue?
Speaker 5 (12:44):
Okay, there's three issues. One is that there's gaps in
the back door. Like all the doors that are in
the place, you can see to the outside, So there's gaps.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
You can do what you can.
Speaker 5 (12:57):
You can like see the outside inside when the door.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Okay, So okay, does the door securely lock and keep
you safe? Oh yeah, okay, it goes locking and safety.
I'm trying to find the article and I will, But
that's a really big thing, the locking and all of that.
So if that I'm telling you you don't have an
issue with security, it's not part of the habitability Act.
(13:21):
But keep going, Okay, tell me different things and we'll
figure something out that might be part of the part
of the Habitability Act, because if we do, I promise
you you're going to be shocked at how you can
find stuff to help you. So go ahead for sure, Okay.
Speaker 5 (13:37):
Number two item is the dust event. There was a
dust event about a week or so ago where it
came through the duct system where there was just a
massive amount of dust.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
Okay, but is that coming from neighbors or is that
coming from where's.
Speaker 5 (13:55):
That coming system? And then it also seems also unpacked
the rest of the building as well. It didn't necessarily
impact my neighbors somehow. I was the unit where that occurred.
It clogged my air filter is what it ended up doing.
So I got a new filter and now we're back
(14:15):
to normal. That's number two. And then the third piece
is HVACS. Some where anytime I use the air conditioning,
there's this like moist mildewede.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Okay, that could be well that comes through that could
be a habitability issue. It could be I want you
to leave your email and I want you to read
over this PDF I send you, and then I want
you to call us back and let's walk you through it. Kachina,
can you take her email and I will email Mikayla
(14:49):
this thing for the warranty of habitability. Is she over
there and I can't see what If she wants to
drink mimosas, tell her I'd rather she be here and
drink them, so so bring the picture in here rather
than having to run out. We can all tell what
she's doing because when she walks in, we all get
a whiff, right, So tell her to bring the picture
of Mimosa's in. Shannon, you won't I vibe anyway. So no,
(15:13):
I quit drinking in No.
Speaker 6 (15:14):
Eight.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
But she's working on getting YouTube started for all eight
of your viewers. Yes, thank you. What a little wise
ass he is. I have more morons. I have a
ton of morons doing that. By the way, the last
count I had on yesterday's show was forty six thousand downloads.
Thank you. So that was yesterday. Doctor Joel Cherdack, he's
(15:39):
with Denver Regen dot com. I personally went to Denver
Regen for two things. I went for hair stimulation. I
call it stimulation because they don't really implant it. The
one I had done was hair stimulation and they used
various themselves and everybody in the world noticed. I mean
(16:01):
I was you notice even Yeah, okay, I mean I
my hair thickens. Now I'm not telling you. I have
the hair of you know, a twenty four year old
stud whose parents are orders. Yeah, so I don't have you. Yeah,
you have a high hairline, but you have hair, and
you have hair Scott. But the thing is, I wasn't
(16:24):
going bald. I took after my mother's side, which most
men do, and it was thinning. It was not bald
at all. I mean I had a tiny it was
more thin towards the crown than around. But I wasn't bald,
but very thin, very thin, and you could see my
scalp if I cut it short enough. So here's the deal.
(16:44):
Hair thickening worked. It really, really, really really worked. So
are you doing much of those anymore?
Speaker 4 (16:52):
And we're doing a ton of that. We've actually improved
on our procedures.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
Oh sure, after I did it, how are you improving?
Speaker 4 (17:01):
So we have another product that we add to our
mix of stems because.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
You add my stem cells, plus you have ex zomes
correct that you bring in and then you have what
So now we also have what's called MVT microvascular tissue.
What is the micro Where do you get that from?
Speaker 4 (17:16):
So it's a product that we get from the same
lab that we get the exozone.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
And what does the and by the way, exizmes people
always say Tom, not always, but people text me when
I talk about this because I used to speak against
I had a big fight. I used to endorse them,
and then I found out what they were doing. A
stem cell of America whatever they was back in the
day when it's coming out, and they were shipping in
stem cells. And I just want to claim find because
(17:40):
Joel and his team do ship in chemicals, but not
not stem state. They don't pretend they're living stem cells.
Let me just give you a nutshell. If you go
to any stem cell therapy clinic, if they say that
they are shipping in stem cells for you, they're lying.
Stem cells were not will not survive shipment unless it's
made into a drug by super concentration. We're not allowed
(18:03):
to do that in America because no one's gotten the approval.
So therefore, if they ship stem cells legally, they cannot
be used because there's not well, they can be used,
but there's not one of them alive. Not one of them. Well, okay,
there might be three, and there should be billions. However,
the cells they do ship in stem cells, even if
they're not living, still have beneficial results. But it's not
(18:27):
stem cells, but they have beneficial results. Then if you
further take away stuff from them, you can get down
to exi zomes, which are the true magic, and they
can be shipped legally, and they do survive and they
do have tremendous qualities. What are some of the things
I've heard people? Now, listen, folks, I'm not saying this
(18:49):
is a cure or there is a cure, and I'm
not touting cures, but there have been cases of people
with fatty liver disease, kidney disease, other diseases that exosomes
taking system systemically through the blood. They got over this crap.
I mean exi zomes. What are exosomes?
Speaker 4 (19:11):
So, exizomes are the chemical signals that stem cells produce
in order to affect change. So like in your body,
when your body is doing different things, it's chemical signals
that are causing the growth and causing the regrowth and
causing the signal to your own cells to regrow, and
so all that the exozomes are are the packets of
information that the stem cells release. But they're distilled, if
(19:34):
you will, down to that actual packet of material, so
they work a lot faster. They don't get released continuously
like you would. Would you have your own stem.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Cells, you do a combination. So you do a combination.
You do the best of all worlds.
Speaker 4 (19:48):
Right, So the exozoons work first, okay, and then the
stem cells prolong that healing effect over time.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Okay. So that's so. So I had that done and
it worked. And then I had my lower back before surgery.
And I say before surgery because people know sim cells
was going to cure this. But I swear to God,
it gave me such relief. I remember talking to Joel saying,
(20:17):
it's not working. It's three months later, he says, give
it a little time. It was like magic to me.
It relieved me so much. I was tempted not to
do my surgery, but obviously I had a structural problem
that nothing could have cured that like that. And you know,
fusion was the only solution until my doctor and I
(20:37):
found the TOPS procedure. I won't get into all that,
but it was this spinal implant that allows movement. It's
not a fusion. But anyway, before that though, right before surgery,
I was going doing great. I mean, they did such
a wonderful job for me. I just couldn't believe the relief.
(20:59):
I couldn't believe it. And I would imagine, Joel, if
people have minor problems, this will stem cells will do
it for them.
Speaker 4 (21:10):
Well, we get great success with the general of arthritis,
disc injuries, and degeneral barthritis in the lower back. You know,
your situation, as you've explained, was severe. Yeah, but when
we have people with a little bit lesser of a situation,
that might be all that they need. We just had
a patient that we treated today for a significant disc
herniation in their neck.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
We get actually, well so, but won't the disc still
be herniated or what?
Speaker 4 (21:35):
So the explanation about that is that when you have
a disc injury, it's the inflammatory chemicals that are coming
from that tighter that are causing the pain.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
And they signal other kinds of inflammation around the body,
and it's.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
The inflammation that causes the symptoms in the pain, not
necessarily the mechanical pressure of the disc. So what stem
cells are able to do is resolve that inflammation that
are causing the information to stop. So it sets up
an environment for your body to heal itself.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
All right, Denver Region dot com. This stuff you know,
Look it works and now nothing is one. But you
can give us a club. You have questions about it,
and I am going to ask. I am going to
ask what doesn't work, what doesn't might do a little improvement,
(22:25):
but you've had bad luck with it, and I'll do
that right after this. I took you this and I
want to remind people that fix it twenty four seven
Fix my Home dot com. These people are incredible. They
came out to my house when I first they first
had this special and they spent two hours. They took
parts of my air conditioner all over the lawn, started
(22:45):
cleaning each and every crack and crevice. They had a
mat down and then they put the parts in and
then they go in and they clean out inside, they
clean the contenser. This is thirty nine bucks. People. You
add life to your to your AC because it's the
number one killer. You also add efficiency with a no
breakdown guarantee. Now listen, they're really busy, Okay, but if
(23:07):
you call they're still going to do this for Martino listeners. Okay,
only for Martina listeners, and you have to be a
new customer, So fix it twenty four to seven. Go
to this website and book it thirty nine bucks. Fix
my home dot com book now. You might have to wait,
but it's worth it. Fixmhome dot com book now. Go
(23:34):
with a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (23:38):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home Remax Alliance three oh three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hey, I have a
(24:08):
text here about used cars, and it said I remember
a discussion one time, and Mark was disagreeing that anyone
would actually enforce it. But it was back a few
years ago. On buying cars as is that there even
though you buy as is, there are certain laws that
(24:29):
can protect you. Okay, let me explain some of those.
The first one is covered under federal law. Something has
to be what it is, even as is. Do you
know what I mean by that? Okay, let's say they
advertise a television for sale. Okay, Facebook, Marketplace, Craigslist or
wherever the other morons go. All right, so now you
(24:52):
go and look at it. You don't turn on, you
don't do anything. And because they say this as is,
this is a stupid example, but it's exaggerated on purpose.
You take the TV home and it's absolutely as is,
no refunds, no exchanges. You realize when you plug it
(25:15):
and nothing happens. You can't turn it on, remote doesn't work,
nothing works. So you kind of look inside it. You know,
you don't think you can fix it, but you just
want to take a look. You open up the cabinet
and it's filled with rocks. Now, this is an exaggerating
example of under covered under the Magnus and Bass Act.
(25:39):
Something must be what it is, even if as is,
even if, even if there's no refunds or exchanges. So
you call the guy that sold the team and you said,
this TV is filled with rocks. He says, yes, it's
a rock storage bin. But you bought it as is. No, no, no,
(26:00):
it has to be what it is. So a car
has to be a car. It can't be a planter
out in the yard. Okay, even though some of them
are out in the country if you're in Albert County
or Kiowa County. But here's the deal. You have to
have that much. That's But Colorado, though, has specific laws,
(26:21):
and I'll get to those at a moment. But I
have another text for doctor Joel on region. They want
to Oh, first, I'm going to put you to the test.
What doesn't what I want to know? Things you don't
have good luck with.
Speaker 4 (26:35):
Well, a lot of times we get patients who call
and ask if PRP will be enough to fix their issue.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Platelet rich plasma, which is their blood spun down and reinjecting, right,
And it's.
Speaker 4 (26:45):
Something that we add to our stem cell mix, and
patients will inquire us to whether or not that alone
will be beneficial. And so for small muscle tears or
for inflammation of a muscle or attending chronic inflammation works great.
But if you have anything bigger than a small muscle tear,
in other words, like need degenerate arthritis, it's not going
(27:05):
to work for that. It's not going to.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
Restore part but stem cells stem cell therapy in general,
I had great luck with my lower back. I don't
know how I did, but I did. And some people
have great luck with their elbow or their knee. I
want to know where is the least amount of success,
And I know you don't want to You don't want
to keep people away because even though it might be
a low percentage of success, some people in that low
(27:27):
percentage have a high percentage. I understand all that, but
there must be a category where it's especially a challenge.
I would think it's low back, but I don't know.
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (27:38):
Well, the spine proceders just take longer for the effects
to take place, whereas like no like four months for me, right,
it can take several months for that. But something that
it it probably wouldn't work for would be a bone spur.
So's if there's bones growing into an area, Yeah, that
needs to be removed surgically before stem cell procedure can
(27:58):
take place. And so those patients that have bonespurs that
are causing pain, that's not as stem cells not going
to fix it. Stem cells can add but they can't
take away.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
What about these people that have knees and they get
this cushioning fluid. What is that thing on top of
the cock called comb? The comb? It comes from the comb?
Speaker 4 (28:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (28:18):
Don't they still something acid?
Speaker 4 (28:20):
Pyle uronic acid?
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Okay, cool? I remembered it was an acid, right. Anyway,
So when they need cushioning like that, what will stem
cells do. It's not going to create cushioning.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Stem cells will regrow some of the cartilage you now it's.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
Luych would which would diminish their need for the cushioning.
