Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Teemsters nineteen thirty two salutes our American workers on this
Labor Day weekend.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
One thing all great athletes have in common is their
determination to distill every last drop of effort and energy
they can expend in pursuit of their goals. The same
holds true in any field of endeavor. Discipline and dedication, perseverance,
and hard work are the cornerstones of success. On Labor Day,
we salute our hardworking fellow Americans across the land and
(00:45):
right here at home.
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This is Teamsters Local nineteen thirty two.
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We are over sixteen thousand strong. Our members power the
services that keep our communities running.
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I'm doctor Anthony Lyiserwitz. This is Climate Connections. At an
art installation at Rice University in Houston, Texas. Visitors walk
into a large corridor, Light ripples around them, and the
sounds of voices come in and out of focus, all
of them talking about climate change.
Speaker 8 (01:16):
And it's as though the building or the atmosphere itself
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It's rather a chaotic and turbulent piece.
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The project by Mexican Canadian artist Rafael Lozano Hemmer and
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Their calls for protests, call for politicians to write responsibly,
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to folks on the ground, facing and battling and living
with the impacts of the fiercely changing climate.
Speaker 7 (01:54):
The recordings are being archived online so people will be
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but for those visiting in person. Lozanohemmer was a yer
to capture the collective swell of hundreds of voices together,
each calling in their own way for climate action.
Speaker 8 (02:09):
I wanted more the sound of crowds, the sound of
not being alone, the sound of people rising up.
Speaker 7 (02:17):
Climate Connections is produced by the Yelle Center for Environmental communication.
To learn more about climate change, visit Climate Connections dot org.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
Homelessness it's not going away and you can help, and
you can help make a difference locally right here.
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I'm Marywinter with the Faces of Yukaipa, a homeless apot
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Speaker 3 (02:49):
It's simple. Check out Faces of Ukaipa on Facebook or
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What's the number four? Samaritan Project for Change at gmail
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Contact us here at KCAA Radio dot com and we'll
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Speaker 1 (04:18):
One of the best ways to build a healthier local
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local program started by Teamster Local nineteen thirty two that
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(04:43):
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Your Personal Bank Show airs Tuesdays at four pm right
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Speaker 10 (07:14):
You're listening to an encore presentation of this program Ka
the Top Express.
Speaker 11 (07:40):
We love the movie. There's been so many things that
headed us down.
Speaker 12 (07:57):
So many things that held us down.
Speaker 11 (08:00):
Black things are fun and coming around.
Speaker 12 (08:03):
Oh yeah, but we're working our way up, folks. We're
doing our information, our brain, that space between our ears,
to help dissolve our ignorance and our fears. Because the
truth is available and it is the light, and that's
what we need to take us from our bad position
(08:23):
to the right position. And we're going to do that
today right here on Empire Talks Back. I'm Wallace Hallen
on the case for truth and justice with the right
information to help improve the situation. I don't have all
the answers, but I do have a lot of questions,
and I do think that with your brain and my
brain together, we can figure this thing out a little bit.
(08:47):
I've got a wonderful guest for you later. Today won't
be long, but I do need to, you know, add
a few verses to my weekly song. One of those
things that we've been talking about is immigration, and I
think that we need to realize that there are two
things that kind of involve our immigration status. One is
(09:08):
the group of folk who realize that our immigration status,
our ability to bring people into the country, feeds our
brain wave. It gives us a new way to look
at things, a new energy level, a visionary concept that
comes from people who are hungry for the American dream,
(09:29):
not people who've been sleeping through it, which is the
tendency when we are used to it. We need to
be aggravated by our opportunity. We need to be aggravated
by the goals that America allows us to set. No guarantee.
Oh yeah, we pay into Social Security, but we see
(09:52):
that they try to steal that anyway. But we pay
into products that are getting to us online that tell
us miracles can occur, and we pay for them, and
the miracles don't occur. We don't go crazy. We have
expectations and with expectations come disappointment. But in America that
(10:19):
disappointment is also usually associated with another opportunity. Now I said,
there's that group of folks who look forward to the
breath of fresh air, the additional power to the gene
pool that immigrants bring to America. Then there's those folks
who say, well, if they're not the right color, I
(10:40):
don't want them. That's Wallace who said that. Well, your
president said it, and the people who support him say
it because they've got a fear of intellect leaving them behind.
Instead of understanding that just because we do the research
and create the ability for people to go to the moon,
(11:03):
everybody's not going to use that research to create that.
Some people are going to let that research sit at
the end of the table let somebody else deal with it.
Let somebody else put together the method to go to
the moon, and maybe these people will still buy a
ticket and ride. But all of the information and all
the great things that are available for us are not
(11:24):
for each and every one of us. But each and
every one of us can benefit from the work the
passion that other people have. And that's what makes America great.
And it also is a thing that makes lazy people afraid.
