Why would I get fat?'s avatar
Why would I get fat?
npub1jlgf...v44k
I am not a doctor. I do not give health or medical advice. Instead, I excerpt what others say.
Why would I get fat?'s avatar
whygetfat 1 year ago
Dr. Ted Achacoso: "Jack, you just reminded me of something that I've been railing about for decades now. It's not just X-rays. It's actually the use of ultrasound in pregnancy. Like how many times do you need to ultrasound irradiate a fetus in there when you know very well that ultrasound actually causes cavitation." Dr. Jack Kruse: "Right." —Dr. Ted Achacoso with Dr. Jack Kruse @ 24:00–24:25
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whygetfat 1 year ago
"The Nazis, in order to get people to totally be obedient, used multiple methods. […] But if they had waited another five years, they could have just injected everybody with the psychiatric drugs called antipsychotic drugs, in sufficient doses. Because they go in and they corrupt the function of your frontal lobes. That's where civilization is. "Our frontal lobes, the big foreheads that we have, the bulging tops of our heads, all filled in with the frontal lobe. That all has to do with your thinking, your feeling, your judgment, your love, your hate, your intensity. Injuries to it make you docile. They found out on the first day they tried them in mental hospital that they had a miracle, because the nurses that night reported all was calm in the wards for the first time ever. One dose. "That was Halidol, still in use. That was Thorazine, still in use. "And all these drugs like Abilify and Seroquel and Zyprexa that have any dopamine blocking, that's the way to tell if you're on one of these. Find out if it's blocking dopamine. That's the nerve that go to the frontal lobe. Because you are going to be told that Abilify is an antidepressant, or Seroquel is a sleeping pill, or that you're getting help from Zyprexa for your anxiety or whatever. So look for the dopamine blocking. And get lists of dopamine blockers, because things like Compazine that they use for nausea also happen to be dopamine blockers. "So what they've done now is to realize, starting in the '50s, that if you went after the brain and just corrupted its function, especially the frontal lobes, you would have passive people on your wards, and passive people when they went home. Because they wouldn't have the energy, they wouldn't have the spontaneity, they wouldn't have the self-direction." —Dr. Peter Breggin with Tommy Carrigan @ 01:30:34–01:33:20 https://rumble.com/v5yhwbq-globalist-predators-dr.-peter-breggin-tpc-1643.html?start=5434
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Public health is not science "The failure and the pseudoscience is coming from inside the house. The problem is when a Francis Collins and an Anthony Fauci in private emails can turn their dissenting colleagues, fully competent experts dissident colleagues, like Jay Battacharia and his colleagues at Harvard and Oxford. And overnight they become fringe epidemiologists. Right? "So more or less what you're seeing is not a failure of science. What you're seeing is a failure of science to disavow public health. "Public health is not science. Public health is an incredibly bizarre field that tries to straddle two worlds of actual truth and the noble lie." —Eric Weinstein with Piers Morgan @ 23:50–24:37
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Dr. Ted Achacoso: "There is something that you said that was quite alarming to me. Are we really in an extinction event with the way we are in the world? Dr. Jack Kruse: "Of course we are. This shouldn't shock anybody. "If you take a good look behind me, you will not see it right now, but you know that it's 4 o'clock in the afternoon at the 28th latitude. The sun is out. That is the EMF that we're optimized to. "Ted, since 1874, the light that we've chose to live under was Edison's light. Then we built the AC power grid by Tesla in 1893. That was turned on at the World's Fair. All of a sudden we thought it was a good idea to have artificial light during the day, but here's the big one: at night. And guess what? "That's an extinction event. That's an extinction event for anything that has a mitochondria. […] "Uncle Jack doesn't want Ted to be upset by it. I told you before: embrace the suck. Because the only way we're going to get people to understand that they have to be smarter about the way they use technology, is to think about this. […] "I want you to know exactly what you're doing. Because when you know exactly what you're doing, Ted, decentralized doctor, is going to allow you to continue to wear the headphones and be inside and talk to me. OK? I'm not going to tell you, Ted. You made this as a conscious choice. I know that you did that. "But it's my duty, if you're my patient, for me to tell you if you continue to do this over and over and over again, I'm going to have to fire you as a patient […] "I treat patients, clinicians, just the way nature does. If you don't follow her laws, what is the