Speaker 4 (28:37):
Well, it would add the cushioning.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
Yeah, that's what I mean. It will add the cushion
It wouldn't need as much of that acid.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
Right. And also what the stem cells will do is
reduce the inflammation which is causing the degenerative arthritis and
the pain is the first will.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
Help with that. Yes, okay, So anyway, that was so,
So if you're getting those injections of the fluids, stem
cell con further help by possibly growing some cartilage. Okay,
so just know that three O three seven to one
three talk seven run three eight two five five or
three oh three Martino. We got more coming up? Go
(29:14):
with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (29:18):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance Paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
to seven to one help. You'll think you're his only
customer when you choose Frank Durand the real estate Man
dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance three
oh three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hey, I'm
(29:46):
Tom Martino. You're troubleshooter. Let's go to Robert. Robert, what's
going on? Man? What's happening? Hey?
Speaker 7 (29:55):
Yeah, I just I bought a car without a month
and a half ago. Yeah, yeah, dealership in Long Long Did.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
You did you buy Robert? Did you buy this as is?
Speaker 6 (30:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (30:08):
It's a used car so in Colorado anything above twenty
four thousand miles is excluded from the Lemon loss.
Speaker 6 (30:14):
So, yeah, it was as is?
Speaker 3 (30:16):
Vehicle as is? And when did you say you bought it?
And exactly what is it?
Speaker 7 (30:21):
I technically bought it in May twenty six. I want
to say it's a twenty sixteen out e S seven sixteen.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
How many miles on that all has?
Speaker 7 (30:32):
Seventy nine thousand miles?
Speaker 3 (30:34):
I'm not terrible, Okay, So so okay, what's the issue? Man?
What's the issue? Yeah?
Speaker 7 (30:43):
So I picked it up on June third, so they
had to fix some stuff on it.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
That's when you actually took delivery technically.
Speaker 7 (30:52):
Yeah, and I got it a mission I went to.
It had some stuff wrong with it when I drove
it home.
Speaker 3 (30:59):
And you know, did you take this car somewhere to
be checked out? And don't tell me you had them
check it out? I mean, did you have an independent
mechanic look at it.
Speaker 7 (31:09):
No, they don't allow that at that dealership.
Speaker 3 (31:11):
And why let me ask you? I mean this, and
I'm really curious, and I love quizzing my listeners, not
to put you on the spot, but if they don't
allow you to have this car checked out, didn't that
throw up a red flag for you a little bit?
Speaker 7 (31:26):
It was Memorial Day when I bought it, so they
said they didn't really have access to throw it up
on a list.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
Yeah, but Robert, didn't it tell you? I mean, you
did know? Really? Unless they lied you cheated, you ripped
you off, or covered it up. You're responsible for everything
that happens to that car from the moment they put
the keys in your hand.
Speaker 7 (31:49):
Yeah, I mean except for the fact that they failed
the missions a couple times.
Speaker 3 (31:52):
Now, hold on, hold on, let's talk about that. And
I should mention this dealership is in Longmont and long
and Greeley. Are they both Wald County? Or is? Yes? Okay,
I just just a programming note. I the vast, on
the vast, terrible of the field of complaints. It most
(32:18):
bad dealerships. In fact, I don't know of one good dealership,
not one, not one my personally, not one in Weald County.
There might be people I never hear from because they
don't get complaints. Maybe we should research that. But Robert,
so right now, I want to know how can we
help you. You bought a used twenty sixteen AUTI around
(32:41):
seventy thousand miles. Who'd you buy it from?
Speaker 7 (32:46):
Boots Motors in Long Line.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
It's called Bruce Motors.
Speaker 6 (32:50):
Boots Motors.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Oh, Booth. Oh, we've heard of Booth before. They really suck.
Was this the salvage car?
Speaker 6 (32:58):
No, it was the title.
Speaker 7 (33:00):
It has a clean title, but it shouldn't.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
I think this was the one, and I might be wrong,
but I think this is the one that actually advertises
that's all they say. No, maybe I'm wrong, But what
are you saying no for? How do you know? Well?
Speaker 9 (33:17):
I was looking.
Speaker 3 (33:18):
It's a dealership up in Windsor. I get it, bro
I got it right on here, and it says booth
motors about us, And I think no, And maybe you're right,
this is not the one. Okay, it's not. But there
are dealerships that literally specialize in salvage cars. This is
not what this is not it. So here's the deal.
(33:41):
They're in Longmont. This DEVI you drive, that's the one
we're talking about, right, three oh three seven seven two
eight thousand. Yeah, okay, So tell me what you want.
I'm serious. You have you had a lot of problems
like like our Do you have major problems? Now?
Speaker 6 (34:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (34:03):
It needs already, I mean it needs more work than
it's worth.
Speaker 6 (34:06):
It needs to go.
Speaker 3 (34:07):
Now on the emissions. Here's how it works. Upon sale,
unless it's a tow away vehicle. Upon sale, they have
to give you a what is it called the voucher
that it's good for three days and you have to
get tested within that three days. If you miss that
(34:27):
three days, everything is on you. If you go and
it doesn't pass, everything is on them. And if they
can't make it pass, we can undo the deal. So
hang on, unlet's analyze your deal. Also, Michael wants to
talk about workplace violence. We have a lot coming up
on the Troubleshooter Show. Also, you can call three oh
three Martino. It'll come right through to us three oh
(34:49):
three six two seven eight four sixty six or three
oh three seven one three talk with a sure thing
Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (35:03):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (35:09):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
Yeah, rid of.
Speaker 10 (35:37):
Needs who you don't have.
Speaker 2 (35:42):
Run anxious astas as you can. Shooter's gonna help coming man,
this is the Troubleshooter Show.
Speaker 3 (35:52):
No Tom Martino. Hey, I'm Tom Martino. Thank you very
much for being here where we at to make your
life a little easier by solving problems, answering questions, taking complaints.
And we have guests from time to time. We have
a guest today, So get your calls in and callers
(36:12):
get priority on this show. And you can also text me.
I haven't given out that number and so long, but
I get so many texts here. This comes to my
cell phone. Here's a deep dark secret. It's cloned my
cell phone. It's not cloned, it's it's fed to here.
So that number is exactly like having my private cell.
(36:35):
It's a Google number, so I can turn off if
I ever need to. But I will answer mostly your texts. Okay,
I can't promise phone calls, but I promise you it's
a place to get help. And it is seven four seven,
nine nine, nine fifty to eighty and to remember it.
(36:56):
I like airplanes, and seven forty seven is a big plane.
Seven four seven, I like perfection. Nine nine nine is
as close to perfection as you can get. Because I
can't write ten ten ten for a phone number. So
it's seven four seven nine nine nine. And then the
next one is easy to remember, fifty two eighty for
the Mile High City, so it's seven four, seven nine
(37:16):
nine nine fifty two eighty. Then then iHeart also has
a number you can text a short coate. It's called
and it's for all hosts. So put my name in
there on all nos for me. Five seven seven three
nine five seven seven three nine. Okay. My guest today
is doctor Joel Cherdak, who is with Denver Regen dot com.
(37:38):
They do stem cell therapy, PRP therapy, all kinds of therapy.
They do some of the main things, of course, bones
and joints and tendons, all of that, sports injuries, all
of that. Then they do hair thickening I call it
hair enhancement. And then they also do weight loss and
weight loss through some glue tide or chzeppati. And again
(38:01):
these are at a fraction of the cost on the market,
as you will find in most clinics or of course
with the brand names. I thought that drugs were protected
and patented, Doctor cherdoct Why is it that so many
people are offering these terzeppetide and semiglutide now they don't
(38:21):
use the brand names obviously of whatever they are o
Zempic and Manjaro and all of these, but they still
use the active drug. I thought, where does that come from?
How did that happen? Tell me about that?
Speaker 4 (38:36):
Well, I'll give you the short answer. Yeah, yeah, So
the short answer to that is that the compound of
drugs are combined with either B six or B twelve,
depending on the compounding pharmacy, which makes it a different compound,
and the B vitamins aid in weight loss.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
You mean to tell me, I so you can copy
your and I don't mean you The industry copycats. All
of these compounding pharmacies are copycatting, and then they're adding
their own little thing. Correct. Okay, but what about this
I heard you had to prove there was a shortage
(39:14):
of the drug in order to legally do it. What
you're saying is you can do anything as long as
you change it, right. And what is this one FDA
ruling that said that they would allow it to be
compounded because of a shortage.
Speaker 4 (39:27):
Well, that's a different thing. That means that you can
really copy the exact same drug without adding anything to
it in the exact same dose.
Speaker 3 (39:34):
There's an emergency supply shortage.
Speaker 4 (39:37):
If there's not a shortage, then there needs to be
another drug combined to it, and you need to show
medical necessity.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
Okay. For that, I want to give a programming note here.
I are because I'm at the mothership today and the
laptop is remote. It is a long story. We had
a blackout and so we don't have a YouTube right now.
But I'm going to go live right now when I
figure it out. I'm going to go from my channel
and uh or from our channel here uh and and
(40:05):
I'm gonna go live from my laptop. So you're not
gonna have a lot of fancy crap. And I don't
want to hear anything, all right, And I don't know
how to go live directly from my laptop, but I'm
sure there's a button here that allows me to do it.
And I'm going to figure it out during a break.
So for my YouTube morons who stream, and obviously it's
gonna be uh to download, You're gonna have to go
(40:26):
to the iHeartRadio app. Those who download the uh if
you download the you know the show. Uh, it's not
gonna be on YouTube to download. I'm sorry about that.
So just bear with us. Three oh three seven o
three eight two five five. So I was talking about
something that I want to get back to, and that
(40:48):
was the yea Robert. I was going to tell him
how to get help, but he hung up. Now some
people do because they think I'm gonna tell him, you know,
return the car. In fact, Kachina, if you took Robert's number,
call him back. I'll get right to him. Okay, yeah,
I'll call him. I'll talk to him right this minute,
because he had an important topic. Okay. Now, so as
(41:11):
I was saying, we have a situation. I was talking
about when you buy something as is and it is
not as is, or it is as is, but you
still want help for it. So we're gonna be talking
about that. Then this problem that Robert had was with
booth motors, and I said, that's a place that I
(41:34):
hear a lot of them. And I don't know why
I hear a lot of it. I'm not sure. I
don't think we've had a lot of complaints about him.
But for some reason, that name rolled off the tongue
like I've heard it several times and everyone here said
the same thing. So they must have come up on
the show before. I'm doing a search to figure that out. Meanwhile,
I do have a text here for doctor Joel Trudek
from Denver Regen dot com with weight loss. They want
(41:58):
to know which one and what's the difference between turzepetide
and semi glue tide. They say they hear them mentioned
all the time, so what's the difference.
Speaker 4 (42:07):
Okay, I'm gonna go through real quick. So sema gluetide
is a GLP one drug, so it acts as a
mimic of one specific chemical that your body produces to
tell your brain that you're full, that you don't need
any more food. Trezepetide is a GLP one and a
GIP so it works on two different receptors, so it
(42:28):
has a little bit more strength to it, it has
a little bit less side effects, and for those patients
were the that are really overweight and needed to have
a lot of weight loss, turzepetide sometimes is a better
choice because it just works a little bit better because
it hits two receptors instead of one. But generally speaking,
they're they're they're basically the same.
Speaker 3 (42:48):
And this one a text and by the way, thanks
for using that that number and I'll give it to
you again seven four seven nine nine eighty. This one
says I'm already taking met Foreman, and that is, by
the way, a met foreman controls ac one and blood sugars.
And it's a long story, but people love this drug,
(43:11):
by the way, and a lot of longevity experts are
starting to use it. And I'm not sure why. I'm
not sure what the met foremant does, but this drug
has been a miracles for some anyway. And she says
that already controls my A one C. If I want
to lose weight and take this compound. And by the way,
I'm summarizing this, she didn't write exactly this, and I
want to and I assume it's a sheet. I don't
(43:33):
even know if it is. And I want to use
one of these drugs. Will it further dangerously possibly lower
my blood sugar? What do I do if I'm already
on blood sugar meds. That's a good point. If you're
already on blood sugar meds. Now, these drugs trzeppetite and
semic glutide are made to control blood sugar. So could
you what would you do in a case like that?
Speaker 4 (43:55):
I would say you know, she'd consult with her physician
who'd kind of direct her in the right direction.
Speaker 3 (43:59):
Her prime Mary, who's taking care of her.
Speaker 4 (44:01):
Either her primary or our medical doctor in the clinic. Okay,
to look at those numbers and see where they are
and recommend what would be the best dosage.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
So then maybe cut down on the met form and
while you're on But possibly, I'm not saying to do
it potentially.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
I mean the answer is, we have a lot of
those types of patients, uh, and it's different for everyone.
You know, it might be the case that they'd want
to use some a glue tide instead of trs eppetite
because some a glue tide just works on the hunger
issue and doesn't affect blood sugar necessarily, where tzeppetite is
more of a diabetes stroke.
Speaker 3 (44:30):
Okay, Now I talked about when is as is not
as is. We'll talk about that and more. Three L
three Martino, Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer
Excel roofing dot com. You don't pay a cent until
you're content. Time for an insurance checkup free, no obligation.