People who've gained power because their great great grandfather worked
(11:45):
hard to make something happen, or worked hard to steal
something and make it, you know, and hide it and
legitimize it later. But we have these people who are
vested in other folks's effort. Great Grandpa all left me
so and so in such and such, But he did
it because I'm gonna be He did it because I'm
(12:06):
You've got our president stopping colleges and universities from bringing
in brilliant minds because of what. Well, they come from
another country and they don't look like me, and they're
probably smarter than my kid or you, and they may
take I don't know exactly why racist and supremacists do
(12:26):
exactly what they do, but they do it not to build,
but to take away. And that's that's not what America
is supposed to be about. That's not what the dream
is all about. But at the same time, they want
to stop me from having the aggressive people who are
hungry for the American dream. They want to provide for
(12:49):
the people who are still hanging on to the teat
of grandpa and Grandma's hard work. They want to be
the entitled ones who can go to college because my
dad went here. I can go to this college, because
my grandmother went here. I can go to this college
because my uncle give them a lot of money. But
(13:14):
the smart, hard working kids, they got to qualify, and
plus you know, they don't want to anyway. So there
are people who are clear thinking and there are people
who are not. And all of the people who think
clearly are not necessarily the folks with great charisma, you know,
and long wavy hair and the kind of eyes that
(13:35):
put you to sleep and hypnotize. But we tend to
lean in the direction of the Jim Jones kind of people,
you know, the cult leader, the one who can talk
into anything, take everything away from you and make you
wish you had more to give them. America is a challenge.
(13:57):
America is an opportunity, and we are in a position
where we have got to defend that opportunity. And at
the same time we are defending it, we have to
take advantage of it. But we have to defend the
fact that America is the one place where we should
be able to dissent and not have to go to jail.
(14:18):
We should be able to speak our minds and not
have our power. People get so upset that they decide
that they want to do something to me or you
as a result of what we're thinking and saying and doing.
We have to be careful about all of that. So
with that care we still have the opportunity to step
(14:40):
forward with our great ideas, with the ability to reach
inside of that brain and close our eyes and imagine
something and create it and bring it forward for the
rest of the world to benefit from. And we have
a right to get paid for that. What you're fighting
for in America is integrity. You need a clear pathway,
(15:03):
and that's what our government is here to provide a
clear pathway. Keep the trash under order, keep it safe,
keep it predictable in the sense that we should know
what a rule is, what the series of rules are
and how we deal with them. I said rules, not loss.
God is the one created lass here on on earth.
(15:25):
God's law says, if you throw it up, It's going
to come down. We all know that. Now we can
adjust that with parachutes and reverse jet forces and things
of that, but we know that we are competing against
a law that is consistent. But man's rules they're not consistent.
They're just rules, and they're arbitrary, and they tend to bend.
(15:50):
For the friend of the power of people, saying not
to say people, the power is with you, with you
and me and us. We just have to come together.
We have to use our power together. We've got five fingers,
some of us lost one and maybe only had four.
(16:11):
But coming together with those fingers that allows us to
have a hand. And with a hand we can get
things done. Hopefully, we can work together. We've seen it
done in the past, and we see people doing it
all around us, even in these times of evildom, because
the evildom is being matched by goodness. Even the dead
(16:36):
minds are being matched by live visionaries, people who want
to step forward and make things happen. I've got a
guest that we're going to introduce doctor Christopher Otiga after
this short break. He's someone that I could spend a
lot of time trying to make you see how important
he is by talking about his history, his past, how
(16:59):
hard he's worked. The fact is the gentleman put together
went through the process of getting something patented that appears
to be very very wonderful and exciting and something that
we can benefit from in terms of our wellness, our
quality of life. So when I come back, I want
(17:21):
to introduce doctor Otigo to you, not so much so
that we can make his parents proud or him proud
of his upbringing and things of that sort yet, but
so that you can be enchanted by the work that
he's done, the product that he's put together. And as
we see the worth of his product, we'll find that
(17:44):
it's much more interesting at that point to see really
where he came from and how he got here. We'll
find all of that out right after this shortbreak. This
is Emprior Tarcs back. I'm Wallace Allen, and we're going
to continue to explore our possibilities by understanding who we are,
who is sit next to and how we can pull
(18:05):
the best out of each of us. God has blessed
us with that, and we need to take advantage. We'll
be right back after the short break.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Easy Ever plans to move.
Speaker 9 (18:15):
Who is.
Speaker 12 (18:18):
Trap?
Speaker 11 (18:19):
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Speaker 12 (18:58):
ONEI the high way that best.
Speaker 9 (19:02):
Get Jill kicks.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
On Rude sixty six.
Speaker 11 (19:10):
It winds from Chicago, all right now, more than two.
Speaker 12 (19:18):
Thousand miles all the way we get Jill kicks On
Rude sixty six. Mister nap Kinko, my goodness. That man
could sing my goodness, and you're singing about my neighborhood.