biologic toll you get? You know it's mitochondrial disease. And that mitochondria changes the translation of the genome. Guess what? That's exactly what it does. It's an electromagnetic event. That's what technology is. "It's the same thing that happened when the asteroid hit the planet. People ask me all the time, 'What was the electromagnetic event in the KT event?' An asteroid that was six miles wide blocked the sun for a period of time. That's the key. In other words, if you block the sun, it's a really bad problem. "The flip side of that is if you have light at night that we create, and you do it that way, that's additive to the problem. That will get you extinction. […] "We don't realize how the electromagnetic footprint in our environment has changed radically in the last 150 years. That is the single biggest lever that is ruining our mitochondrial biology, and that mitochondrial biology reacts by doing things that the RNA and DNA shouldn't be doing. It's designed to be quiet and stable so that it can stay as a photolithography plant that makes the best semiconductors that nature has come up with for 3.8 billion years. But guess what? "When you start using Microsoft, Meta, Apple, and you do it to a great degree, you are messing up with the key features of what makes you, you." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso @ 01:47:05–01:53:35
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Jesse Hal: "Mandy from our Facebook says, 'Some of us don't have the choice as to where we live. So what can we do if we're only getting vitamin D for four months out of the year? How do we optimize just being stuck in wherever a person may be due to financial reasons?' Dr. Jack Kruse: "Mandy's not going to like my answer: Then you have to be OK with suboptimal results. "See, biology makes you pay a toll. That toll is in disease. Remember I told you before that choices are the engine of destiny? You have to do everything possible. This is what I would say to Mandy. "The single most important asset you have in your life is time. How you value your time will determine how motivated you are to change your environment. That's as simple as I can put it. "I understand that economic, social reasons mandate that people have to stay there. "But here's what I'm telling you, Mandy. Do not waste your money on BS stories if you don't change your environment. Save your money. Take a week trip, or a two-week trip, down to the 13th latitude, down to the 10th latitude, down to the 20th latitude at Cancún. Because that 7–10 day trip will have much more benefit for you than going out and wasting your money on supplements." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Jesse Hal @ 01:01:13–01:02:36 https://rumble.com/v1h4da1-interview-283-with-dr.-jack-kruse.html?start=3673
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whygetfat 1 year ago
"You actually mentioned in another a podcast, via negativa, you know the removal of the superfluous elements, admodum. What are those superfluous elements that need to get removed? "Well, we just talked about a couple of them. I'm going to give you my bias now. I think many of the things that we do in neurosurgery, absolutely superfluous. For example, I think we do way too much spine surgery for degenerative conditions. I don't want to just pick on my own profession. "Let's pick up on let's say, breast surgeons. I think the amount of mammograms that we do is ridiculous. "Let's talk about the gastroenterologists. The way we screen colon cancer absolutely preposterous. "Pediatricians, in the way they use vaccines and antibiotics. Psychotic. "Let's talk about internal medicine. The use of statins on LDL cholesterol is probably the biggest mistake centralized medicine has ever made. But yet we still have people out there telling you you need to lower your LDL cholesterol, even though it's blatantly obvious in the literature that people that have the highest LDL cholesterol do the best and live the longest. "So those are some of the big ideas. But I don't want anybody to think, because I just gave you a bunch of allopathic ones. There's plenty on the functional side. I can promise you these functional guys are not going to like Uncle Jack's program. Because if you think it's wise for a patient to spend $20,000–$30,000 doing labs that lead to no good outcomes for them. If they still have their hypothyroidism, or their mitochondrial function still blows, guess what? You, you need to pay the penalty, not the patient. They may have paid you $20,000, but guess what? You need to change your template because what you believe needs to come under scrutiny. Why? Because it goes to the bottom issue. "What is the return on equity for the money spent? If we want a good system of healthcare, we need results. That's what proof of work really means, Ted." — Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso @ 36:44–39:02
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whygetfat 1 year ago