(44:51):
In comparison, call compass insurance paying too much your coverage
at dozens of insurance companies. Find out Now three all
three seven to seven to one help. You'll think we
are his only customer when you choose Frank durand the
real estate man dot com to list your home with
Remax Alliance three all three nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
(45:13):
Hi Tom Martine, you're a troubleshooter. I'm trying to go
live on an alternate means for those who stream, and
I'll do that in a minute here because at the mothership,
I'm not there to reboot the laptop. It's a long story.
If you care about technology, you know technology when you
think about it. I was looking at the businesses I
(45:34):
run and have and investments and different things, and thought,
the productivity of the average person has exponentially increased because
of technology. If it is amazing to me how much
you can juggle and how wonderful things are. And I
(45:55):
believe one of the best programs of the modern age.
And I shouldn't say the modern age, but seriously, now,
if you're talking about business and entrepreneurialship and you're talking
about productivity, QuickBooks Online, if I had to pick up program,
QuickBooks Online can do so much and if you get
(46:18):
to know it as an expert. I wish there was
a class on it. Maybe there is, maybe at a
Rapo Community College or something. Look that up, man, look
that up. See if you can find one. Chopper, but
QuickBooks is a valuable tool. But Google Drive for organizing
across your organization. So if you have a few people
you're working with and you need to share information. Google
(46:42):
Drive is basically a drive in the cloud that Google
provides you as part of your account. When you go
to Google Drive, you can choose what to put on there,
any of your files you want to put on there.
You can create the files there in their version of
a word doc and their version of a spreadsheet, and
their version of a database, and their version of everything
(47:04):
Microsoft offers. But you can also just upload the Microsoft
docs or whatever docs you have, so you're not limited
to just Google stuff. So you create this drive and
it's a hard drive okay in the sky, and everyone
that you want to access it can access it. And
(47:25):
you even have other sub drives you can make called
shared drives, so you can have a main drive for
you and have sub drives for different people in your organization.
And think about this anywhere you are with a phone
or a laptop or a business center computer at a hotel,
you know, you can log in and see everything you've
(47:45):
had stored there. You can do your spreadsheets, you can
then oh and then there's Google Voice. I mean, think
about this now. I know the last couple of things
I'm talking about is Google are Google, but you have
similar products outside of Google. But I'm talking about how
technology helps your business. So what you have is you
literally have a phone system. You have a phone system.
(48:10):
You can forward this number anywhere you want, you can
stop it, you can communicate through it, you can make
calls with it. It's called voice. And what I'm saying
is if you haven't availed yourself of technology, then you've
missed the boat. So if you are starting a business,
you have to find someone and job it out who
(48:31):
knows and who is savvy with business, or you do
it yourself and you learn what you have to learn.
And so many people avoid technology or they adopt it
half asked and they don't really know what they're doing.
They just know if I press this button and this button,
this will happen, and then they hope everything will work out. Okay,
(48:51):
I have to text here about the ass is. Are
you going to go over that? Yes, I will. I
did talk about that. Let me get back to it.
Somebody wanted to know about the ass is. So even
though you bought a car, as remember I said, under
Magdison bosson federal law, everything has to be what it is.
So if you bought a car and obviously you tried
to start it and there was no motor in it,
(49:12):
and somehow you got a home and you didn't notice
it until you got a home, you towed a home,
and you call them and say there's no motor in
this and the car and they say, oh, it's a
lawn ornament. See, it has to be what it is, Okay,
unless they advertise it as a motor vehicle lawn ornament.
I'm serious. That's exaggerated, but true. It must be what
(49:35):
it is. That's the only requirement. No, there are a
few more. When it comes to vehicles. There is a
state law CCR two five Dash one that outlines material
particulars they're called that sellers must disclose to the buyer.
Most dealers don't even follow this law, and many times
(49:57):
you're able to get out of a deal because of it. Again.
I remember when we first learned about this law, Mark
was almost adamant that no one is ever going to
enforce this. But anyway, here's what it is. Material particulars
that should be disclosed is if the car is salvaged
(50:22):
or not. Okay, and that is mandatory, mandatory, And then
there are some other things. By the way, three zero
three seven to one three talk if you want to
add to the conversation, or if you have a problem question,
complain concern of your own, or you want to talk
to doctor Joel Trdak from Denver region dot com about
(50:44):
weight loss or about stem cell therapy. Anyway, if the
motor vehicle sustained damage, whether repaired or not. I didn't
know about this, a frame or unibody damage of any grade,
or a flood or fire or hail damage, or an
accident or collision. Come on, they have to disclose that.
(51:07):
I'm with Mark on this, and the as is, no
one enforces this. I don't even think the dealer licensing
board does. The motor vehicle has been modified in a
way that impacts warranty coverage, the motor vehicle had been
declared a total loss by an insurance company, so this
is different than salvage. It was declared a total loss.
So these are things according to CCR two five dash one.
(51:31):
It's one seastar. I'm going to look up this law,
by the way, and I just did, because to me,
this is a game changer on calls we get about
as is. How many times Chopper and Dollar have we
had people call in with problems and we say, well,
you bought it as is. But think of what this
law is saying. Any frame or unibody damage, any flood fire,
(51:54):
or any kind of hail damage or other accent or
collision must be disclosed. Whether it's the salvage is must
be disclosed. And let's see what else. If the motor
vehicle has been modified in any way, Oh, come on, man,
think about that, and then the motor vehicle had been
declared total loss by insurance company, or the motor vehicle
(52:15):
had been stolen in the past, you have to tell that,
or the motor vehicle if it was used as a
police vehicle, a vehicle for hire, how would you know
if somebody used it for uber or lyft?
Speaker 9 (52:27):
Tom That sounds like they want to disclose your sheet
Like in real state. I've never seen anything like that
for a car.
Speaker 3 (52:35):
I remember Norris brought this up to us. She used
to run SOS inspections he did for cars. Norris is
no longer doing that. He had a discussion with Mark
on the air and Mark was saying, yeah, all of
this name one time this has ever been enforced. And
I wish Mark was here. He's coming in and I'll
ask him because he was adamant. No one's going to
(52:57):
do anything. Where do you call? What do you even
do about this? But I want to look more into
this law. This law is a game changer people. This
law is a game changer because it means, as is vehicles,
you'd have a lot more rights to it. Uh three
oh three seven one three talk seven one three eight
two five five Go with a sure thing Denver's Best
(53:20):
roofer Excel roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (53:22):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (53:28):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hey Tom Martino
(53:52):
here three O three seven one three talk seven one
three eight two five five. Let's talk. We have this
this weight loss thing on the weight loss supplements. They
want to know which one is cheaper?
Speaker 4 (54:12):
Is cheaper?
Speaker 3 (54:13):
Okay, So tranzepetite is more expensive, semiglutide is a bit
less expensive. But compared to the brands and other clinics,
they're a screaming deal, a screaming deal. Uh, let me
go to my emails and see. Okay, somebody wants to
(54:34):
know about advanced mud jacking and what it does. So
what mud jacking means is they take a slurry of
concrete and mud and they pump it to give support
to an area that has been eroded away. So under
(54:54):
the ground, sometimes voids exist where underground water or other
pressures cause soils to settle, and sometimes voids or holes
or caverns underneath a structure might appear or underneath a sidewalk.
And what it does is it actually makes it sometimes
(55:15):
sink or in other areas, heave, depending on whether there
is expansive mud below or soil. So what does mud
jacking do. Somebody who's good at mud jacking goes to
where it is settling and they fill the voids with mud.
(55:35):
They call it mud. It's concrete, and it's a different
kind of concrete. It's not so much it's very structural,
but it's made to spread and to fill. Now some
do this with a poly well, let's see, it is
a poly it's a synthetic product that resembles a plastic
that it's an expanding foam that they do the same thing.
(55:58):
So whether you're filling the void, and they don't have
to necessarily fill the whole void, but they have to
make like underground support. So what the fill does is
goes down to the bottom where it stops settling, and
then it fills up to the top and it becomes
almost a peer or a structural support, so it doesn't
(56:18):
keep dropping like that, and that it it stabilizes. Now
where it has heaved a little most of the time
when you lift, the other side goes down back into place.
If not, there are ways to repair it. But once
the so you can repair concrete on the surface as well,
where the cracks were of it heaved or sunk and
(56:42):
that's done separately, that's separate from mud jacking. So anyway,
our number is three oh three seven one three talks
seven one three eight two five five. How long does
it take someone to lose fifty pounds? Uh, this is
a straight out question. I don't know what to tell them.
Speaker 4 (57:01):
That's going to depend a lot upon you know, what
percent of that of their body weight?
Speaker 3 (57:06):
What is the normal loss of weight? What would be
the normal? Is it two pounds a week, a pound
a week, three pounds? I mean, what is it? I
think the more you have to lose, the more you
lose upfront. I've seen that with people.
Speaker 4 (57:19):
That's absolutely true.
Speaker 3 (57:21):
You know.
Speaker 4 (57:21):
I like to talk of it in terms of percentage
of body weight rather than in pounds, because everybody's different.
So twenty to thirty percent body weight is what people
can expect to lose within the first three months.
Speaker 3 (57:34):
And do you lose This is another text I heard
and I've seen people. I call them ozembic bodies. It
seems like they're flabby, but thinner does it eat up
muscle and fat?
Speaker 4 (57:51):
Well, when you lose body weight, you are going to
lose some muscle with that too, which is why We
always encourage people to increase their protein intake and increase
their resistive exercises.
Speaker 3 (57:59):
So I want to keep exercising, and you want to
take protein to build muscle, to keep to maintaince to
keep muscle, right, that's very important. So the answer is,
by the way, folks, the answer is yeah, you will
lose muscle in fat and you can. I've seen that. Look.
That's sick, flabby look. But that's not the fault of
the compound as much as it is the person.
Speaker 4 (58:23):
Right, you don't want to just rely on the drug
itself and not do anything and be a couch potato
and expect it yourself to look good. You'll lose the weight,
but you'll look sickly potentially.
Speaker 3 (58:33):
All right. An update now, I talked about a guy
being jilted. I don't know if you call it jilted,
and she said no, I mean, I guess when you propose,
there's a chance somebody will say no. Of course, this
guy was shocked when he contacted me, and I'm keeping
him anonymous. We don't have to. Let's call him Barry.
I don't know why I picked that named Barry. So
(58:55):
Barry has living with a girl for eight months and uh,
Kachina's got the email there, Kachina, if she's not on
the phone, could you read from that email? Like some
of the things she did to this guy Barry. He
all he did was ask her to marry her. But
now they had been getting along up to that point, right,
(59:15):
didn't he say? He didn't have a clue?
Speaker 7 (59:17):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (59:18):
Correct? And then after the proposal, what did she do
to Barry?
Speaker 11 (59:23):
They went to counseling and uh she it then went
kind of it got torn asunder.
Speaker 3 (59:35):
But what does she but she said they were doing fine?
He proposes to her? Correct, and then she came on
glue though didn't she move everything she had out immediately?
But she wasn't moving out before this.
Speaker 11 (59:49):
No, she went behind his back and signed a lease
and bought a new car.
Speaker 3 (59:58):
And well was why had they had they been co
mingling finances up to now?
Speaker 11 (01:00:04):
They had? Oh, the one good thing he did was
take a transfer fund on his lease to move into
a different part of.
Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
So she still is she in the original apartment or
is he? Or they both gone?
Speaker 11 (01:00:24):
They're both No, he is in the original apartment as
we speak. He's moving out early August, and he still
has this beautiful ring, this beautiful princess cut ring.
Speaker 3 (01:00:39):
With povy princess cut which is square for those who
don't know. Yeah, and then they also have pave diamonds
around a credding band and they come as a set
and they really are beautiful. Now I'm going to tell
you the downside. When I say downside, it's not a
downside for me. And I asked my wife what she
(01:01:00):
would think, and she said, I don't know. Is mind fake?
She did not say. And I said, first of all,
it's not fake lab grown. They literally take a piece
of carbon and irritant or whatever you call it, and
they subject it to all this crazy pressure and heat
(01:01:23):
and it becomes a rough diamond. Then they cut it
and it's perfect, which is a problem. A lot of
people think, you know, it's too perfect.
Speaker 11 (01:01:33):
Well, you know, there are the three c's cut, clarity
and carrots.
