Sasha Latypova: "Charles Richet was a French researcher […] In 1913 he was given Nobel prize for […] the work on anaphylaxis […]
"When you look at this work […] you understand a few things. […] It's impossible to vaccinate for anything. And Richet has demonstrated conclusively […] While he never himself said it's impossible to vaccinate, but when you read his work, you know it's impossible to vaccinate. […]
"He figured out that if you inject some poison which may be even not noticed at the beginning […] and then a certain number of days goes by, and typically it's twenty days […] even the minute dose, which is not considered dangerous at all, may create in some percentage of them, a very violent illness or even death. And he called it anaphylactic shock.
"Now what he also discovered that it doesn't have to be poison. […] It could be something considered benign, like milk, for example. It can produce the same effect […]
"He discovered […] that it's impossible to predict anaphylactic reaction or anaphylactic state. It's impossible to predict who, which if you inject a group of 100 people, which 20% of them will be anaphylacticized. We don't know. And we still don't know. […]
"Second most important thing is that at the time that he discovered it, a bunch of other researchers called milder reactions "allergy." And he was against it. He said it's the same phenomenon; you shouldn't call it a different name. […]"
James Delingpole: "Even stuff like hay fever?"
Sasha Latypova: "Yes. It's also a form of anaphylaxis. A milder one. […]
"So when your child develops a food allergy, like gluten allergy, first of all you don't even realize what it's allergy to. […] And then ten years later your child has an autoimmune condition […]
"But now of course the vaccine industry says, 'oh no, no, no. It's your rare genetic mutation. It's hereditary.' So victim blaming starts. It's your bad genes. Or it's your bad food habits, because you're eating seed oils and sugar. Or maybe because you live near the power line. […] Those are the common ways of how they gaslight you to look away from those injections." —Sasha Latypova with James Delingpole @ 09:17–27:01 https://rumble.com/v5gnghp-sasha-latypova.html?start=557
Why would I get fat?
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I am not a doctor. I do not give health or medical advice. Instead, I excerpt what others say.
"A lot of the healing effects of photobiomodulation rely on the stimulation of stem cells and progenitor cells. […] The main niche [of] stem cells in the body is the bone marrow. I mean there are niches all over, but certainly the bone marrow has the most stem cells.
"Now the question is how much light gets to the bone marrow? I mean bones are transparent to light. I mean they scatter light quite well, but they're actually white, so they don't absorb light.
"So it's possible that the light can scatter around the bones and get to the bone marrow." —Michael Hamblin, PhD with Cameron Borg @ 44:43 – 45:29
"It's certainly correct that you can use red light as a sunscreen. So if you're going to expose yourself to potentially damaging UV sunbathing, what have you, you can use pre-exposure with red light as a sunscreen. So that definitely works." —Michael Hamblin, PhD with Cameron Borg @ 33:29 – 33:47
Connect with Mother Nature
"The point is, I know that I'm older, that I'm working on the seventh decade of heteroplasmy in me. I need more sun, not less, to continue to do this.
"Remember, going back in the podcast an hour and a half ago, about our 76-year-old doctor playing pickleball and tennis and golf, because he read some papers that I won't get Alzheimer's that way.
"Guess what Uncle Jack's doing. This [points at sun] is where I need to do my decentralized and centralized spiel if I want to keep doing it long so that I don't wind up like the people that work out in blue-lit gyms. Or the people that are technologist like Bill Gates or Steve Jobs or Steve Ballmer or Paul Allen. I don't want to wind up really, really rich and dead at 67, or 65.
"I would rather, you know, be the guy down here still doing the podcast telling people: change the way you think because your life will change. You can have your cake and eat it too. You can.
"But the thing is, you need to understand how to do it. And the way you do it isn't by listen to a guru. The way you listen to it, your guru is Mother Nature. That's it. I want you to listen to her. She's the fucking the boss. OK?
"And we are a fabric in the boss's network. Don't ever forget that. You are no different than this tree behind me or that hippo or lion. You operate by the same principles. You need a connection with her, and it needs to be the most intimate connection that you ever have in your life. Because if it's not, the connections you make in life won't be good, whether it's professionally, socially, emotionally or physically. They will not be good. I promise you that."
—Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Alexis Cowan @ 01:59:37 – 02:01:29
Sherrill Sellman, ND: "So inflammation has a positive charge, and what we're really wanting to is increase the negative charge in ourselves. And that's what's called the redox potential. And we do that by increasing electrons."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Correct. You want to assimilate electrons in different ways. Most people in the food and exercise paradigm believe that you do that from food. It turns out that's not totally true. There's other ways of doing it.
"One of the ways that you may be aware of, because I like going back to the physics, I always like teaching people that. The sun that's on my face right now is a cathode ray. That means it's a negatively charged ray. It hits the planet. Our planet, spaceship earth, is an anode. When light hits an anode, what does it do? Axiomatically true, anywhere in the universe: reduces free electrons.
"Here's the part that the food and exercise guys very rarely know. We're the only primate on earth that has sweat glands on our hands and our feet. Our cousins, the apes and gorillas, don't. The reason why? They're designed to be continually connected to trees and the canopy. But we're the primate that has two legs that walks on the ground. It turns out because there's a wet connection, you actually gain free electrons from your feet.
"So if you really understand fundamentally how mitochondria work, you don't need to get all your electrons from food when you break it down through the inner mitochondrial membrane.
"If you remain connected in sunlight, that's part of the reason why you need to eat less. That's the basis actually of my leptin prescription that I wrote 15, 16 years ago. And I tell people the more connected you live, the less food you're gonna require.
"That's decidedly a different message than most food gurus and exercise gurus. Why? Because they tell you well you just need to eat less and exercise more and everything will be fine because it's all about calories in and calories out.
"Jack Kruse rejects that nonsense." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Sherrill Sellman, ND @ 05:50–07:49
"It's definitely true that the vitamin D you generate by exposing your skin to ultraviolet is more effective than taking it as a supplement. I think that's been well established. So if you're going to expose yourself to sunlight to generate vitamin D, it would make sense to use near-infrared as a protection, yeah, in addition to its established benefits on its own." —Michael Hamblin, PhD with Cameron Borg @ 35:35 – 36:01
UV light will never hurt you when the six other colors are present
"You first have to understand why dermatologists and ophthalmologists believe UV light's bad in order to understand the whole paradigm.
"It turns out babies that were born with jaundice, […] they used to be put under UV light in the '50s.
"Well, it turns out a lot of those kids got retrolental hyperplasia in their retina. Immediately they found out, 'Oh, this is UV light exposure that caused the problem.'
"What didn't they know? That babies have lenses that are completely permeable to UV light. When we were in medical school, we were told by ophthalmologists that the lens blocks UV light, which is also bullshit. It lets 2% to 4% of UV through. Well, it turns out babies really let it through. Why?
"Because UV light stimulates brain growth. […] It turns out their lenses are permeable for sunlight to help stimulate them to grow. […]
"They eventually switched in the late '50s to the early '60s to blue light, because they found out the blue light didn't cause the retrolental hyperplasia and it was able to get rid of the jaundice. But what have we found out in the 2000s about kids that are irradiated for jaundice?
"They all have higher levels of melanoma, skin cancer, and this new cancer that's blowing up everywhere called ocular melanoma. It's the number one fastest-growing cancer in the ophthalmology literature. Guess what we found out now?
"We found out the story that the blue light goes from 435 to 465. That's what stimulates melanocytes in the RPE of the eye and on your skin. It's actually the key frequency range that melanopsin works at. Now we know that it's artificial blue light that really causes the cancer.
"Turns out that UV light taken out of its spectrum, so if you're thinking about the Pink Floyd album cover, remember, UV light only makes up purple. There's six other colors. UV light will never hurt you when the six other colors are present." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 52:05 – 54:25
"If you're an NFL fan, you'll take out an NFL rushing list when I get done with this podcast [from 2018] with you, and you'll notice that the top 20 NFL rushers all went to school in the Southeast. Not one of them with the exception of one guy, John Riggins, went to school north of that. Guess why?
"Because muscle fiber type is linked to actually your physiology and the amount of solar exposure you get as a kid. What's the key here?
"As a cardiologist, if you have anybody that has cardiac disease, your job is to get their chest, their sternum out in the sun as much as possible.