"For example, the CDC and the FDA just announced that, 'Oh, let's give people more boosters.' I mean after looking at the aftermarket data, anybody who says, 'Let's give them more boosters,' they need to have their head examined. That would be the stupidest thing you could ever do. Why? Because they didn't work the first time, and they're certainly not going to work again. "But you have to realize incentives dictate the outcomes. You know, the CDC and the FDA, these are people who are incentivized for big pharma. So of course they're going to tell you that. "But the problem is the public doesn't look at the CDC or the FDA the way you and I do. We know what they are. They are levers that control the centralized paradigm. "I mean the simple thing to do in a country like the United States is I would just tell people, 'Do not comply with anything the CDC or the FDA says.' In fact, I would tell you to do exactly the opposite, because that's exactly what they deserve. Their information has been so bad, for so long, on so many different things. Let me give you an analogy. I think you'll probably chuckle at this. "So I was in a foreign country not that long ago, in front of group of very influential people, and I made the case, the very provocative story, that if I was to tell you that your health would be better by being under the care of the Colombian cartel for cocaine, versus the CDC or FDA, would you believe it? "Of course, everybody in the crowd just got a big smile on their face like you did, and they laughed and this and that. Well they stopped laughing, Ted, after the next slide that showed up that showed how many people died of cocaine and fentanyl deaths in the last three years, compared to how many people died from covid and from covid vaccinations. And guess what? Everybody stopped laughing then. "So when I told them the initial premise that I made to you, it sounded preposterous. Why? I understood. But you know what people don't understand about decentralization? "Just put some sunshine on the data, on the facts. All of a sudden people will be able to make their own decision. Because guess what? "If you sit down with me and you're my patient in the operatory, and I tell you this story, and I show you that slide that I showed them, all of a sudden you begin to realize well if we made this big a mistake with that, what kind of mistake are we making with statins? What kind of mistake are we making with stents? What kind of mistake are we making with, I don't know, CABG versus non-operative treatment? What kind of mistake are we making with fusions? And this is the point, Ted. "The point is the decentralized perspective has never been given a chance to show its power. OK?" —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso @ 01:31:07–01:34:01
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Dr. Ted Achacoso: "Say I am a patient. […] I go to you, and it's decentralized medicine for a particular disease, choose your favorite one as an example. Walk me through how a decentralized medicine system would work. Dr. Jack Kruse: "Well, let's take the simplest one […] Let's think about hypertension. "Hypertension is a huge problem. Most of us know the reason why it's a big issue, because it can lead to bad medical outcomes that are very, very expensive. And dealing with someone's blood pressure is simple. […] "The first thing we have to do is define what a high and low blood pressure would be for the patient's age. And I would like to say haplotype, because in my practice we'd tie it to their haplotype, their latitude. Are they mismatched? "For example, […] if a guy from Somalia comes into my clinic in Toronto, that guy's not getting medication. OK? "Now if it's a guy from Nairobi who's coming to see me in my clinic in Nairobi, and he has high blood pressure, and his Vitamin D level is really good, I'm probably gonna default to medication on him sooner than the other guy. "You understand that nuance. But guess what? The people who listen to this who are not doctors say, 'I don't understand what Jacks just said.' This is the whole point of my system. Doctors will begin to understand what's really important. "The single most important thing for high blood pressure should be education that's done in the operatory. "For example, I would sit down that guy in Toronto who's from Somalia and make him watch the TED Talk of Dr Richard Weller from 10 years ago. He's a dermatologist that basically said, 'It seems like most of the people in Edinburgh are dying of problems related to hypertension because they don't have enough nitric oxide production, because they don't get enough sun, because we live at the 59th latitude.' "So my discussion with the patient would start right away. 