Speaker 3 (01:01:39):
And the carrot and the clarity will be perfect, yes
to the size, but the cut could be changed depending
on the skill of the cutter. But here, let's get
right to it. We want to help this guy sell
it now. He paid around three grand and what we'd
like to do is see how much we can get
them and if any I'm serious about this now when
(01:02:00):
I say this, okay, I don't want to make fun
of his situation. The ring is beautiful, okay. And it
can be sized for they left it where it can
be sized, so size is not a problem. Now here's
the deal. If you're interested at all, if you're thinking
about getting engaged, you're going to get a screaming deal here.
(01:02:21):
And it's a perfect diamond. But it's lab grown, which
by the way, is identical to so called well not
so called, but to natural diamonds. Okay, lab grown and natural.
It's kind of like a knockoff of a diamond, but
it's identical. And here's what you do. You email us
help at troubleshooter dot com. Help at troubleshooter dot com.
(01:02:47):
And what will happen is it will you will put
a price in and he's willing to deal. He just
needs to undo the damage and move on with his
life exactly.
Speaker 11 (01:02:59):
And also so just to uh put a just to dovetail.
Speaker 9 (01:03:04):
On your point.
Speaker 11 (01:03:05):
It is an actual diamond.
Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
This is not a cubicxerc no it is. It's a
real diamond. It's a real diamond. Yes, it's just lab grown.
So if you're interested in help at troubleshooter dot com,
or you can call us and we'd love to talk
about three oh three seven one three talk seven one
three eight two five five or three oh three Martino
(01:03:30):
Go with a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing
dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:03:34):
You don't pay a cent until your content.
Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi Tom Martino
(01:04:06):
here three three seven to one three talks seven one
three eight two five five Denver Regen in the house,
Denver Regen dot com. We've been talking weight loss. Now
I want to talk about neuropathy. Neuropathy is a tingling
or numbness in the fingers and toes, or you can
even go into your calves and legs, or it's mainly
(01:04:27):
in extremities. Nerves are damage. Blood vessels are damaged. Sometimes
sometimes there's no upfront reason. A lot of people believe
it's inflammation which is caused by glycation of the blood
which is consuming too many carbs and sugars. But whatever
it is, it's uncomfortable and it's terrible. Now, I'm a
(01:04:49):
fan of getting to the root cause of neuropathy and
stopping it, which could be high blood sugar and other things.
It could be nerve damage, it could be other things.
Now there are some things that can be pinpointed, and
there are people who want relief from symptoms, and that
is exactly what you're talking about, right, Joel.
Speaker 4 (01:05:10):
Right, Well, neuropathy a lot of times is caused by
lack of blood flow and damage to the nerves. So
if we're talking about diabetic neuropathy, which is a large
percentage of the neuropathy patients that we treat, it's a
combination of the nerve has been damaged and the blood
flow to the nerve has also been compromised. So what
we can do with stem cells and exosomes is restore
the nerve, restore the damaged nerve, and also we add
(01:05:34):
what I was talking about earlier, microvascular tissue which causes
new blood vessel growth, so you'll get new blood vessel
growth to the nerve plus healing of the nerve its.
Speaker 3 (01:05:43):
So you have case studies where it's helping with neuropathy,
not just here but around the country at all.
Speaker 4 (01:05:48):
I mean, yeah, if you just look up stem cell
therapy for neuropathy, you know, you can put it in
an AI and you can see all.
Speaker 3 (01:05:53):
What kind of successive you had at your clinic Denver,
Regien Dot.
Speaker 4 (01:05:57):
We've had pretty remarkable success. We had a couple of
pay granted stem cell therapy typically takes a few weeks
at least before you start noticing improvement, and we've had
two cases recently where people were telling us that they
were seeing improvement within a week. So that's pretty amazing
compared to what we typically see with a stem cell procedure.
So we have pretty good success with that. Again, we'd
(01:06:18):
have to pinpoint what's causing the neuropathy. Not everybody's a
good candidate for this. Diabetic neuropathy does great. Neuropathy due
to trauma if it's not long standing, responds very well.
It really depends on what the cause of the neuropathy
is and how long the neuropathy has been there, because
the longer it's been there, the longer the nerve has
had a chance to degenerate, and the harder it is
(01:06:39):
to regenerate. That nice.
Speaker 3 (01:06:40):
So, but I'm correct in saying that neuropathy is for
extremities mainly. Yeah, well it's I mean, you're not going
to get neuropathy in your stomach.
Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
It's only because you have small nerves and small dead
blood vessels out in your extremities, right, you know. Otherwise
you have the same thing going on throughout your body,
of course, but you're going to notice it in your
extreme because that's where the smallest blood vessels and the
smallest nerve endings are. Plus you're walking on your feet,
so that's where you're gonna feel it.
Speaker 3 (01:07:06):
All right, three oh three seven one three talk seven
one three eight two five five. So on the again,
getting back to the code, I looked up the actual law,
and I'll be a son of a gun. This law
one CCR two OZH five Dash one addresses as is vehicles.
(01:07:30):
It also addresses new vehicles and what is required. I
used vehicles to find at any motor vehicle that has
missold bargained exchange given away or titled they're too, transferred
from one person to another, blah blah blah blah blah.
And it goes through it. It talks about what needs
(01:07:50):
to be disclosed, and that's amazing to me because it
they do have to disclose previous damage, any kind of
salvage or insurance loss, whether it's been stolen or not.
And major I'm telling you major defects they say must
(01:08:12):
be disclosed, but it's within their knowledge. The Dealer Licensing
Board regulates this. So again, what's you know? I want
to know what would happen with a private owner? See
the lead. The leverage that the Dealer Licensing Board has
for dealers is that they can take their license right,
(01:08:35):
so that is the hammer. But for a consumer, what
are they going to do? They can't take a license
because there is no license and according to the code,
there are no fines I can find or penalties at best.
What it is. What it is is a way for
you as a consumer to use it in court. That's
(01:09:01):
what I see about this law. So you should look
into it. And they go through everything that must be
disclosed in an automobile sale, even if it is as
is it truly is more than you would think. I'm
Tom Martino. Hey, we got more time to go three
oh three seven one three talk seven one three eight
(01:09:23):
two five five or three oh three Martino go with
a sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:09:32):
You don't pay a cent until you're contenth.
Speaker 3 (01:09:38):
Time for an insurance checkup free, no obligation. In comparison,
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three oh three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two ripped up.
Speaker 1 (01:10:06):
New need advice so you.
Speaker 3 (01:10:08):
Don't have come.
Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
Run in just as fast as we can. Shooter's gonna
help coming man.
Speaker 9 (01:10:18):
This is the Troubleshooter Show now, Tom Martino, Hey.
Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
Tom Martino here, Welcome to the show, the only show
of us, kind of anywhere on us forty fifth year
in Denver and fifty years overall, I've been fighting for
consumers' rights, solving problems, answer questions, taking complaints, recovering hundreds
of millions of dollars for people. I've dedicated my life
to this. Really, you can always get help twenty four
to seven. Spread the word three h three Martino. So
(01:10:47):
many times we get through everything without attorneys, without a
lot of craziness. We have retired executives and active executives,
and doctors and lawyers and accountants and insurance brokers and
experts ready and willing and able to help you. Isn't
that wonderful? Now? By the way, we've been talking about neuropathy.
I have Denver Region dot com with US Denver Region,
(01:11:09):
which does stem cell therapy. One of the treatments they
do is on neuropathy. Can't Glenn?
Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
What is your comment? Glenn?
Speaker 10 (01:11:19):
Yeah, Like a couple of months back, I started having
neuropathy and my A one C is like not that high.
But I just figured that it was like finally like
turn it into diabetes or something. So I was pretty scared.
Speaker 3 (01:11:31):
How bad? How bad was it? Glenn? Oh?
Speaker 10 (01:11:34):
It was some nights it was this constant all night.
I like a lot of sleepless night.
Speaker 3 (01:11:39):
Was it tingling? Was it fasciculations or a little spasms
or what?
Speaker 5 (01:11:44):
Kingling?
Speaker 10 (01:11:45):
Numbness and then just like insane. Like it's hard to describe.
Speaker 3 (01:11:50):
You know what, people who don't have it, it's hard
to describe what it is like if you don't have it.
Now I developed it and it's temporary. It comes in,
goes with the cycle. I'm in chemotherapy and just a
programming note. Thank you for everybody's kind thoughts. I beat
the pancratic cancer. It's one hundred percent removed. The follow
(01:12:11):
up care just has to do with some follow up
chemo that is protocol. And what it does is causes
severe neuropathy to a point where I cannot button my shirt.
Do you ever get that bad where you can't button
your shirt or something?
Speaker 5 (01:12:24):
No?
Speaker 10 (01:12:25):
Well, I was just like doing a lot of googling
and I read something where it could be a vitamin
B twelve deficiency. So I was like, what the heck?
So I bought like some sublinguals.
Speaker 3 (01:12:34):
Well they're talking about. What they're talking about is nerve
food if it's a nerve issue. But you know, I,
oh god, there's so many articles you can probably find
out somewhere where baby poop on toast is good for it. Joel,
what is the uh? What is the school on B
twelve or bees and neuropathy.
Speaker 4 (01:12:57):
It can help, you know, like you said, it is
nerve food. It does help with nerve function. You know,
if it's a vitamin deficiency, it's worth giving that a
try and see if that improves. Neuropathy can be caused
by so many different factors that you know, it's worth
trying these things out. Ultimately, do you have diabetes?
Speaker 3 (01:13:17):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:13:18):
Yes, no, I don't.
Speaker 10 (01:13:19):
Okay, everything was negative except like, well.
Speaker 3 (01:13:23):
What did your doctor say about it? What did your
doctor say?
Speaker 10 (01:13:27):
He said, if taken B twelve like fixed it, then
just keep doing that.
Speaker 3 (01:13:32):
I would agree with that.
Speaker 10 (01:13:33):
For like, there's like a I don't know, like Celiac
disease can interfere with B twelve absorption, and so there's
a lot of other tests you can do to see
if your body's not absorbing.
Speaker 3 (01:13:44):
And by the way, Glenn, I I am not a
loan supplement arranger, and a lot of people are. They
hear this will do this, and then they add it
or this will do that and they add that. I
truly believe in a complete blood panel and then having
a doctor or a qualified nutrition iss. I'm not talking
about these freaking nutrition iss that, oh, you need a
(01:14:05):
balanced diet. A balanced diet is probably the worst thing
you can have in your life. But so what I'm
saying is this is that based on blood work, I
do all my supplementation based on blood work, and blood
work is truly the only fingerprint that will tell you
what supplementation is good. There are some supplements you you know,
(01:14:26):
I'm not going to harm me either way, but it's
okay to add B. But for all you know, it
could be something else blocking absorption, like you said, and
a good blood panel with a good primary care doc.
And just a disclaimer here, You're not going to find
too many good primary care docs that can literally go
through blood work and make recommendations. But I found a secret,
(01:14:47):
and I'm going to tell you something that just knocked
the sense right into me. This is what I did.
I took my I think they call it a SMACK
twenty five or whatever. They did this blood test this
quick where it's the main panel. They call it right,
and then there's a few subs.
Speaker 4 (01:15:05):
I was going to say, there's a there's another test
that you can do for nerve function itself, uh nerf
EMG electromyograph. You guys do that TV nerve. No, that
would be done by a neurologist.
Speaker 3 (01:15:16):
Okay, yeah, and that is for the serious mac daddy's
to see if you have really serious diseases.
Speaker 4 (01:15:22):
It'll tell you how bad the nerve dysfunction and.
Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
How far it goes. It could go to your spine,
it could go to your elbow. Literally, sometimes nerve pain
stops at a certain area or is centered at a
certain area. Get getting back to this. I took my results.
It was a pdf, my blood results, and I uploaded
it to chat GPT. I did and I said, based
(01:15:47):
on this blood work and the supplements I'm taking. Then
I uploaded the list of my supplements and I swear
to God, it came out with recommendations like I noticed,
you don't have this be consider adding it and decrease
your D three and do this. And I thought I
was sitting down. I used to do this blood work
(01:16:11):
comparison every three months, and I used to do it
with Grossman Wellness. He's a great guy, great clinic, great everything.
And I used to do that with him. I used
to sit there and we'd go through it, and not
many people know how to do it. Not many doctors
but then I would have recommendations based on him. Now
(01:16:34):
I do it on chat GBT, I swear to God
I do. I upload my blood work, then I upload
my supplements and make adjustments accordingly. But I do not
believe in blind supplementation. Okay, let's talk to Bob about
camping World. Bob, what's going on? Man? There you go, Bob,
(01:17:00):
what's going on in the world?
Speaker 6 (01:17:01):
Yeah, go ahead, April fourteen? Yeah, and it still hasn't
been fixed.
Speaker 3 (01:17:06):
Well, okay, what's been there since April? You got clipped
in the beginning? What was it?
Speaker 4 (01:17:11):
What do you have?