Huh you didn't believe me. Well listen up now down up,
(19:42):
New Mexico. I'm not in got Arizona.
Speaker 6 (19:46):
Not there, I don't forget went on, not there, Kinglin Bosco.
Speaker 12 (19:49):
Sat Sanino, My goodness, get him to this wonderful trip
that we're on. For this trip of life, when this
opportunity to serve each other, this opportunity to discover, but
deep deep inside the planets that rotating our brain, we
got it going on. I want to introduce doctor Christopher Otiko,
(20:13):
Doctor Chris. How are you this morning?
Speaker 2 (20:15):
I'm doing very good.
Speaker 12 (20:16):
Thank you very good. I'm not offending you by calling
you doctor Chris.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
Am I no, no, nobody called me Chris christ call
me Chrish.
Speaker 12 (20:26):
Doctor Chris. That may be your new brand name as
we as we bring you into the into the world
of high class media with radio and TV, uh doctor Chris.
As I spoke to my folks earlier, I was letting
them know that we will at some point, you know,
speak more about your background, how you got to the
(20:46):
spot and place that you are. But what we want
to do right now is get them to understand the
significance of why you're here on the radio this morning,
why you are out here operating and what you have created,
and I'm not sure exactly how via Derma works. I'm
(21:07):
certainly not sure of how Vita Stem works. I understand
that you've created a product that makes it easier for
the skin. A matter of fact, one of your brand
names is skin pass how medicines and antibiotics and things
(21:27):
that fixed cuts and bruises, and even I see something
about ed that you're able to support through a topical
application ruben on the skin, folks topical and that your application,
your skin Passed formula allows for medicines to be absorbed
(21:47):
into the skin at ten times the rate of water.
Now I'm confused a little bit because I'm not sure
if now it appears that Vita Stem is a product
that people can buy in the stores, if not right
now shortly, that will affect them and help them cure
(22:09):
cuts and bruises and things of that sort and even
to some extent a little skin conditions. And I understand
that I don't understand, but I'm also speculating that you
have a product that can be used with medicines that
(22:30):
are proven to be good that need to be absorbed
but are not absorbing at the level that they could be,
that you're able to create a delivery system that allows
for those products to be absorbed quicker, better and therefore
(22:51):
become even more efficient than they are. Am I close
to what's going on with your product?
Speaker 2 (22:57):
Well, if you hit the nail right on the head,
all right, I'm doing very very impressed by that. That's
exactly what my company does. That's exactly what it does.
So my background was I'm a podiatric surgeon and I
specialized in the prevention and treatment of diabetic foot wounds.
(23:17):
And during my residency program back in the late nineties,
I was doing so many amputations. It was very sad
that somebody has a diabetic wound on their foot, it
doesn't heal, They've got post circulation and approchately gangoine sits in.
You have to amputate just to save their lives. And
whilst I was just doing so many amputations, I stopped
(23:37):
downing after five hundred and I said to myself, I
just I did not go to school to become a butcher. Sure,
you're given somebody you're saving their lives, but the lifespan
after a diabetic amputation is about five years. That's worse.
In some cancers. So I said, I got to create
something that can prevent this. And if you look at
the body's anatomy, you put the mouth at the top
(23:58):
of the head right, and then you the foot all
the way down at the bottom. So if somebody has
a wound or a di alesion on their foot and
you want to and you want to give them an
antibiotic to take to prevent that, it's got to take you,
you know, give them by mouth. Got to go away
with their mouth, through the throat, through the digestive systems,
into the liver converted and by the time it gets
(24:18):
down to the foot, you'll like to get maybe five
percent of that drug. So the best place to put
a medication if somebody has an injury on the foot,
is right on the foot. That makes However, God created
the skin, and the skin is the first line of defense, right,
so it's it's unfortunately it's difficult to get medication into
(24:39):
the skin. So I had to create a platform delivery system.
I named it. I named the skin pass that can
basically pass through the skin. So what we did is
we created a delivery system and is now, thank god,
it's just not being patented this year it's called skin
Pass that allows any active ingredient to cross the skin
ten thousand times faster than water can penetrate the skin.
Speaker 12 (25:02):
Now that's June of this year. That yeah, that's your
patent was approved and you okay, good, good, Now you
started working with this product from what I understand several
years ago. That's correct, and start and starting to see
that it was working. But good. I will interrupt you
(25:26):
because I'm just slow enough sometimes that I want to
not go around get lost going around the curve here,
So let me let you continue with the explanation of
how you went on and developed your skin Pass for
the sake of going being able to apply medicines directly
to the site needed, and you being a foot doctor,
(25:49):
that was the first place that you started working.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Yes, thank you. So I finally started the research and
development back in two thousand and nine. He got the
first product of probably around twenty ten, twenty eleven, and
we started applying it to diabetic foot wounds, which were
which are very difficult to heal, and that was my
specialty and Wallace really just getting incredible results patients that
(26:13):
were due for an amputation. We prevented that wounds were
healing within six to twelve weeks, and the success rate
was like ninety percent. That was unheard of that before
and after pictures were getting I was accused of photoshopping
back in those days. And the medication is a simple
topical medication. It's made off day approved ingredients, so you
(26:33):
don't you don't need any kind of special equipment. You
don't need you don't need to put on a patch
or a ban anything like that. The medication is, the
delivery system is already mixed in the medication. All we
need to do is put it on the wound, couple
of drops, rub it in three times a day, cover
the band aid, cover of a bandage if it's cateacorse
and nasty, and let the body do its magic.