'Tell me what you do. Oh, you're an IT worker. OK. Tell me about your day.' "In other words, you're doing an environmental biohack on them as part of their demographics, something that never gets done in a centralized system or even a functional medicine system. "'Well, tell me how long you spend under blue light and around non-native EMF. OK, so that explains why your vitamin D is 13, and your blood pressure today was 159 over 87.' "'I will tell you what I think we need to do first. Let's mitigate your environment as best we can. We'll get you some blue blockers. We'll have you wear turtlenecks, cover your body all over. And I'm going to ask you to go out and see the sunrise every day. I'm going to ask you to try to ground. And I'm going to have you try to get at least an hour of sun on 80% of your skin. I want you to be like Uncle Jack is right now. And then I'd like to see you back in one month to see what your blood pressure is.' "I'd also give them a blood pressure cuff, teach them how to do their blood pressure at home, because I'd want them, in a book, to write down for me what the trend is, and how much time they spent in the sun. I'd introduce them to the vitamin D app that Michael Holick has. I'd explain how to use that in their latitude. "And then they'd come back and see me in a month. If the blood pressure showed a good trend, then I would tighten up the environment more. If they did everything that they were supposed to do, then I would consider a first generation pharmacotherapeutics for that patient." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso @ 57:41–01:02:01
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whygetfat 1 year ago
"Most people don't know that one of the most controversial drugs out of covid, which is hydroxychloroquine, is actually a derivative of methylene blue. You know what that means? "The methylene blue could have been used to treat covid very successfully. Now methylene blue is pretty damn cheap. Now here's the interesting part. "The reason that it couldn't happen in the United States in the centralized system was because the system that was built by that law in 1980, the one in 1986, and the subsequent laws that were passed and adjudicated by guys like Fauci and Collins, was you could not have an Emergency Use Authorization for any vaccine if another drug was found to be successful at treating that disease. "And realize that that's the reason why 'The Science,' the centralized science, was used to block guys like me and you from telling people, 'Hey, you might want to try this, instead of doing this.' "See that's a decision, Ted, that needs to happen in your operatory, in my operatory, with me and the patient. And you know what? The skin in the game for me and you is if we're fucking wrong, somebody's going to come after us." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ted Achacoso @ 55:18–56:37
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Ulcers, Leaky Gut, Getting Fat, Autism, Cancer Dr. Jack Kruse: "When I was in medical school, we used to do vagotomies on people for people who had ulcers. We used to think this was a good idea to go in and cut their vagus nerve. "Then Barry Marshall comes along and says, 'OK, I think it's Helicobactor. I'm gonna prove it.' He looked for an animal model to use. He couldn't use monkeys or gorillas. Why? Because the closest relatives to us have a different gut organization than we have. So what did he have to do to prove it? He had to drink the fucking Helicobacter himself and then scope himself while he did this. [...] He couldn't use a chimp or a gorilla to do this because they don't have the same gap junctions in their gut that we do. "Turns out humans have a leaky gut by design. Why? Because we're designed to absorb tons of viruses that are in seawater. That's the difference between us and chimps. "It turns out that those viral elements that we got from seawater played a massive role in encephalization of our brain. That's the reason why we have two frontal lobes and gorillas and chimps don't. It's also the reason why when a human baby is born it's fat as shit, has an immature brain. When a chimp and a gorilla have almost a fully-formed brain and they look like an anorexic individual. Because they don't need the fat to develop the brain. That brings then a new point. "Is that the reason why people are getting fat in different parts of the world today? Is there something that's causing a cognitive devolution? Is the body reacting like the cancer cell, is going back to a primitive form? We call that atavism. "I'm going to tell you that to me is the key to autism. That's exactly what's happening there. "The same thing that's happening in Levin's lab that he's learning about cancer, where there's changes in gap junctions, is the same thing that happens with neuronal migrations. "Cells, just as I told you DNA has a history of all life, so do cells. Pay attention to what cells do. "Remember what Becker found, Cameron. He found that in salamanders, in mammals, that red blood cells have the capability to dedifferentiate into pluripotential stem cells by using using weak electromagnetic signals. Then hard stop again. "Think about what Gurwitsch found in the onion root experiment, that you cannot pass through mitosis unless you have extreme low frequency UV light. You're learning some of the key metrics. These