Speaker 6 (01:17:12):
We dropped it off. I had it towed up from
our property in Trinidad up to Colorado Springs one A.
Speaker 3 (01:17:18):
What did you have to I need to know the
v the RV we're talking about.
Speaker 6 (01:17:22):
Uh, it's a Jaco j Flight L thirty two L
R three.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
K Now, you're giving me too much. So your Jco
r V you drunk? Is it a bumper pool, a
fifth wheel or a motor bum bumper pole? Okay? Okay?
And you took it there.
Speaker 6 (01:17:38):
When April fourteen because they had a recall for the
windows might fall out, And then I had other problems
that I wanted them to look at.
Speaker 3 (01:17:48):
And so you haven't heard from them.
Speaker 6 (01:17:50):
Oh, I've been calling them in there. Whatever they're giving
you to run around, well this and that, because I'm
having the waters heater changed over to a tankless one.
Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
Okay, is this they may I ask me? Is this
a uh a brand new one you bought or was it?
Speaker 6 (01:18:07):
Well, we bought it's a twenty twenty. We bought it
and we keep it in the garage down on our
property like north Againada.
Speaker 3 (01:18:14):
Is it still under any kind of warranty?
Speaker 6 (01:18:16):
I have an extended warranty? They said, there's a year
left on it.
Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
And what is your main complaint today? That you're being ghosted?
They won't talk to you. I mean what.
Speaker 6 (01:18:26):
What the one slide out started tearing the floor up? Now,
the mechanic told the service people that when they made it,
they put in too long of a screw and that's
what's tore up the floor. So now they're saying, well,
ja Co only has a two year warranty and so
it's five years old now, but the extended warrants he
(01:18:49):
is still in effect. I didn't well that.
Speaker 3 (01:18:51):
Yeah, but they extended warranty won't cover that.
Speaker 6 (01:18:56):
Well, I didn't build it and put the wrong screw
and the mechanic said the screw were too long.
Speaker 3 (01:19:01):
Well I understand that, but that that would be covered
under the manufacturer's warranty which expired. I mean, I know,
how much is that going to cost you to fix?
Speaker 6 (01:19:09):
Now? Obviously putting by about five hundred bucks.
Speaker 3 (01:19:12):
Okay, so that's for the new floor, and then they're
just going to put shorter screws in.
Speaker 6 (01:19:16):
I guess yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:19:19):
Look, man, I know what your theory is. Your theory
is the warranty shouldn't it shouldn't expire on this because
it was done wrong from the beginning. That, by the way. That,
by the way, is an argument we get from so
many people who say this, Look, I understand it's a warranty,
it's a two year warranty. But if it was never
done right to begin with, blah blah blah, blah blah.
We get that call all the time. But that's precisely
(01:19:42):
what warranties are. That's precisely what they are. Things that
weren't right from the beginning, or things that popped up
as a result of things not being right. So, Bob,
if your warranty expired is not going to cover it.
I doubt the extended warranty would cover it because it's
more like an insurance thing. It's not a maintenance issue.
So is that the main thing you're calling about? Or
(01:20:05):
what's the main thing we can help you with? Okay,
what do you want? Tell us what you want us
to do. We're here to help put a.
Speaker 6 (01:20:14):
Fire under there. But so maybe I could use my
camper for Labor Day since I three months.
Speaker 3 (01:20:20):
Pitty Chopper is going to call Camping World. Have you
ever talked to them before?
Speaker 4 (01:20:24):
No, I've.
Speaker 3 (01:20:26):
You did? So you have a name and number, right.
Speaker 6 (01:20:28):
Bob Uh you need the number?
Speaker 3 (01:20:32):
Not on the air. What I'm going to do, I'm
going to have Deputy Chopper sitting right here, chomping at
the bit. I'm going to have him look into this
and what, as you said, light a fire. Sometimes when
you just mentioned stuff like this to people, it helps
to light a fire. So you hold on and we
will take you off the air and take care of this.
(01:20:52):
Frank around. The real estate man dot com will do
a free market evaluation of your home to tell you
what it was sell for. Now what does that mean? No,
I'm obligation. He'll look at your home, the comps, the neighborhood,
price range, interest rates, everything in the market, the supply
and demand, and give you an idea of what your
house will sell for. And he has a vast experience
(01:21:13):
to do it. Frank durand the real Estateman dot com
a free service three oh three nine two zero sixteen
twenty two. Go with a sure thing Denver's Best roofer
Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:21:29):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (01:21:34):
Time for an insurance checkup, free, no obligation comparison call
Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens of
insurance companies find out now three oh three seven seven
to one help. You'll think you're his only customer when
you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot com
to list your home with Remax Alliance three oh three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hey I'm Tom Martino.
(01:21:58):
You're a troubleshooter three ot thos seven one three talk
seven one three eight two five five very lively texting
going on? And somebody wants to know with with tennis elbow,
what what exactly is tennis elbow? Uh and stem Cell
therapy is tennis elbow. I I heard that even pr
(01:22:21):
PL work on that, right, Tell me what tennis elbow?
What is it? Is it an inflammation? Everything's in inflammation.
What is it in addition to inflammation?
Speaker 4 (01:22:29):
So it's it's basically just eeroto chronic inflammation of the
tendons on the outside of your elbow where your elbow
joint is, where that muscle is when you.
Speaker 3 (01:22:37):
And they call it tennis because if you're gripping something.
Speaker 4 (01:22:40):
It's like moving, it's like your backhands. Okay, it's like
the muscles you would use with the back Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:22:44):
So it's the and so it gives you a pain
with that.
Speaker 4 (01:22:46):
The technical name is lateral epicondylitis.
Speaker 3 (01:22:49):
Okay uh.
Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
And that epicondylitis, it's inflammation of the conduct of the epiconda.
It's the inflammation of that air, inflammation of the So
so that's something like I was talking about earlier that
PRP would actually work for because it's not a muscle tear,
it's not degenerate arthritis, it's just chronic inflammation. So the
first step would be PRP.
Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
Okay. And we have here talking about who wrote to
me about Coca cola I mean, what moment Coca Cola
it says, it says that Coca Cola will make a
version for the USA with cane sugar and h and
(01:23:28):
right now it's it will be similar to Mexican coke.
Did you know that there is a separate coke you
can buy called Mexican Coca Cola made with cane sugar.
But I don't. I don't know the big deal. I mean,
truly sugar, sugar sugar. What.
Speaker 4 (01:23:42):
Oh, it tastes totally different.
Speaker 3 (01:23:44):
The Mexican I had. I asked for one the other
night at a Mexican restaurant. I don't know if I
noticed a difference. What is it? Waste sweeter?
Speaker 4 (01:23:52):
If you've tasted them next to each other, you would
notice a huge difference. The cane sugar Coca Cola, in
my opinion, is much better.
Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
I said the sh word. I didn't realize that coke
is that bad for you. They have just a corn
syrup and all kinds of trap.
Speaker 4 (01:24:08):
For years and years they've had corn syrup, but you
get it from Mexico and it has regular cane sugar.
Speaker 3 (01:24:15):
Oh. By the way, the word fast food shouldn't be
used here. Now these are now don't ask me how
they did it. But this organization took it upon themselves
to do a massive nationwide survey with thousands of drivers
(01:24:36):
and timers, and they came up with a list of
the slowest drive throughs in America. The slowest, I know
one of the answers, it's whichever one I choose to
go to. I swear to you. I mean, I have
(01:24:59):
such a prom uh so here it is. Now listen
to this Number one. Just take a while. Guess You'll
never guess it in a millionaire because it's not a
normal thing you even think about and drive through. And
I'll give you I'll give you another hint. It comes
from a chicken. It's Wingstop. The number one slowest, Like
(01:25:19):
I care? Did you know Culver's. Now that's a relatively
new chain to Denver, but it's been around. It's it's
Culver's is pretty good. Food is number two slowest. Number
three is Churches. Number four Panera. I didn't even know
Panera has a drive through. Number five is Tropical Cafe
(01:25:40):
something again and not heard of, probably not in this state.
Bo Jangles is number six. What the hell is? It
looks like a chicken logo Zaxby's, zack By z ax Bys.
Have you ever heard of that? It's beck East? Yeah, okay,
so that one. Number eight pop Pies. I guess when
(01:26:01):
it comes to chicken, wing stops Zaxby's. Popeyes. When it
comes to chicken, it just is slow. Popeyes is number eight.
Steak Can Shake is number nine slowest. The tenth slowest
is Freddy's. The eleventh is what a burger or one
of burger? What a burger? KFC number twelve, thirteen is cookout,
(01:26:24):
fourteen is DQ fifteen is Carls Junior. Who do you
think has the fastest? Come on?
Speaker 1 (01:26:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
How did you know that? And it would help if
you put the mic within a mile of your mouth.
I mean it doesn't have to be right at it,
but within a mile. Good Chick fil A? Why did
you say that right away? Because of your experience? I'm
not a big Chick fil A person, but I know
that they are fast. My god, it was amazing. What uh?
(01:26:55):
What you know? Number one by long shot a distant second,
but good one is McDonald's. Do you find McDonald's. To me,
I've never once gone to a McDonald's where I wasn't
asked to pull off and park somewhere to wait my person.
I don't know, there must be something about me. This
survey found that most of them are understaffed because these
(01:27:17):
people are taking care of the drive through and they're
taking care of, uh, you know, the people there. And
that brings to mind Starbucks. Starbucks isn't on the survey
that I can see. It might be anyway, So what
they did was by the way, they took the whole
state and they ranked states and the slowest drive throughs
(01:27:38):
of any state in the United States. If you had
to pick the most slow drive throughs of any state.
I cannot believe the trouble these people want. These people
went through for the survey, but I can see it. Hey, dude,
how do you want that burger? California the slowest, the slowest,
(01:28:01):
the slowest, number two. Listen. I don't know how to
put this, but but number one and number two are
liberal states and the fastest ones are conservative states. I
just look, everybody puts political bend to everything, so I'm
going to do it. I am saying that progressives and
(01:28:26):
Democrats are slow when it comes to fast food. That's
that's my theory. Anyway, California is the slowest, secondest Connecticut,
Third is New Mexico. New Mexico might not be liberal,
I don't know. And number four is Washington State, a
(01:28:46):
liberal BASTIONI another one. Number five New York. I think
I'm right. Number six Maryland. I think the slowest drive
ins I can say are blue. Isn't blue? Democrats blue?
Speaker 9 (01:29:00):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (01:29:00):
Yeah, So I think conservatives are slow and anyway that
has to do with And I'm amazed by the way
that people still go to drive throughs. I hate drive throughs.
I can't. I can't understand anything said, anything said in
(01:29:21):
a drive and I try to articulate. And my kids
just hate being in a drive through with me. Anyway.
They say, Dad, you don't have to talk to them
like they're you know whatever. Anyway, So in a survey
went to one hundred. By the way, Colorado falls right
in forty one, right in the middle for Colorado three
all three seven one three talks seven one three, eight
(01:29:43):
two five five more right up. Go with a sure
thing Denver's Best roofer excel roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:29:53):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (01:29:59):
Time for an insurance check up, free, no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance. Pay too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three all three seven
seven to one help. You'll think you're his only customer
when you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot
com to list your home with Remax Alliance three all
three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi Tom Martine here,
(01:30:23):
Doctor Joel Cherdek is with us from Denver Regen dot com.
We're talking about stem cell therapy and things like that.
I'm want to know something about sem cell therapy in general.
Some people do systemic sem cell stem cell therapy and
I never understood it, so they literally just take it intravenously.
What does does stem cells have a way of knowing
where to go well? Or do you guys do systemic.
Speaker 4 (01:30:46):
We do, and we use exosomes. We use exosomes and
growth factors not a person.
Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
Okay, So if someone gets a systemic or full body
intravenous stem cell which is in the form of exisomes
which used to be stem cells, but they still retain
the main growth factors, what does what does that do?
Speaker 4 (01:31:05):
It's going to it's going to affect any air of
your body that has inflammation systemic.
Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
And inflammation, by the way, is the number one reason
for all disease. All disease can be can be summarized
as first inflammation, all disease.
Speaker 4 (01:31:22):
Inflammation, my mitochondrial degradation, which also.
Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
Is which is first inflammation, then degradation, right, Okay, So
the stem cells will inter I'm sorry, the axisomes will
interact with any area that's exactly that's inflamed and resolve
that inflammation.
Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
So rather than it just being in a joint. You know,
if you have inflammation coming because you have liver disease,
if you have inflammation coming from your kidney because you
have kidney disease, it will help that, it will help
improve that overall inflammation. A lot of people do the
stem cell infusions just as an anti aging protocol because
inflammation is the primary cause of aging, if you want
(01:32:00):
to look at it that way.