"With ladies who have heart disease, they say, "Well, I can't just take my boobs out and walk around." Well, actually you can, ladies. They make something called Cooltan out in your neck of the woods in Arizona, a clothing company in the States. There's another one that I push my members to, which is Kiniki. They're in the UK. And I found that Kiniki allows more of the infrared A and UV light to come through.
"But these are things that we can do to help people. These are little, actionable steps that actually improve people's things. Instead of them coming to see you to have a wire placed in their coronary arteries, or coming to see me to have pedicle screws placed in their back." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 50:13 – 51:31
Dr. Jack Wolfson: "Is there any role at all for retinyl palmitate supplementation, vitamin A?"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "No […] Excessive retinol in any form, I don't care if it's synthetic or even natural, has been associated with significant problems. […]
"It has to be linked to circadian biology. That's what controls it. […]
"You can't go taking something exogenously and thinking you can replace it endogenously.
"The cool thing is, if your redox level isn't trashed, eating liverwurst or eating seafood every so often helps prime the whole system. Mother nature and evolution designed you to take the pieces and parts […] to do the right things. […]
"Sunlight controls the entire system, both in the eye and all the peripheral clock genes that are present. Guess what controls the peripheral clock genes? Melanopsin. Guess what controls the SCN? Turns out it's melanopsin again […]
"When you have blue light or non-native EMF, really any other part of the spectrum besides visible light, it disassociates the retinol from the melanopsin. […]
"When retinol comes on, [if] it's not connected to the circadian mechanism it becomes toxic. Which is why I tell people, 'Do not supplement with it.' Because what does it do? It destroys leptin biology. […]
"The retinol locally destroys the photoreceptor. It's the same reason why we have AMD in the eye, because when retinol gets out there, it thins the retina. It destroys it. OK? Because it's ruining rhodopsin, melanopsin, and all the cones. It's also the reason why people get cataracts." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 32:44 – 39:13
"For example, fibromyalgia, in my opinion, it's not only a disease of the mitochondria, but it's also a disease of the collagen. This is the reason why when you touch some of these ladies, even when you try to do massage on them or you do acupuncture, it kills them, because that system is broken. It turns out there should be a better method.
"I use tons of red light on them before I actually put them in the sun. And I tell them if you don't build your solar callus first, you're never going to get better from fibromyalgia. Then once you build that, then I'm going to be able to put you in the sun.
"Because most ladies that have fibromyalgia, they'll tell you getting in the sun for them is miserable. And it's true. The reason it's miserable because their mitochondria can't make water.
"It's kind of like, to understand this, it's like having a house in the 1920s, then hooking up the modern power line to it. You're going to burn the house down." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Carrie Bennett @ 53:14 – 53:58
"And the one thing that infuriates me is that every single person that will ever listen to this video is here listening to it because Mother Nature allowed you to be here.
"5,000 years ago there was no centralized doctors. OK? It was nature. And we are here because of that medicine.
"And we are the most arrogant silly talking monkeys to not realize that even when we have data from 5,000 years ago that the Egyptians put a sphinx that looks to the east grounded to the ground in the middle of a desert. They were telling us something. There was a reason they named their God after the sun.
"Now, did they have it all right? No. Just like I'm telling you on this podcast I don't think I have it all right. But do I think that the Egyptians had more right about decentralized health than the FDA and the CDC have right now? That's exactly what I'm saying."
—Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso on the Smarter Not Harder Podcast 01:34:01 – 01:35:01
"Infrared A light forms up 42% of sunlight. It's the dominant form of light. Turns out red light in you is the fastest way for you to build your solar callus. So that means the more red light you get, the more UV light you can assimilate and you don't need to be outside and you'll never get red.
"You know you've met me, I'm an Irish guy with freckles. I can stay out in the sun for eight to 10 hours. In fact, this weekend on Sunday I was outside watching some of the NFL games, out 10 hours straight in the sun. Do I look like I'm blistered and miserable? No.
"The key is, people don't know this about the skin, that this ability is there. Women are recalcitrant to do this because they assume that they're going to get wrinkles, because that's what the dermatologist tells them. You know what the irony of the story is? The higher your skin redox is, the more mitochondria you have, the more water it makes, the less wrinkles you get. It's actually the opposite. If you want to get wrinkled, sit in front of a computer all day." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 59:45 – 01:00:45
"It turns out AM sunlight is the key to begin fixing people's sleep. And everybody knows when you sleep you begin to regenerate. Why? Because it increases melatonin levels. Melatonin controls autophagy and apoptosis.