are like the beacons, the signposts. "So I would tell you the link to biophotons, the link to ROS signal, is tied to the presence or loss of the gap junctions. That brings directly the idea of AMO physics to the cell. "And it turns out this is the reason why in cancer cells, also size and shape changes, also completely correlate to thermodynamics. It also make sense why mitochondria look the way they do in different diseases. But people are not putting those things together. "Remember, there's there's micropores on the inner and outer mitochondrial membrane that are acting just the way the cells in Levin's lab are working. But remember, the mitochondria itself is a bacteria. it's not a eukaryote. So you have to begin to realize that how that mitochondria operates within a eukaryotic cell is not going to look the same as a eukaryotic cell that Levin is working you know, with cancer. "The key thing is, I think what he's focused in on is the morphogenetics. I think he's between Becker and probably Rupert Sheldrake, if you want to know the truth." Cameron Borg: "I couldn't agree more." Dr. Jack Kruse: "Yeah. I think that's where he is, and I think he's looking for things that are going to get him to the next level." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Cameron Borg @ 01:36:18–01:40:47
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Carrie Bennett: "I love what you say about part of the healing the nervous system is you have to have that and educate yourself. I feel the same way about someone who's healing their body. "My goal is not to give you a protocol that you just do blindly. My goal is for you to actually understand and start to embrace some science that, yeah the words might be a little confusing at first. But once you start to understand it, and once my clients start to recognize the physiological reasoning behind these recommendations, that is the glue that really sticks with their behavioral changes." Irene Lyon: "Yes, and I think it has to do with our higher brain wanting information and wanting to figure things out. We are problem solvers as humans whether we like it or not. "And I did see in fitness and in the medical health world just being given a pamphlet and say, 'It's saying you have to do this,' it just doesn't create that glue with the person to stick and for them to keep perpetuating that lifestyle shift." —Carrie Bennett with Irene Lyon @ 12:31–13:35
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whygetfat 1 year ago
"You know what DNA looks like, because you've seen it in books, you've seen the X-ray crystallography of Rosalyn Franklin, you've seen what Watson and Crick have said. We now know that opticogenetics can change how DNA works. In other words, when you shine different lights on DNA it does different shit. Guess what? Same thing is true when we put it in a different magnetosphere. It reacts differently. "The thing is we don't understand all the variables yet. But we know that it's an electromagnetic antenna. We know that it's hydrated. It can't work without water. And we know that the type of water that's around DNA changes the function of what DNA does. "So if you don't think that when sunlight comes out and changes the electrical permittivity, that that's basically called the coherence, where the dielectric constant in water goes from 78 to 160. If you don't think that every single change there means that DNA has a different capability then you don't understand life. Because that's exactly what's going on. When it goes from 78 to 88, this part of life is possible. When it goes from 88 to 108, this becomes possible. I think in all of those changes you will find every single animal on this planet operates in different octaves of what is possible. "And I believe that all of life on Earth, the DNA that's in us, since we're the last of life that's evolved, in terms of being complex, everything that was present in archaea and bacteria 3.8 billion years ago is present in us right now. "In other words, the life that they experience then is magnetically and electrically stored in us. In other words, mother nature doesn't let any opportunity to learn go by the wayside. And that's what makes life really amazing, because no matter what she faces, she's trying to shuffle that deck and figure out what she needs to do to survive. "That's actually the story that's in Jurassic Park. It's the story that's in quantum biology. it's the story in every extinction event. "Every extinction event always has the seed of creation in it. It's even the story that's in our holy books, whether it be the great flood or the story of Adam and Eve, however you want to look at. There is a modicum of truth to all the parables that are there of how this story links there. "I always like to take people back to my favorite one, which is in the beginning of Genesis, because that affects a lot of religions. Let there be light. Yeah OK, God told you it's a big story about light. But you know what He didn't tell you? "He didn't tell you the recipe. that's what we're here to figure out. That's what Levin's doing. That's what Becker did. I'm putting my two cents in, Montagnier put his two cents in, you're putting your two cents in by doing a podcast like this. Prigogine, the same way. "And what are we trying to do? We're trying to parse the onion so that we have a greater understanding, and we don't make the mistakes that people have made." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Cameron Borg @ 01:29:48–01:33:22