Speaker 3 (01:32:01):
Absolutely, you know.
Speaker 4 (01:32:03):
Aging by anti aging medicine is considered a disease, and
we treat that as treating inflammation, so it can be
used to treat systemic disease like neurodegenerative diseases. We treat
Parkinson's disease with with with the infusions. We treat multiple
sclerosis with ifusions, we treat autoimmune diseases with infusions, and
we treat anti aging. We use it for anti aging purposes.
Speaker 3 (01:32:25):
Right, that's the part I've known about. And again it's
it's stand near a miracle. The way doing a way
of an inflammation can diminish your campatit or your potential
to get ill and one of the other things. So
not only is inflammation bad, but then there are irritants
(01:32:47):
to inflammation and adds inflammation. So we have been told
fats are good for us, and most fats are. But
lineac linearic is it called? It is the worse fat
in the world. And it will absolutely kill you. I mean,
it is the most terrible thing. And it's I think
(01:33:08):
you pronounce it line lineatic acid whatever, it's no lino
line oil like linyl. I'm gonna ask my my AI
how to pronounce it. But it's l I n O
l e i c acid. It's the most destructive ingredient
you can find in food. It is a seed oil,
(01:33:32):
and seed oils are in everything. Have you noticed that?
And it's also a cause for inflammation. Correct, And if
I could give health advice, to people. The number one
thing is to lower. Now sugar is another. Okay, The
main reason for inflammation is uh is glycation of the blood.
Glycation of the blood is simply the sugars and carbs are.
(01:33:57):
They're circulating your blood. They think your blood and they
don't think of everblod. They float in your blood and
irritate arteries and veins. Now, here's what happens when a
vein or artery, or just say a blood vessel. When
a blood vessel is irritated, what is the very first
(01:34:18):
thing the blood vessel does when it's irritated and it
starts getting inflamed. The number one thing it does is
sends out a signal for help. And that signal for
help is calling for cholesterol. Because cholesterol is not only
(01:34:41):
a building block of cells, but it is an anti inflammatory.
It repairs damage. It repairs damage. So all of a sudden,
cholesterol is rushing all over your blood vessels to fix
this inflammation. And here's what's stupid about this. So you
(01:35:03):
first you get inflammation, then you get cholesterol. Here's the
stupid thing people who go after the cholesterol. I've given
this analogy before. It's like shooting firemen on a way
to the fire and then claiming there's no fire. If
you kill the firemen on their way to a fire,
that does not put out the fire. So cholesterol can
(01:35:28):
build up and can be bad for you. But the
reason cholesterol is building up is because of glycation and
inflammation caused by glycation in your blood vessels. If you
cleaned up your diet of sugar and carbs and if
you reduced inflammation, cholesterol would be reduced. Now, there are
(01:35:53):
times you get two out of control, and you have
to control the cholesterol. In other words, you have to
put an end to this building up and start etching
away at it. But the best way to keep it
from forming again is to lower your intake of sugar
and carbs, of bad fats, and then increase protein and
good fats, and then you're on your way to health.
(01:36:16):
As far as stem cell therapy, what does it systemically?
If we do it, do you advise people also to
go on a diet? I mean, do you ever get
even with the people with the weight loss stuff? Do
you guys? Go beyond the quick patch? The quick patch
(01:36:39):
is the semiglutide or the tseepetite. It is people don't
necessarily learn things or with exisomes to help you become
anti inflamed or not inflamed. But they'll they'll go right
back to it if they don't change. So and I'm
not saying you should do this, by the way, well,
(01:37:01):
because you can only do so much. But people have
to know if they're if they're going for a quick fix.
And by the way, stem cell therapy is a relatively
quick fix, and it's a good one, and so are
eggs zomes, which is a form of stem cell, and
so is semaglue tide and to zeppatide. They're good quick fixes.
Speaker 5 (01:37:20):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:37:20):
Well, we give people general nutritional guidance when we put
them on the weight loss drugs. You know what foods are.
As a general rule, you're gonna want to stay away
from high fatty foods and from fried fruits when you're
on them, because they're going to irritate your gut. Now,
we are coming out in the next month or two
with a actual cookbook for patients that are on these
(01:37:41):
weight loss drugs. I found a publisher that really wrote
a really good book about it, and we're going to
start to include that with our program. That's probably about
a month or two away.
Speaker 3 (01:37:50):
Okay, So somebody asks, where do you find these oils
that are bad and these fats, and basically you can
you narrow it down to seed oils. Are there any
seed oil?
Speaker 4 (01:38:03):
Sunflower seed oil you see in a ton of stuff?
Speaker 3 (01:38:07):
Why do they? Is it a stable? What? What? What's cheap? Ah?
Speaker 4 (01:38:11):
So you could Yeah, so sunflower oil, Canola oil, which
comes from corn.
Speaker 3 (01:38:17):
Oil is not in that category. Olive oil is good
for you, right, it's a carcinogen, but that's debatable. That's theoretically.
Speaker 4 (01:38:27):
But there's really.
Speaker 3 (01:38:28):
Burn any kind of fat. You really shouldn't know because
it degrades it, right, it doesn't do the good for
your body it should.
Speaker 4 (01:38:35):
It actually does the opposite when you have denatured oils.
But there's not been, you know, any studies done on
heating olive oil to a high temperature and that causing
health issues. We've always heard theoretical. That's just theoretical.
Speaker 3 (01:38:48):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:38:49):
But you know what what I would recommend to people
is that animal fats are good for you. We were taught,
you know, our whole lives, My whole life was taught
animal fats bad saturated fats, and it isn't. It's one
of the best things you can use. In fact, you
can you see with the with the health the Health
Secretary of Kennedy. Yeah, getting these companies to use animal fats,
(01:39:10):
getting the fast food companies to use animal fat.
Speaker 3 (01:39:12):
If we could do away with seed oils, I swear
to God, so much of the heart disease would go down.
I mean you would you see amazing results. Now, if
there's a fine line between legislating health, you can't. I
mean there are just people who just don't take care
of themselves. I mean, if you look around, you'll see it. Yeah,
(01:39:33):
and you will. By the way, One Clear Choice Garage Doors.
What I love about one Clear Choice Garage Doors. They've
been with me for years and years and years. They
have twenty four to seven service and they do everything
from springs to hingebolts, to cables, to openers to doors,
door panels, every part and all of their prices are
(01:39:53):
on the website. One clear Choice Doors dot Com, One
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a cent until you're content. Time for an insurance checkup
(01:40:17):
free no obligation. In comparison, call Compass insurance paying too
much your coverage at dozens of insurance companies find out
now three all three seven seven to one help. You'll
think you're his only customer when you choose Frank durand
the real estate man dot com to list your home
with Remax Alliance three three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi,
(01:40:37):
I'm Tom Martinez. So that acid is linoleic acid. It's
an omega six and it is a poly unsaturated fatty
acid found in plant base, oils, nuts, and seeds. They
say it. The PR says it's great for skin health
(01:41:00):
as a building block for skin cell membranes, maintaining skin permeability,
and potentially helping with acne. Now, I'm telling you that
the majority of health experts will tell you it is poison.
You're not gonna now that's not Omega threes good, Omega
(01:41:20):
six bad. But why do some people Joel doctor, Joel Cherdek,
why do some people tout the healthiness of this Omega six?
I mean beats me. I mean you know there are
there there's seems like a lobby saying Omega six oils
are good for you. They're not good for you. It
says here, it's include. It's included in brain functions, skin
(01:41:46):
and skin and hair growth, bone health, metabolism. But so
are real fats. Right, So are real fats, fish, omega
threes and animal fat and animal protein. Do you know what.
For the longest time we were old animals are bad
for you. Now look it. I know about the compassionate
thing with the vegetarian, but I'm talking about diet wise,
(01:42:09):
like it or not, animal fat and animal protein are
the two best sources of those substances.
Speaker 4 (01:42:14):
I've had a couple of patients that have gone on
the carnivore diet and have asked me my opinion of it,
and I've done as much research as I possibly could
on it, and I couldn't find any definitive scientific proof
that it was bad for you.
Speaker 3 (01:42:26):
No, there's a lot of political truth. See, and I
don't mean political public a Republican or Democrat. I mean
political meaning what it does, what it does to an environment,
what it does to you know, like it just whole foods.
And by the way, whole foods is filled with a
lot of junk if you go to that store. I
don't know why people think Whole Foods is healthy. Now
(01:42:46):
it has some healthy options, but it doesn't have any more.
I mean it has as much junk as any supermarket. Yes,
it really does. And seed oils are the culprit people.
If you want to do one thing for your health,
cut out seed oils. If they use seed oils, you
should boycott it, not use it. If enough people do that,
(01:43:09):
they'll stop using it. Now it is abundant, It is cheap,
but it is deadly. It causes inflammation, which causes a
host of diseases. Denver Regen dot com. Any last words here,
we got an hour to go.
Speaker 4 (01:43:26):
If you're suffering from the general arthritis, if you're suffering
from inflammation, give.
Speaker 3 (01:43:31):
Us a call.
Speaker 4 (01:43:31):
We can help.
Speaker 3 (01:43:32):
Yeah, it's Denver Reagen dot com. Seven U zero five
A three sixteen forty eight. More coming up on the
Troubleshooter Show. Go with a sure thing Denver's Best Roofer
Excel Roofing dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:43:45):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
Time for an insurance check up free no obligation comparison
call Compass Insurance paying too much your coverage at dozens
of insurance companies find out now three out the three
seven seven to one help. You'll think you're his only
customer when you choose Frank durand the real estate man
dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance three
oh three nine two zero sixteen twenty two.
Speaker 5 (01:44:11):
Yeah, ripped up.
Speaker 1 (01:44:18):
News you need so you don't.
Speaker 2 (01:44:21):
Have come runing.
Speaker 3 (01:44:25):
Just as fast as we can.
Speaker 2 (01:44:27):
Shooter's gonna help come Man.
Speaker 3 (01:44:31):
Dix is the Troubleshooter Show. No Tom Martine. Hey, I'm
Tom Martino, and I welcome you to the show. We're
here to help you, and all you have to do
is call if you have a problem, questioner Comlain or
text me. I've been getting a lot of texts for
some reason, but you can always call three oh three
seven to one, three talks seven one three A two
five five or three oh three Martino three oh three
(01:44:51):
six two seven eight four sixty six. So I've seen
several calls come in and hang up, and Kachina Glory
is telling me that a lot of people call in
and don't understand it's a radio show. When I say
three h three Martino or I advertise it on social media.
Call for free help if you go on the airts
(01:45:12):
Anonymous folks We're not gonna call your name your last name.
We can even give you a fake first name if
you want. But you need to understand that coming on
the air is a way that we can assign one
of our esteem deputies to this to work on stuff
and to and to help you. Okay. Now we have
(01:45:32):
a lot of a lot of people doing okay, by
the way, a lot of people texting. Let me get
to one, Tom, I'm a coke I'm the one who
texts you Mexican coke cane sugar inflammation has gone away. Oh,
(01:45:53):
I don't even know what he means when I had
it on. When I had inflammation on regular coke cane sugar,
coke is what I drank. Anyway, I guess he's saying
that it's healthier for you. I don't think so. I
don't think so. Anyway. The selfie camera is always a
mirror image you do not have, okay. Anyway, So he
(01:46:16):
was talking about why my image on YouTube is flipped.
It's a mirror. I think it's a mirror image. Okay.
A couple of things, Tom, did it ever occur to
you that so called blue state fast food drive throughs oh?
I talked about how the Blue states are have slower
(01:46:37):
drive ins than Red states. I don't know why, but
I'm just saying maybe conservatives are quicker on the ball
than liberals. I love to steer up the crap. Who cares? Anyway?
A couple of things, Tom, did it ever occur to
you that the so called blue state fast food drive
throughs are three times as busy because the population is
(01:46:58):
three times as large, dense, and the smaller Red states
than the smaller Red states. Also, people in small Red
states rural towns are more apt to cook more at home,
where Blue states have greater restaurant choices. This guy is
such an idiot. I know you're not You're not an idiot.
I like you, Manty, But my God in Heaven, everything
(01:47:21):
everything Monty looks at is political. Everything I was joking
about the fast food drive through as being slower in
liberal states. Also, Tom, evidence is in people who have
had cancer had very love is. Yeah, this is true.
Have had low vitamin D levels. That's true, but that
doesn't mean high. You know, D levels are not going
(01:47:43):
to prevent you from getting cancer. But I've had wonderful diamond.
Look at no one took care of themselves better than me.
I'll just tell you that since I was forty seven,
so I was fifty seven to sixty seven, and then
at seventy one, which is twenty four years later, I'm
diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. And thank god it was isolated.