Speaker 12 (26:56):
The medication itself can I got to interrupt you.
Speaker 13 (26:59):
You you're you're slapping America's capitalists in the mouth. I mean,
the people who only do it for the money have
got to be you know, they're trying to hunt you down.
Speaker 12 (27:14):
Wallace. What are you talking about? I'm saying this. You
just said that you were doing amputations. And I'm sure,
and I'm not trying to be mean and evil, but
I almost want to point out the economics of this
that a hospital and a doctor in a medical group
probably makes more money cutting a foot off than it
(27:35):
does saving one.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
Is that true?
Speaker 12 (27:39):
Okay? So, all of a sudden, the budget that you
were able to create and help defend for hospitals cutting
off some five hundred or more feet amputating, and now
you're at a position where, hey, guess what, we don't
have to cut these feet off. I just applied as
a medicine and a couple of weeks these people can
(28:01):
go home and everything. Isn't that wonderful? Well wait a minute, doc,
We're counting on you doing what two hundred amputations this year,
and you're telling us we're not going to make that.
How much money is an amputation worth? I don't know,
probably thousands of dollars. So I'm seeing you negatively affecting
(28:24):
the million dollar flow for pedietary surgery. Okay, So that
can make the patient happy, But there is a rumor
that medicine and pharmaceuticals are usually there to treat the
(28:45):
symptom and not be seeking the cure. Now you're right
in the middle of this, and you know, the American
dream says we want to make a lot of money.
But there's also a more oral dream that's part of
the American dream. And tell us why you're willing to
interrupt that cash flow like that. You know, you know
(29:08):
that makes you persona non gratus to a certain extent.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
Right, yep, another great Christian Wallace. Okay, Now you've got
to think about who pays the hospital. Remember it's the
insurance company. And even though the insurance companies are you know,
capitalist industry, their primary way of making money is savings.
(29:33):
They don't want to pay out.
Speaker 12 (29:34):
So there is a big brother that you could lean
to and say, hey, wait a minute, these guys are
trying to beat me up at the door. Okay, okay, good,
all right, that makes sense. That makes sense.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
And in addition to that, Wallace, if you think about it,
the delivery system skin pass, I cannot only use it
for my own drugs to create, you know, by the
steme as you mentioned, that's the wold Care product. Now
I can license that same delivery platform through other drug
manufacturers so they can develop their own drugs. So instead
(30:05):
of having drugs that all medications, they can develop their
own drugs based on the skin past technology, and they
can extend the life of their plants. So I do
not have a big target on my back. The big
drug delivery companies, sorry, the punctive companies, we think hopefully,
well think, oh my god, this guy's shown us that
make even more money.
Speaker 12 (30:26):
Well that's that, that's a very progressive thought. If they've
not already put so much into their infrastructure that they're
still trying to pay for that, and they've gotten so
used to getting paid on that that they really are
not interested in innovation. But then again, you've got insurance
(30:46):
companies kind of pressing forward to say no, if you're
not using this, we may raise your prices and lower
them for people who are using these products. Very good,
very good, very good. I'm impressed, Thank you, thank you
much impressed. So how are they receiving this advancement in
(31:08):
technology that gives us the opportunity to serve equitably and
with some intense integrity. Are they beating your door down?
Speaker 2 (31:24):
It's been a long long road. Originally I was locked
out of hospitals. I was locked out of a conferences
because I was basically using, for example, virus them. It's
an old the active ingredients tetracycling. Tetracyclin has been around
since nineteen fifty two, So the doctors were saying to me,
wait a second, can you how can you heal this
(31:46):
wound that's been you know, there for like a year
without apputa this person's foot with ordinary tetracycline And I said, no,
it's the delivery system inside the medication that's making tetracycling
work even better. So, well, was it me years to
get that credibility? As I mentioned people who accusing me
a photo shop in the pictures because they were just unbelievable,
you know, the before and after pictures, which is I'm real.
(32:09):
So it took me years to get that credibility. But now,
you know, treated thousands, maybe ten thousands of patients all
over the world. It's I'm now a major force in
the industry. And thank god, I've got the patn that
was issued in just a couple of months ago. That
gives me a lot more credibility. So I'm gradually getting there.