"So when you can rebuild that energy facilitation in somebody, in other words, you then can take somebody who has −200 mV and get them closer to −400. And it doesn't happen overnight. But it's one of those things that's about being consistent. And if you're consistent with it, it doesn't take as long as people think.
"There's some people, if I do a full work up on them, I tell them, 'look, you're looking at 18 to 36 months.' Those are the people I'm telling you right now: they got to move. There's no option for them. Why? Because they're so far gone.
"But even then, do I think if they do things right they can improve themselves? Yeah. And I'm not gonna tell them to do anything else. Because when they move down there, they don't really need the lights. They've got the best light in the world. They just need to learn how to use it.
"You know using solar power sensibly, the way nature built it, you have to have your solar callus built. You have to understand that all branches of sunlight are not equivalent. They're different for a reason.
"And they all funnel to water. It always comes back to what is the light doing to water. I always try to tell people to understand it functionally I want you to think about water it allows Apple to talk to Microsoft. That's what water does in yourself. It takes all the environmental signals outside and then it makes sense to them in the mitochondria inside.
"In other words, a mitochondria is an electromagnetic sensor that has to decipher the cipher, the information, in sunlight. Water helps that process. Water makes it easier. That way you can think about water and light as the Rosetta Stone for mitochondrial biology." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Carrie Bennett @ 47:48 – 49:51
Dr. Jack Wolfson: "Give me some strategies, if you will, to deplete the deuterium from the body. How do we minimize our exposure?"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "[…] Dr. Laszlo Boros, who is an MD PhD at UCLA, he has shown pretty clearly through his work in Hungary with a researcher and MD named Gábor Somlyai that ketogenic diets are deuterium-depleted diets.
"In fact, one of the number one things that you could eat to deuterium deplete yourself is coconut oil. It has a deuterium level of about 101 parts per million. Well, it turns out that all fats, almost all animal products are deuterium depleted. Guess what has the highest level of deuterium in it? This is where you're going to laugh. Vegetarians won't like this part.
"Anything that's made from C3 or C4 photosynthesis. It turns out C3 photosynthesis forms 80% of the food webs on the planet. That's the one that has the highest level of deuterium in it. That's the one that vegetarians eat.
"Guess what depletes us of deuterium? Solar mechanism, meaning the sun and your circadian biology. It's present in many different systems.
"In fact, when I went back to the Weston A. Price meeting this year in 2018, that's what the talk was about." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 29:31 – 31:00
"You learned, just like I did in medical school, how fast the enterocytes turn over in our body compared to everything else: 24 to 48 hours. You know what that means?
"That means nature, when your circadian mechanism is working, has a mechanism that works very efficiently getting rid of enterocytes that are filled with a bag of shit. Got it?
"So, guess what happens when you're blue light toxic, or you put the cell phone up to the side of your head instead of putting it on speakerphone?
"Your enterocytes are filled. That's what leaky gut is. It's an electromagnetic phenomenon. It ain't tied to any bullshit tied to foods […]" —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Jack Wolfson @ 28:43 – 29:22
Dr. Jack Kruse: "You know, because you have experience in this, that when you get a diagnosis [of cancer] like this the first thing that happens you get scared."
Maria Menounos: "Yup."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "What I want people to know is: don't get scared. Because guess what? The way regeneration works. […]
"Because what is cancer effectively? It's a dedifferentiation of the cell to a more embryonic form. […] That's what Robert O Becker found in his work. That's actually what happens. Now here's the interesting part.
"A dedifferentiated cell doesn't cause a problem if the immune system, the T- and B-cells, actually operate. Why? Because it can controls that cell from being able to do the things that you know that cancers can do, specifically metastasize or grow uncontrollably.
"But if the immune system is not operational at the time that you get dedifferentiation, then guess what happens? Then you get your mom's problem, or you get your problem in the pancreas. […]
"But the reason I'm explaining this to your audience, I want you to know that you have to be decentralized. To be a good decentralized patient, you have to subtract the superfluous. That means you cannot be afraid."