Thank god, I mean, because that's only happens three percent
(01:48:05):
of the time. It is a deadly disease. My heart
is going out to you if you have it. They
were able to dissect to get it out of me,
and they said the margins were clear, the pathology shows clear.
Now I'm doing follow up chemo because they always want
to do that, they say, as a follow up to
make sure every little cell has gotten And by the way,
(01:48:28):
interestingly though, they recommended against exi zomes and stem cells
during this time because the last thing you want is
to stimulate any kind of growth. So Joel, that's one
thing that sometimes people don't want to.
Speaker 4 (01:48:42):
Yeah, when patients come and get a consultation with us,
that's one of the questions we ask is if you've
had cancer in the past two years, if you've not
been cancer free for at least two years, we will
not administer stem cells.
Speaker 3 (01:48:55):
Yeah, and so yeah, there is a screen process anyway,
that is Manty and his ridiculousness. Uh and uh he is,
what's going on? Bro Lost? Oh okay, well I can't help,
but I'm just say well, I'll tell you what the
YouTube is. Screwed today, folks, Tom, could you ask the
(01:49:18):
doctor if it's safe to use some of glue tide
when you are on heart medications like meto pro RUBE'STAT
and well, rufstat is just a stat and that's okay,
but I don't know what this meto prolol is.
Speaker 4 (01:49:33):
I don't either. Generally speaking, most medications are safe to
use at the same time that you're using.
Speaker 3 (01:49:38):
Fact, I heard they were healthy, they did good things.
I heard they were healthy for heart patients.
Speaker 4 (01:49:44):
These drugs well, generally because it's going to cause you
to lose weight, which is always going to be healthier
for you. But uh again, when we do an intake,
you're gonna list all the medications you're on, and our
doctor's going to cross reference that make sure that there
isn't any contraindication. But generally speaking, there there really isn't
for any drugs that I know of. It's certain conditions
there are contraindications for, but typically not drugs that you're
(01:50:06):
also on.
Speaker 3 (01:50:07):
Okay, I have a text here as red Rocks, Roof
and Solar are still in business. Yes they are, they
are switching from their residential now. Obviously, if you have
a residential system in process, they're going to finish it,
they're going to take care of it, they're going to
warranty it and all of that. Okay, But they are
switching mainly to commercial right now because they're finding that
(01:50:28):
commercial solar right now is a bargain because not only
do you tax credits and deductions, you can also get
government grants if you qualify for the REAP grant, and
you can have one hundred percent of that system paid for.
So the answer is, yes, they're still in business if
you have a system in process, but they're switching from
(01:50:51):
residential to commercial, and that's a programming note there. Yes, yes, sir.
Speaker 9 (01:50:59):
Two days ago, I received a flyer in the mail
saying that residential Solar was still going to get government
grants and everything. So I looked at it and it
came from a solar com.
Speaker 3 (01:51:12):
I thought that they were expiring December thirty first I heard.
Speaker 9 (01:51:15):
That's what I thought too. I was just wondering if
this was some sort of scam or something.
Speaker 3 (01:51:21):
I don't actually know. I mean I heard they were expiring, Tom.
Did you hear about the study? This is a Have
you heard about the study about chewing gum? Yes? I have,
In fact I pulled it up. So because of the
pollution all over the earth basically of microplastics, they've done
a study into chewing gum and it releases microplastics in
(01:51:43):
your mouth. They contain microplastics. Chewing a single piece of
gum can release up to three thousand microplastic particles into
your mouth within minutes. This was a study released. Now
think about this, and it's both synthetic and natural gums
released similar amounts of plastic particles, which include types of
packaging and even things from automotive parts. I mean, microplastics
(01:52:08):
will be the next big thing. I know, we had
a big thing about mold and all this stuff, but
microplastics is a big fricking deal. Most consumers are unaware
that gum based contains oil based synthetic rubbers similar to
those they find in car tires and plastic bags discarded. Okay,
(01:52:30):
so anyway, they're saying that you can expect to have
microplastics consumed when you chew gum. That's a that's a
terrible thought. Go with a sure thing Denver's best roofer
Excel Roofing dot com. You don't pay a cent until
(01:52:50):
you're content. Time for an insurance check up free, no obligation.
In comparison, call Compass insurance too much your coverage at
dozens of insurance companies find out now three all three
seven to seven to one. Help. You'll think you're his
only customer when you choose Frank durand the real estate
Man dot com to list your home with Remax Alliance
(01:53:12):
three all three nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi
Tom Martine here at three oh three seven to one
three talk seven with three E two five to five.
Automatic withdrawals. Somebody asks about a company will not do
business with them unless they set up auto withdraws. And
they had heard me talk about automatic withdraws. And I'm
(01:53:34):
not going to name the company because it doesn't matter.
There are ways to have automatic withdrawals safely, in ways
not to have automatic withdraws. Number one, you never want
the company to initiate automatic payments into your account. It's
you only only do it if they give you access
(01:53:54):
online for you to initiate auto payments, but you're the
one that supplies your routing number and your account number.
They don't draw from your account. You push to them.
They're not drawing from it, well, or you're allowing them
to draw, but really you're initiating the payment. That's what's
really important. I want to tell you something. If the
(01:54:15):
creditor initiates payment, you can't stop it with your bank
unless the creditor agrees. We've had situations where consumers had
auto payments initiated by the creditor with information supplied by
the consumer, and they auto deduct from their account, and
they've had a dispute and they wanted to stop paying,
(01:54:35):
or they wanted a refund, or they wanted to quit
the service, whatever it is. That's a civil matter left
between the consumer and the company. But what the bank
said was, you can't stop your auto payment because you
never initiated it. You can stop one payment at a time,
but you can't put an end to it. This person
had to close their account and move banks. You can't
(01:54:56):
just you can't even stay at the same bank because
if you open up a new account at a bank
and something comes in where they owe you the money
or where they're trying to where they think you owe
them the money, they will go to another account at
the same bank. It's called it's called cross collateralization. Where
(01:55:17):
you have an account at a bank and you agree
in the signature paperwork, you agree that when you sign
up for an account, if you have any other accounts
with the bank, they can cross collateralize. So bad checks
or bad payments or any kind of a problem they
can come and they can take it from another account,
(01:55:40):
So watch out for that. There are ways to open
accounts without cross collateralization, like at a bank I have.
I have several different accounts, and I specifically disclaim joint
collateralization because they're different companies. I might be common to them,
but I am not. I do not want them going
from one account to an other. Should there be a problem.
(01:56:02):
Three zero three seven to one three talks seven one
three eight two five to five. Okay, somebody just texts
me that conspiracies are truths that people simply want to avoid.
I don't know about that anyway. We have a stem
cell therapy question on knees. What knee problems cannot be solved. Now,
(01:56:23):
they're not asking that, they're asking what can be solved.
I'm asking you that the really important question is with knees,
what can't be solved.
Speaker 4 (01:56:30):
So the most common thing that we see with knees
that we can't treat is like I discussed earlier, as
a bone spur into the knee, or what we sometimes
call loose bodies in the joint, which are bone fragments
within a knee. They can create a lot of pain,
they can restrict movement, and it's something we can't treat
with stem cell there.
Speaker 3 (01:56:46):
What about torn meniscus?
Speaker 4 (01:56:48):
Torn meniscus we treat all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:56:50):
And how does it work.
Speaker 4 (01:56:52):
It will reduce the inflammation, allowing the body to regenerate
that area that's been it's just cartilage that's been damaged. Now,
there are certain cases where you can have a torminiscus
and it can sort of flap over itself. We can't
fix that. That's a surgical intervention. But a torminiscus in
and of itself is something that we treat all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:57:13):
Okay, three oh three seven one three here here here,
hold on, Tom, I went on. I experienced exactly what
she talked about credit holds. Is there any way to
prevent them? Credit holds are reservations creditors make on your card,
(01:57:37):
which says this much credit must be reserved for me
when you sign an agreement. I'm going to give you
the most common way this happens. You check into a
hotel and you give them a credit card, so you're
on vacation, and you give them a credit card for incidentals.
(01:58:00):
Done that, Okay, What you don't know is they put
a hold on a certain amount from your card. It
depends on the hotel, depends on the area. The more expensive,
the bigger the hold. So you literally might have one
thousand dollars that this creditor or this hotel reserves as
your credit. Now, if you're on vacation with a credit
(01:58:22):
card and you use your credit card a lot and
you only have a couple thousand dollars in credit line,
it could be chewed up without ever spending a dime.
So you go to a hotel. Let's say they reserve
one thousand dollars, which is very common. So one thousand
dollars is reserved as if you spent it, even though
you didn't. You don't owe the money, but you can't
(01:58:43):
use that part of your credit. So now you go
and you rent a car. Car rentals are the biggest defenders.
They might put as much as two thousand or at
least what a deductible is on their insurance policy, so
that could write there. Those two things could drive your
credit where you no longer have a credit card for
(01:59:03):
your entire vacation. Yeah, done, You don't have and you thought,
wait a minute, I have a credit card. I'm not
actually spending the money. You're right. Even some gas stations,
when you go to a gas station and use a
credit card, they reserve a I don't know why they
(01:59:24):
do this, but they reserve immediately when you swipe it.
They reserve like one hundred bucks or so, even if
you're getting sixty dollars worth of gas and that doesn't
expire for a few days. It's an automatic credit reserve
when you swipe that, so you can swipe and fill up. Okay,
they don't make you put in a specific amount, so
(01:59:44):
when you swipe, they might withhold, or they might reserve
one hundred dollars sometimes two hundred. Then in a few
days it expires and you're the only reservation on your
credit is the actual use for that fill up. So
remember credit is something. If you're going on vacation this
(02:00:05):
year and using a credit card, make sure your credit
line is big enough to sustain hotels and rental cards
and gas pumps. And now retail doesn't do this, okay,
but other places can. So what I recommend is you
have two cards and just make sure you have enough credit. Now,
(02:00:26):
some people, of course, aren't fortunate enough to have enough
credit and they think that you know, they only need
one card. That's fine, although there is a reason to
have multiple cards. Multiple cards will give you a better
credit rating. I'm not saying you should use them, but
(02:00:47):
your credit is determined by the number of credit lines
you have and the percentage of use. So obviously, if
you have one credit card with one thousand dollars credit
line and you spend five hundred dollars, that would be
a fifty percent use of credit and you would immediately
have a bad credit for that month. It would knock
you down a few points or several points. So by
(02:01:09):
having more cards and more credit available, you are using
less than the percentage total. So if you had ten
cards at one thousand each, that's ten thousand dollars, and
if you spend one thousand dollars, that's only ten percent
of your credit line, which would give you good credit.
(02:01:30):
So that's why your credit can fluctuate within a month.
Because that's another question I had, Why would my credit fluctuate?
This guy's going for a mortgage, and the loan officer,
in a smart move, said do it at the beginning
of the month. The reason is this, as you go
through the month and more charges are made, more percentage
(02:01:52):
of your credit is used, and the higher percentage of
credit available used, the lower your credit score. So if
you have one thousand dollars of credit and you use
ten percent of it, good, If you use thirty percent
of it, you're bordering on lowering your points a few,
forty and fifty percent very bad. So that's the reason
to have multiple cards and to rotate use of them,
(02:02:14):
not because I want you to get into debt or
use the credit, but it gives you a lower percentage
of credit use. You should still only use the amount
of credit you can pay off in a month. Unless
it's an emergency. Credit should never be used. Otherwise it's
a trap and it will keep you in debt for
the rest of your life. So I'm saying the wise
use of credit is a good thing. That means you
(02:02:37):
use it as a convenience and you pay it off
monthly for emergencies. You can go beyond a month, obviously,
and that's the reason you have credit. Credit should not
be for simply thinking you have extra money to spend.
Go with a sure thing Denver's Best Roofer Sell Roofing
(02:03:00):
dot com.
Speaker 8 (02:03:01):
You don't pay a cent until you're content.
Speaker 3 (02:03:06):
Time for an insurance checkup free, no obligation comparison call
Compass Insurance pain too much your coverage at dozens of
insurance companies find out now three all three seven seven
to one help. You'll think you're his only customer when
you choose Frank durand the real estate Man dot com
to list your home with Remax Alliance three all three
nine two zero sixteen twenty two. Hi Tom Martinez, your
(02:03:29):
troubleshooter three oh three seven one three talk seven one
three eight two five five Denver Regen dot com. Doctor
Joel Scherdach is with us. We've been talking about semsell
therapy and really some main categories hair restoration and then
pains joints. You know, painful joints and tendons and all
of that, and then neuropathy, which I guess could be
(02:03:50):
classified as pain and infusions. Oh, the systemic infusions, yes,
and what do people report with systemic infusions before I
get to these texts.