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Irene Lyon: "So let's dig apart this sunrise thing a little bit. [...] What is that morning light doing? What is that morning light? And what is going on in our brain and nervous system when it actually goes into the eyes?" Carrie Bennett: "It's a beautiful pathway. It's really, really crazy to think about light as containing information that our body uses. But we've all seen it. Anytime you've shone light through a prism and you see the different colors, that's different what are called wavelengths of light. "A wavelength of light is just information, the color contains information. So in that light are little packets of light called photons. And when we're outside, nature laid this out beautifully, because it doesn't stay the same. The colors are not the same all the time. From sunrise to sunset they shift and they vary in a very predictable way. "What you have at sunrise is you actually don't have very much of the blue. You don't have any ultraviolet, none of those colors of light, none of the UV light. At sunrise, it's really heavy in the red and infrared actually. That's a portion of light that we can't even see. But it's heavy in the red and the infrared. And that kind of is a calming, anyone who's been outside at dawn, it's very calming. "Those soothing colors of light are what really preps the body then to wake up to the more energizing colors of light that come a little bit later. Then as soon as the sun breaks the horizon, you get a much more intense jolt of blue light. "But it's this perfect blend of red and blue that actually gets captured by the backs of my eyes. I've got like little catcher's mitts for photons in the backs of my eyes. They're just waiting to suck this light in. "Depending on the blend that gets caught, how much blue and how much red, it can communicate to this clock in my brain, called the suprachiasmatic nucleus, and my whole body knows then exactly what time of day it is. "Then as the colors shift and change, you get the blue, you get the violet, indigo violet, ultraviolet colors, that's when the sun's at the high point of the sky. You've got all the colors, and then they predictably go away. The colors go away until at sunset, it really mirrors what you're receiving at dawn. "All living creatures have been entrained to this beautiful change of colors in the form of the wavelengths of light from sunrise to sunset. And then we've been able to optimize our biological function, decide when to do different tasks based on what light frequencies are there." —Carrie Bennett with Irene Lyon @ 21:51–25:04
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Cameron Borg: "I wanted to start by asking about mate selection and olfaction. A couple of years ago there was a paper published suggesting that repeated miscarriages were related to olfactory perception, particularly of male odor in the brain. And I've been thinking for several years now that the use of deodorants and perfumes, and just generally not being able to smell one another's actual scent is really impacting the way that we interact with others, particularly those we see as potential mates. I wanted to ask you your thoughts on this, and how important olfaction is in the way that we interact with one another." Dr. Jack Kruse: "[…] In us, meaning humans, we have six layers of cortex in most places in our brain. But it turns out right where the olfactory cortex is there's only three. It's the oldest part of our brain. […] Between all of our senses, the five senses (actually I'm going to tell you it's six, because mitochondria is another one), we have melanin present there. Most people don't know that there's olfactory melanosomes that do that. "The way sex selection or mate selection really works, you're designed to smell someone else's immune system. OK? So if you use perfumes, if you use deodorants, if you use any odoriferants at all then you begin to realize that it creates an interesting problem. […] "When you're dealing with three-layer cortex, it turns out the ROS signal is really important, because that's actually what creates the biophoton release in cells. So effectively, what you're doing in three-layer cortex is you are really sampling someone else's electromagnetic footprint to see if they're compatible, not only with your biology, it's not so much a mitochondrial story, it's actually really a story is do our immune system really work. "And this story goes back so far, especially in humans. Most people don't know that the genes that actually