Speaker 12 (32:26):
How long does it take? Well, let's get back into
describing the Let's say Vita Stem tell us more about
what Vita Stem does. I saw on your website at
one point that it either is available or is supposed
(32:47):
to be available at CVS and other retail spots, but
I've not been able to find it, and now as
I check your website, I don't see that statement. What
is the retail positioning for vitas stem at this point
and tell us more about how it can be used
and its availability. Please?
Speaker 2 (33:09):
Yes, absolutely, the Vita's term is our primary drug. It's
been on the market since I would say it since
about twenty twenty. Originally I was selling it to directly
to hospital clinics and doctor's offices, and the reason I
was doing that well is specific get more credibility and
also get the database of patients for an actors pass.
(33:29):
Now we are on track to get it into Walmart
dot com and Walmart CBS, all the big dogs retail stores.
I think it should be on the market in those
stores probably in the second quarter of next year. Starting
from October this year, though, we're going to be online,
have our own online store, Target dot com, Walmart dot
(33:51):
com and places like that where people can go and
by it.
Speaker 12 (33:54):
What does vider stem do for me as an individual?
What does it do for my medical kid at home?
What does it do for my my my sons, or
my nephews or my grandson's a Pop Warner football team
or the soccer team. What is by the stem able
(34:16):
to do?
Speaker 2 (34:17):
Yes, by the stem, in my opinion, is the number
one going to be the number one first daid antibiotic
in the world topical because of a healing rate. Because
of the delivery system. Skin past is so powerful it
allows any It allows wounds and cuts and scrapes to
almost start healing instantly, even the most diabets, severe diabetic wounds,
(34:38):
which were which was created for We have one hundred
now I think sorry, it's a ninety six success rate
in twelve weeks. So imagine if you can heal a
really bad wound, then what can it do to cutain
scrapes and things like what you said, your grandson or
a plane playing for owner, so a bottle of vit
The stem ideally should be in everybody's medicine cabinet.
Speaker 12 (34:57):
So by the stem is not just a tool to
help deliver other medicines. Stem contains a medicine. Is a
medicine taking advantage of the skin pass system.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
Yes, sir, Yes, that's exactly right. So bid the stem
itself contains on the top of the active ingredient is tetracycline.
We also have a bass tracing version, and then it
contains the skin pass delivery system, and they also it
also contains vitamin C and vitamin D that are essential
for skin healing. And when you combine all those together,
you basically have the number one topical antibiotic in the
(35:36):
water heal also of wounds.
Speaker 12 (35:38):
So when my adventurous granddaughter falls off the top pier
of the ladder that she decided to climb and skins
her knee or an elbow, I'm able to Well, let's
say this, if I'm walking around with the Vita stem
in my pocket, then I see the accident. Do I
(35:59):
need to run get the whole and wash the grass
and dirt off or can I just hit that vider stem?
Is it a spray? Is it a How does it operate?
And does it clean around the mess or does the
the mess have to be cleaned off in order for
it to work. So they're at the soccer game, they
(36:19):
skin their knee and they want to get back in
the game, but they're bleeding and they're you know, how
does this thing work? What happened there?
Speaker 2 (36:26):
Yep, yep, great question. So Vita sim is actually a
liquid is probably the only topical liquid empatibiotic in the
world at room temperature, which is stable at room temperature.
We have two versions. We have this small fifteen mL
spray bottle sorry fifty am drop a bottle which comes
out as props, and then we also have the fifty
five mL spray which is used for bigger wounds, so
(36:49):
you don't need to clean it with, you know, wash
it off. You can just spray it right on that
wound and because it comes out in the liquid screen,
it will basically flush the wound for you.
Speaker 12 (36:59):
Very good, Very good, very good. Uh. I've been discussing
your product with with some people that are involved in
the sports world at a at a fairly decent almost
well yeah, pro level, we can say that international level
(37:20):
for sure, and the idea of being able to do
what we just described. The only question that they gave, well,
the first question they gave me is yeah, but you know,
we have to have these things approved by the sports
federations in terms of their contents, because if we want
to be sure there's no enhancing drugs involved in in
(37:43):
there in the ingredients there are you do you have
any steroid or anything in there? That make me run
faster or jump higher or lasts longer.
Speaker 2 (37:55):
No, we don't have. No, we don't have not yet. Yeah,
that's a whole different product line to.
Speaker 12 (38:06):
STEM.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
It's just a simple antibotic. And it's interesting that you
mentioned the post sports because we have been just recently
a major league sorry, major league baseball a picture of
all mentioned his name here the wound in his hands
that would not heal, and it's been there for like
six months. I couldn't heal the world. I met him
at the party, told him what I was doing, gave
him a bottle of the Ysteme. Of course he had
(38:28):
to get it approved by his team. It's not to
heal with the wound in about two three days.
Speaker 12 (38:34):
So we're moving in the direction to I'm I'm you
know you're talking to me on radio because I love
making noise and I think i'm well, I'm reflecting my
mother's attitude. She thinks I'm too really smart, and I've
been trying to live up for live up to that
(38:55):
for for years. And a happy birthday mom again. Uh So,
so what we're looking that is you have already given
something to a major league baseball player who understands the
importance of staying clean as far as his body is concerned.