Speaker 4 (02:04:02):
Well, if we're using it to treat a neurodegenerative disease
like multiple sclerosis or Parkinson's, people will notice a decrease
in their symptoms, and then we figure out, based on
their decrease and symptoms and how long that decrease lasts,
how often that they should receive that type of therapy.
For people who are just using it for anti aging
and rejuvenation effects, if you will, it typically takes about
(02:04:26):
a month, just like the stem cell procedures for joints,
to when people start noticing more energy, better sleep, all
the things that you would expect to find if you
were doing some systemic systemic Yes.
Speaker 3 (02:04:38):
And do you have people that come back.
Speaker 4 (02:04:39):
From multiples or are they Yeah, we have people that
come you know, once every well, if we're treating the disease,
typically once every three to six months. If we're treating
if we're using it for anti aging purposes, maybe six
to twelve.
Speaker 3 (02:04:51):
Months, somebody says, here, you keep saying that stem cells
cannot be overly manipulated or condensed and then sent to
clinics because it would be considered a drug. So the
obvious question is, why hasn't anyone applied to the FDA
to make a stem cell fluid that can just be
(02:05:13):
approved by the FDA. In other words, after all this time,
I know it takes millions and millions of dollars to
become a drug, but you would think, with how ubiquitous
stem cell therapy is across so many different genres or modalities,
why wouldn't someone like Eli Lilly or someone start a
(02:05:36):
stem cell pill or not a pill, but a stem
cell fluid that can be used by clinics or compounded
by pharmacies and literally be used as a drug. Why not? Why?
Speaker 4 (02:05:48):
Well, I would only speculation, of course, that's all we
can do. My speculation would be is that how are
you going to patent that? I mean, it's not a
novel drug. A stem cell is not a novel compound,
So how would you that? And then you know, on
the other end of that.
Speaker 3 (02:06:02):
They would have. What they would do is is they're
certain condensing the way they condense it and then the
additives to it and things like that, Like exosomes come
from stem cell but they're not padded, right, They're not
they're available.
Speaker 4 (02:06:19):
Right, But basically that's kind of what that is. An
axisome would be a concentrated pat prepackaged.
Speaker 3 (02:06:26):
Stem cell product.
Speaker 4 (02:06:27):
Yes, exactly.
Speaker 3 (02:06:28):
Is there anything living in an exisome though when you
get it?
Speaker 4 (02:06:31):
Or are they just proteins? Is what they are? Exosomes
contain proteins. It's a packet of proteins and the proteins
are the signaling mode.
Speaker 3 (02:06:39):
Now are they used as well for pain and stuff
like or do you always harvest stem cells from the.
Speaker 4 (02:06:45):
Patient Depending on the patient's health status. I mean, if
a patient's you know, over over sixty five seventy and
they're non in great health, we may we may recommend
just using exosomes or umbilical core donor tissue. We use
a lot of that, and sometimes that'll work better than
their own stem cells. It's just a conversation we have
(02:07:07):
with a patient to decide what's going to be there.
Speaker 3 (02:07:09):
Again, when I talked about stem cells being imported and
no living stem cells, that stem cells still have a
lot of growth factors even after they are no longer living.
Stem cells. In the past, I used to say they
were useless. They're not. There have been studies shown that
even stem cells shipped into clinics even though they're not
living at the time, or only a few living, they
(02:07:31):
still have benefits.
Speaker 4 (02:07:32):
Well, they have growth factors, they have exosomes, they have
a lot of things that work.
Speaker 3 (02:07:36):
The combination that I love that you guys did for me.
You did exosomes, you did my own stem cells, and
you did PRP correct man. So that's a triple whammy, right.
Why So that combination is that used all the time
by your clinic.
Speaker 4 (02:07:53):
It's going to be very patient specific some patients that
we will we where we think that their own stem
cells are going to be great, like in your case,
you're a healthy guy, your stimpsows are going to work
good and Keith. Also another key factor is you're willing
to undergo the extraction process, and not everybody wants to
do that. It's not painful, as you can say, you know,
you can attest to that. It wasn't a real difficult process.
(02:08:16):
But some people don't want to do that and we'll
respect that.
Speaker 3 (02:08:19):
Okay, here's a text. Please ask your guests if they
have any treatment for cr PS, which is I've never
heard of complex regional pain syndrome. I don't even know
what that is.
Speaker 4 (02:08:34):
I'm not very familiar with that. But if they get
in touch with it, if they get in touch with
our clinic and give it and get us the medical records,
then we can find out whether that's something that would
be commedable.
Speaker 3 (02:08:45):
It says. Complex regional pain syndrome is a chronic pain condition,
often following an injury that causes intense pain, usually in arms, hands, legs,
and feet. It's characterized by a range of symptoms, including
changes in skin temperature, color, and texture, as well as swelling, stiffness,
and decreased mobility. What's weird is this is that it's
(02:09:07):
long after the initial injury has been cured. This remains.
So that sounds like some kind of permanent nerve damage,
almost like a neuropathy.
Speaker 4 (02:09:16):
Yeah, And if my memory serves me correctly, that is
a condition that used to be named Raynow it's syndrome, yes,
or that that's.
Speaker 3 (02:09:24):
Right rainods, I pronounce it right now. But whatever RAINODS
disease is really mysterious. I mean, and it's usually a
sensitivity to cold.
Speaker 4 (02:09:33):
Right, well, it's a parasympathetic disorder where you get heat
and cold and neuropathy likes center.
Speaker 3 (02:09:41):
It can stem cell therapy help with rainods.
Speaker 4 (02:09:44):
Potentially, whether we apply it as a localized injection or
whether we use it as a systemic application and intravenous application.
But a lot depends on the patient. A lot depends
on how long standing the condition has been and where
it's been, and what the symp actually are. You know,
the best advice I could give is to just reach
out to our clinic for a consultation. It doesn't cost anything,
(02:10:07):
and then we can get into details about whether it's
going to be a good option for them or not.
Speaker 3 (02:10:12):
All right, this text wanted to know about the transfer
of credit because I talked to it out once before.
I'm trying to find the damn thing there was. Oh
here it is. So I said, if you have high
interest credit or a lot of high interest credit, and
and you don't have equity, you don't want to take
out a loan, but you want to get rid of it.
These transfers really really really do work. Okay. What they
(02:10:35):
allow you to do is transfer your balance is and
I did. I did a lot of research on this,
and there is one that's better than others. And it's
not a commercial or anything. I'm just telling you discover
at Chrome. Discover at Chrome you can have a medium
credit score and get rid of high interest that you
can put it over and you get how long do
(02:10:56):
you get eighteen months zero interest? Now think about that? Okay,
on balance transfers, you have eighteen freaking months. That's one
of the longest introductory periods on the market. Now, I
will say use artificial intelligence to do some of this research. Also,
not only do you get eighteen months to pay off
(02:11:19):
your balance with no interest for the first six months
of this card, there is no interest on new purchases. Now,
I don't recommend you get this card and start making
new purchases. The idea is to transfer your balance so
you can have zero free balance or interest free balance,
(02:11:40):
so you can start etching into that debt quickly. Does
it say if there's any transfer fees? No, there is
zero transfer fee and get this no annual fee. I mean,
I don't think you can do better than this, folks.
So if you and the credit score only required goes
down to six hundred and fifty or six. Let's see
(02:12:00):
six point fifty. I'm telling you I would do it
discover it Chrome, and I don't know recommend credit cards
at all. And I think credit is a tool. Remember
I don't think. I don't think it's automatically bad, but
it can become bad very quickly, like a painkiller, like
a viking in So really please use credit wisely. So
(02:12:22):
with this discover it, where would you find it? I
think you can find it almost anyway. Just go to
discover on discover it Chrome. It's an eighteen month introductory rate.
Now once that's over it goes from eighteen to twenty
seven percent, So obviously they want you to stay with
them and start spending money. But there's no annual fee
(02:12:45):
at all. Think about that. So that's discover It Chrome.
I'm Tom Martinez three oh three seven one three talks
seven one three eight two five five. Go with a
sure thing Denver's best roofer Excel roofing dot com. You
don't pay a cent until you're content. Time for an
(02:13:05):
insurance checkup free, no obligation. In comparison, call Compass insurance
paying too much your coverage at dozens of insurance companies
find out now three o three seven seven to one.
Help you'll think you're his only customer when you choose
Frank durand the real estate man dot Com to list
your home with Remax Alliance three oh three nine two
zero sixteen twenty two. Hi Tom Martin, know listen this
(02:13:29):
one text You talked about a poor man's trust and
I was trying to look it up on YouTube on
one of your fees. Okay, Dan mackenzie McKenzie law, turn
me onto this, okay, and you can have a family LLC,
the Smith Family LLC, and you can have it own stuff, okay,
And then you can have your kids all part of it.
(02:13:52):
And this LLC has an operating agreement and upon death
nothing happens to an LLC because it's an LLC, it's
an entity onto itself. So basically it is kind of
like a trust, but it's not the same exactly. For example,
you don't get a stepped up basis when you transfer
(02:14:13):
property into it. They inherit the original basis. But if
the LLC doesn't want to sell the property and they
simply want to keep it in the family and they
want to manage rentals or a business, an LLC could
be the way to do it, and ANLC can if
you have one, can also own an LLC. So the
way it's structured is a family partnership. And this family
(02:14:36):
partnership can have bank accounts and can have properties and
all of that. Now, it's not necessarily I'm not trying
to give you advice on estate planning, and definitely you
should call McKenzie because sometimes the trust is more apropos
and McKenzie law is eight three to three co plans
eight three three COO plans. So that is what I'm
(02:14:58):
talking about, a poor man's trust. It's an LLC, it's
a family partnership. In fact, I believe even with a trust,
it's a good idea to have a family partnership for
ongoing business ventures. Again, maybe not the best for liquidation.
For liquidation, you may want to trust, or you simply
may want to leave stuff to people by beneficiary's deeds
or in the will because then they get stepped up basis,
(02:15:20):
so when you sell, you have less capital gains and
left taxes. Again, I'm not going to explain all of that.
If you don't know enough about that, you should ask
an attorney anyway. But for those who want to continue
business ventures or continue owning properties, even artwork, whatever, everything
can be put into a family partnership or an LLC
and it works quite nicely. Again, Dan is the one
(02:15:42):
that turned me on to this. Dan McKenzie McKenzie law
eight three to three COO plans orco plans dot CO Now,
Doctor Joel Cherdak, I got one text here about migrains.
How have you had experience directly with Denver Regen? With
my no, you haven't.
Speaker 4 (02:16:01):
We do not treat migraines.
Speaker 3 (02:16:03):
What do you think about that? It has stem cell
ever been used for migraines.
Speaker 4 (02:16:07):
Not that I know of. You know, migraine is a
true migraine is a vascular issue. It's a dilation and
then constriction of blood vessels in the brain, in the head.
Nobody really knows why that happens. There are medications that
control that, but it's not something that's amenable to stem
cell therapy.
Speaker 3 (02:16:24):
Okay, what about facial ticks. I don't even know what
a facial tick is. I was asked it's a nerve condition.
Facial ticks.
Speaker 4 (02:16:32):
Potentially, there is potential because it's a nerve issue.
Speaker 3 (02:16:35):
So are you saying that stem cells work with nerves.
They really not just tendons, but they have actually been
shown to repair and help nerves.
Speaker 4 (02:16:43):
Yes, really, yes, damaged nerves. Yes, that are inflamed. Anything
that's inflamed can be fixed with stem cell therapy.
Speaker 3 (02:16:50):
Okay, And I knew I was going to get this question.
I'm not going to read the whole thing because the
guy's trying to be funny ed.
Speaker 4 (02:16:57):
Yeah, we treat that all the time.
Speaker 3 (02:16:59):
Come on, Oh, absolutely, the rectile dysfunction.
Speaker 4 (02:17:02):
Absolutely, that's one of the from first things that puropeans
stem cell therapy were used for.
Speaker 3 (02:17:09):
And does this mean injections you know where in the juya? Okay?
But is there a way to reduce the discomfort of
that when you have it done?
Speaker 4 (02:17:17):
A numbing agent?
Speaker 3 (02:17:18):
So what does it do? Does it? Is it more
of a permanent solution temporary? Or how does it work? Well?
Speaker 4 (02:17:23):
It increases blood flow, It helps to grow blood vessels
and increases Yes, absolutely, right.
Speaker 3 (02:17:28):
By the way, that's Denver Regen dot com seven to
zero five eight three sixteen forty eight now three OZHO
three Martino is a twenty four to seven number. You
can call and leave your number and we will get
back to you to get you on the show That's
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