Maria Menounos: "Yeah."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "You have to know that when you get a diagnosed of cancer, you have been injured, just like if you cut your finger, Maria, in your kitchen. That's how you need to think about it. And what your body is saying to you: 'there is something in your environment that is causing my cells to dedifferentiate.'"
Maria Menounos: "What could that be?"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "The number one thing is what I talked about the last time I was in Malibu. It's loss of melanin. It's hypoxia. […] When you have a lack of melanin you have no sunlight."
—Dr. Jack Kruse with Maria Menounos @ 33:22 – 36:03
"Has calorie restriction ever been proven in primates? The answer is fucking no. So why do we keep fucking beating that drum?
"It works in C. elegans, in worms that are simple. But it doesn't work in us, and it shouldn't if you understand how we're built.
"But guess what? We keep studying the stupid shit." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Alexis Cowan @ 01:22:46 – 01:23:05
"I'm going to tell you the fastest way to get a thyroid tumor, Hashimoto's or a neuroendocrine tumor in your pancreas is to use Ozempic to lose weight.
"It is the single biggest risk right now to so many people out there. Why? Because everybody is using these GLP-1 drugs to lose weight. […]
"It's quantum mechanical. It's not cause and effect. It's more probable than not. […]
"I want you to open the package insert the next time you go to the pharmacist and read what the side effects of the medicine potentially are. […]
"I've been seeing a lot of patients with complications related to it, and it's complications that are getting much more difficult to deal with. The number one thing that I'm concerned about is damage to the hypothalamus. I think it has a massive effect on the leptin-melanocortin pathway, and that effect isn't consistent across. I think it has different effects on different haplotypes from the mitochondria, and in different places you live in. […]
"I've been talking to a lot of doctors about this, the place that I'm worried about it the most, is probably New York, Chicago and Miami. But I think part of the reason for that is the people that are there using it have an indoor existence. They're not getting enough sun, and it's changing the signaling in their body." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Maria Menounos @ 15:55 – 18:41
"That's the thing I worry about, because people don't realize the unmyelinated brain is much more sensitive, through nonvisual photo receptive destruction, very, very quickly. And that's the key metric.
"You could destroy a brain faster with light than you can with drugs. And you know when I say something like that people think it's hyperbole. It's not. The data now backs this up.
"Just think about it: your two-year-old niece, they live in a time where kids are now killing themselves at record rates. And you know, magically everybody says, 'oh, well it couldn't be the iPad.'
"I told Anjan this just when we did the podcast this weekend. I said, 'dude, your target market is all humans.' But really, any parent that owns an iPad should immediately switch out to his tablet. Why? Because technically it's a huge step in the right advantage. Doesn't mean that there's no RF and no microwaves coming from it. But dude, you're eliminating the biggest fucking problem." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Ryan Brown on Decentralized Radio @ 18:43 – 19:42
A Drug For Every Ill
"What you have to realize is that you've been preconditioned not only by the system, by your parents, by schooling. […] you have been preconditioned to accept what they tell you, and they're the experts, and you'll do it.
"E.g., when you go to see a doctor, no matter where you are in the world, whether it's Europe or the United States, if you don't get a prescription for it, you feel like, 'well, this was a waste of time.' That idea comes from the preconditioning you got.
"When you begin to realize that the person who really preconditions everything in medicine, who gave doctors that idea, who doctors gave the patient the idea, that was big pharma. That started at the turn of the 20th century. That started with the robber barons in the United States who basically had one of their oil trusts broken up. And then from the breakup, started the idea of big pharma, which started in New Jersey.
"They started to use industrial chemicals to place in pharmaceuticals. […]
"They actually came up with a guy named Flexner to come up with a report. And in the report says this is how we're going to fix schools. The idea of the Rockefeller Foundation at that time is if we can change the curriculum, we can change the culture of medicine away from vitalism towards reductionism. […] What is the single key moment that solidified that the Rockefellers would win?
"It was actually Alexander Fleming discovering penicillin. When penicillin comes out it's truly a miracle drug. It does things that no other drug's ever done. And what does that do?
"It kind of pushes everybody to the belief that there's a drug for every ill. And that was reinforced post-war America, post-war Europe. It was reinforced everywhere in the world." —Dr. Jack Kruse on the Longevity & Lifestyle podcast @ 11:54 – 14:49