He doesn't want to be Barry Bonds and you know,
and end up winning the war and then losing the
(39:20):
battle of integrity in terms of steroids and things of
that sort. So he gave it to his team to
approve and they said he could use it, and his
wound went away, the one that had been there for months. Yes,
oh yeah, we need to. That's a news story. That's
(39:40):
the and the guy without his name, they need to.
We need to get him to not only give his name,
we need the team to ask you to give him
some more so that they can double and triple check.
And I don't know what your advertising intended budget is,
but throw that money into gifts to these major league
(40:03):
teams and allowed them to make their announcements. If to
no one but the Olympic Committee, no one but FIFA,
the soccer guys all over the world, and my brother,
the little money that I'm going to put into buying
some stock, we're going to be no. I'm laughing to
(40:29):
keep from crime because I'm really happy for you and
the work that you're doing. But I'm also super happy
for the fact that my first statements about where things
come from is being realized as we look again, it
not how just how important your product is, but how
important it is that we did not allow the racism
(40:52):
of America, the racism of the world, the desire to
say that if you don't speak English, you know without
understanding that people who speak four or five languages. My goodness,
that intellect is one that I want next to my children.
I don't want my I don't want my children and
(41:15):
grandchildren to only speak one language if everybody else in
the world is speaking three and four. So you were
you're from teleship.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Background, sure, so, thank you.
Speaker 12 (41:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (41:29):
So I was born in Nigeria and when I was
about two to three, I think a twelve three years old,
my dad who got a scholarship to move to England.
Advatary in Nigeria was still part of the Commonwealth and
my dad called a scholarship to go to England to
study back chemistry. So I lived in England from the
age of three to fourteen. When my dad got only
speak degrees. He ended up getting a PhD in back
(41:50):
chemistry and moved us back to Nigeria. So I graduated
in Nigeria from high school, did college called a massive
bachelor's degree in back chemistry, served one year in a
Nigeria military because snational services are required, and then I
came to America in at the age of tweed twenty two.
I went to graduate school and then I went to
(42:11):
medical school in California. So I'm an immigrant, just like
you were saying in your previous pic. I'm an immigrant,
and honestly, I think I have two birthdays. My birthday,
my real birthday, and then the day I immigrated to America.
This country has given me so much opportunity and it's
sad that some immigrants are getting put in a bad light.
(42:32):
We produced so much good, good things for this country
and it's one of the best things that have happened to.
Speaker 12 (42:38):
My current president would be upset with that. He would
you know, the one thing that he would probably push
is that you know, you weren't really born in Nigeria.
You were born in Sweden somewhere, and we moved you around,
and you know, in the movement less of time you
were spending Africa, your body decided to ellen eyes. And
(43:03):
you know, I'm not against this guy at all. I'm
just disappointed that he doesn't use his charm and charisma
to really do things and make it better. Because he
has that capability, people follow him, they pay attention to it.
But he's eating and that he's eating a rotten apple
and it says festered in his throat. And somehow he's
(43:24):
decided to be a gangster instead of a gain stir
if I can, if I can deal with it like that.
So I'm I'm warning people to understand that they could
come to you now, and as crazy as it is,
they could, you know, if they're trying to all of
(43:44):
a sudden turn the traders of the Confederacy into heroes.
And they are so already trying to reneg on the
voting rights and healthcare systems and social social security system
and uh and they're even mentioning taking the vote away
from women. Every rule and every law that we have
(44:07):
that works to the favor of America could be taken
away by these traders, These folks who for whatever reason
want to wallow in ignorance. Doctor could come and chase
you away, and what we in America say we want
would be another great loss. We want innovation, we want jobs,
(44:33):
we want prideful experiences for people who come to America
so that others will continue to want to come to America.
So I'm I'm I'm not wanting to politicize you, but
I don't have to. They already have. But I do
want to put my arms around you and embrace you
and do what we can to to help develop more
(44:56):
of what you what you've been working on. Where are
you now and what do you need to have happened
for the success that you are due to occur?
Speaker 2 (45:09):
Okay, So the pattern has just been being awarded, and
that's a big deal because now I can really start
marketing skin Pass to other drug manufacturers so they can
basically make their own drugs based on the skin Pass technology.
As I mentioned a few minutes ago, we were just
about to start selling online to the big box stores.
(45:30):
So we've turned the corner. We've spent years and millions
of dollars on the research and development and the pattern
and just getting things going, and now I think we're
about to start launching worldwide as well. I'm originally from Nigeria,
so about a year ago I went back to Nigeria. Actually,
the government asked me to come back because they saw
(45:51):
some of the results the product was doing over there,
and the Nigerian government's about to purchase quite a significant
amount of units of the product. And then and then
we also are going to donate some to Ukraine to
the war victims in Ukraine. So we're getting that put,
we're getting that pothold in the world and Wallace. So
I think this is a good time for the company.
(46:12):
A lot of good things are happening.
Speaker 12 (46:13):
Excellent. I'm really glad to hear that. I want to
explore with you more the idea of that relationship and
association with professional sports.
Speaker 2 (46:26):
I love that.
Speaker 12 (46:27):
I we'll discuss that a little bit offline at at
some point when it's you know, good for you, like
right after the show. Thank you, Okay. The retail aspect
of this can be very expensive to make happen. Uh.
(46:48):
The fact that you have the proof, this is the
other level of proof that the patent certainly is one.
The fact that you are not amputating feat like you
were before. How how does that aspect of it work
(47:09):
with other pediatrist surgeons.
Speaker 2 (47:15):
That's a great question because even though you know, unfortunately
when you when you amputate some for a tot, you
do get paid more than a regular officers, But most
doctors they don't want to do that. Of course, they're
in it to save lives, to ease pain, so would
rather e Actually, to turn the truth, the insurance companies
want you to do a conservative treatment before you go
(47:36):
to the lost results. So now this gives them a
toll that they can do that, and they can and
we can't prevent amputation and increase the quality of life
of a patient.
Speaker 12 (47:48):
So who is your information target in that situation? Is
it the doctor or is it the insurance company that
would take on the promotion of the product and access
to the product.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
It's both, it's both. We have to you have to
educate the insurance companies to make them aware that this
product is out there and or save their money. And
then you have to go to the doctors and explain this.
Do you now have a tool in your armor that
you can use to prevent to heal a wound very
very fast and preventing publican to the stage where unfortunately
being an amputation.
Speaker 12 (48:24):
Both, so you really have the proof in terms of
your your medical history. And it's not just your history,
it's the history of the surgical sites that that you
operated from or did not operate from. It's also it's
also in the analysis of the patients who would have
to have gone through the amputation had it not been
(48:48):
for the application of your of your product. I'm excited
for you. I think you probably. Oh. I want to
mention your brother, Manny a brilliant a brilliant journalist. I
think that I've known Nanny for several years and always
have been impressed by his writing and ability to carry
(49:12):
the issue and keep it clean and square. So I
don't know, do you have other brothers and sisters or no? Enough.
Speaker 2 (49:23):
We have one sister who lives in London still. She's
a midwife and I think he's deliverle bit over three
thousand babies. So there's three of us. I'm the oldest,
Man is the middle one, and our sister Lola, she's
in London still very.
Speaker 12 (49:36):
Good, very good. So your parents have to be very proud.
And I was looking to see how many more of
those are tigos we could bring out to the world
here and share from that brilliance. Okay, so now some
of the things that Via Durham can do include I mean,
(49:58):
I see a whole list of things here. Uh, you
talk about skin creams and you know, fungus and things
of that sort. What would you consider to be the
easiest target, the quickest thing that people would jump on. Uh,
(50:22):
what are some of the biggest skin problems that we
have that viaderma could be instrumental and solving.
Speaker 2 (50:29):
Yes, So we're going to be coming out of a
product called Clear that's going to be targeted towards acne.
Then that's going to be another product called Calm, and
that's going to be for so rise is excena and
just basically any attint of pitching in general. And then
we're going to be coming out of another product called Care,
which is the general antibiotic product for the general market.
(50:50):
In addition to that, we already have a product it's
on the market, but we don't really we haven't really
promoted it. It's for pain, you know, so instead of
rubbing bengay you can use our product could probably work,
you know, justn't good.
Speaker 12 (51:01):
It more better.
Speaker 2 (51:02):
So there's so many different opple product lines as well.
And at the beginning you mentioned ed as well. Unfortunately
that's a huge market. So instead of a instead of
taken by a goosiealls of some of these other drugs,
by now you can apply our version right topically and
hopefully will have the instant effect of less side effects.
Speaker 12 (51:20):
Would that be a product that you would create or
a product that you would figure to associate with the
existing producers of ED products for instance?
Speaker 2 (51:30):
Probably probably the second. The second option, we'd create it
initially just to test it out ourselves and have a
proof of concept, and then would license that to another
drug manufacturer that already had the brand recognition and already
is in that market space.
Speaker 12 (51:45):
So we're not trying to put people out of business.
We're trying to put them deeper into the businesses that
they already operate.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
Correct, Yes, sir, it's.
Speaker 12 (51:54):
An amazing it's an amazing opportunity. And congratulate you for
having the vision to see it. Thank you. There's an
old story that I mean, well, it has to do
with defeat and and that's where you started. It makes
a lot of sense. As I was reading your history
of your progress here, I said, ah, he was a
(52:17):
a dietrist. I wonder how that led into this level
of study. But you've you've made that very clear. What
can other people do to participate in the growth of
your product? I see that you're on the stock market.
Is that a statement the right statement? Or you're just
(52:39):
available for people to buy stock. How does that work?
Speaker 2 (52:42):
Yes, So originally the company was listed on the OTC
stock market. It's not the natstack the lower ones because
it was a small company that was about twenty fourteen.
Primarily the funding was used for R and D and
things like that. Now age of retail, we're probably going
to do a little bit of corporate restructuring with that
(53:05):
into What would really help right now is volunteers. If
somebody wants to test all about products that to be great,
some of the new ones coming out, they they will
say because of their topical they're not, you know, the systemic.
We are looking for testers, of course. And then the
products that are going to be out on the market
like a clear calm care and bias and of course
that will be coming out in the fall of this
(53:26):
year and next year. Just look out for it and
support us by the product. Give good feedback, good good recommendations.
We would really appreciate that.
Speaker 12 (53:35):
Very good. We're going to take a short break, come
back and close up. This is Impid Talks back on
Wallace Alan speaking to doctor Christopher Otiga. He is the
proud entrepreneur medical expert that has come up with the
products under the title and branding of Via Derma. We'll
(53:55):
be right back.
Speaker 11 (54:02):
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best service and the best rates called nine O nine
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Speaker 12 (54:08):
One three one.
Speaker 11 (54:09):
Publishing legal notices in the City and County of San Bernardino.
Since nineteen ninety, west Side Story provides friendly expert service
called nine O nine three eight four eight one three
one to benefit from budget friendly rates, whether a fictitious
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other legal or public notice called west Side Story Newspaper
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Speaker 12 (54:43):
We're back. This is Empire Talks Back. I'm Wallace Allen
on the case for truths and justice with the right
information to help improve the situation. We've got a man
who has got a plan, he's got a product, he's
got a vision that he's following. He's in the UH
(55:04):
express lane and UH we're here to ride with him
as far as we can. Doctor Christopher Otiko, UH. Doc.
We've got a couple of minutes. I'd like for you
to go on and finalize and you know, give us
a little pep talk on why you did it and
what excites you about it and what do you see
(55:26):
in the future for not just yourself, but young people
who are out here trying to figure out who they are,
what they are doing, and what they should be doing. Uh,
play big Daddy for me.
Speaker 2 (55:40):
Yeah, well thanks, thanks, thanks all, well, thanks for giving
me the platform to talk today. I go to this
to save lives. As I mentioned, I was tired of
doing amputations that do not really increase the call it
somebody's life. It just extended them for for five years
and they live miserably. So I invented this technology to
(56:01):
medication to help people in general. I want to you know,
make people suffering from wounds a thing of the past,
and the technology, the dustm it can do that. And
then secondly, secondly, I want to extend that to medicine.
As I mentioned, I'm just a pot doctor. Why am
I doing medication that an eed or neurology and things
(56:23):
like that. So the technique self can be licensed to
other companies that they can extend it and basically do
good for the only entire world now in terms of
helping everybody else. I think, honestly, anybody can do what
I can do. I came here as an immigrant, I
work my way through medical school. The America gives that
ability that you can literally accomplish anything you want. So
(56:45):
if there's somebody out there wants to do something big,
think bigger. You can do it. You can do anything
you put your mind to. Just focus on it, don't
give up, don't quit. Surround yourself with good people, surround
yourself with good mentor and you can just go for it.
I'm a proud entrepreneur and I'll support anybody that wants
(57:05):
to create anything, Okay, So just go for it. This
country gives you the ability to do pretty much anything
you can say. Don't listen to them. They says they
hate us out there. Just go for it and believe
in yourself and never give up, and you can accomplish
a breath.
Speaker 12 (57:19):
Doctor Chris. We do appreciate you. We appreciate the work
that you've done, but more importantly, the work that you
are about to complete. Thank you for joining us this morning.
I appreciate that and look forward to us speaking to
you in about fifteen or twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (57:34):
All right, okay, thank you all.
Speaker 12 (57:38):
Well, folks, this is what we want to do at
Empire Talks Back. We want to talk back about those
things that are affecting us negatively. Certainly we need a
heads up. But as we hold our heads up, we
need to be able to point to a solution. We
need to be able to point to those things that
are going to make a difference in a positive way.
(58:01):
We need to be solutionary and hopefully today's program helps
you understand that the problem always leads to the solution
if you don't give up, if you don't quit, and
I'm not gonna quit, I'll be here next week under
two circumstances. One if the Good Lord's willing, two if
(58:22):
the creek don't rise. God bless you for sticking around
with us, and I hope we put something that sticks
in your mind in today's show. God bless you see
you next time. Thousand miles all wie.
Speaker 2 (58:37):
Get two kicks en rude six. Now you go through
Saint Louis, Joplo and Oklahomas.
Speaker 1 (58:49):
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Speaker 3 (01:00:03):
Deep Stairs nineteen thirty two salutes our American workers on
this Labor Day weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
One of the favorite