form the MHC complex, and formed the genes that actually formed our brain, called Sonic hedgehog, that controls migration, they all lead back to these immune-mediated problems. "Meaning that your immune system allows you to pick the right person. Because what is the goal of evolution or nature? It's to make sure that the offspring is viable. "Back in the early days of mammals, there was no issues. There was no electromagnetic pollution to get involved, so this was not really an issue. It turned out that the ROS signal (versus the biophotons) was much more important. "And the ROS signal, this should make sense to you, because T and B cells use like superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and the Fenton's reaction to create a massive amplification of the system. "So when you're able to smell someone that actually is additive to your immunity, that actually is going to drive a lot of your biologic selection. "Your presupposition that when we get involved in masking our sense, is there an issue, the answer is yes. And this is probably some of the oldest quantum biology that's in us. […] "It turns out these T cells, when they get activated, we have massive amplifications of ROS to actually fuel how the T and the B cells actually work in natural immunity. […] "When you layer this on with Nick Lane's work, you begin to understand this is why dogs and cats smell each other's butts. You actually see remnants of this in us. I would tell you it's the reason we kiss and it's the reason why we perform oral sex, for the exact same reason. You are actually getting feedback on this. I've actually told some of my members if you enjoy kissing and you enjoy oral sex, it actually tells you something about the person that you're with. If you do not, it also tells you something." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Cameron Borg @ 01:08–09:15
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Irene Lyon: "I have a question about infrared. […] So I know a lot of people have talked about infrared saunas. […] Is it the same kind of light that's coming from the sun? Carrie Bennett: "Not necessarily. So there's different wavelengths of infrared. There's infrared, near infrared, middle infrared, far infrared. You'll sometimes hear that associated with saunas, it's like, 'far-infrared sauna.' Or these red light panels that are becoming really popular, 'near-infrared panels.' "The sun contains all of them. And some forms of infrared we feel as heat. Some forms of infrared we don't feel as heat. "That being said though, in general, infrared isn't ever doing anything for our circadian rhythm. It's always beneficial as long as it's during a time when infrared would be available in our environment, so dawn till dusk. "You want to hop in that sauna? Go for it. I don't really worry about you timing that in a circadian way. Red light therapy panel, same thing." —Carrie Bennett with Irene Lyon @ 26:38–27:51
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whygetfat 1 year ago
Cameron Borg: "I want to ask you one last question before my head explodes. This is about deuterium dynamics. […] is having a higher D:H ratio when living on the equator, does that serve a benefit? […] Dr. Jack Kruse: "Yeah, I think this a great question. I do believe that you need higher deuterium levels at the equator. The reason why is that offsets the electromagnetic radiation that you're getting from the sun, because it's extremely strong there. "Just remember the lesson from physics. Where do they use heavy water? They use it in nuclear reactors. OK? Why do they use it in nuclear reactors? Because it turns out deuterium-enriched water helps control chemistry that happens at high levels. It's exactly what life is telling you on earth as well. "The flip to that is since most humans on the planet have uncoupled haplotypes, […] they have different metrics. So even when they migrate to the equator, do they need to do something different? "Which is one of the mind-boggling things that I always hear. People are like, 'Oh, when I go to El Salvador I need to go buy deuterium-depleted water." And I'm like, 'Why? Why don't you just drink coconut water?' […] "When I say it to them, I think they're stunned, because they always make the assumption that life should always use deutereum-depleted water, because that's what's good in cancer. "Well, if you don't have cancer, you live at the equator, why would you make the assumption that deuterium depletion really matters?" —Dr. Jack Kruse with Cameron Borg @ 02:00:06–02:02:08
Why would I get fat?'s avatar
whygetfat 1 year ago
"What did [Robert O] Becker really find? This DC electric current in us, it takes red blood cells and dedifferentiates them into stem cells. "Now you guys believe today, even right now, that stem cells are like in us, and then they magically show up and replace things in our body. It turns out that's not how it happens at all. This is the reason why guys that are giving you stem cells are the biggest fucking scammers on the planet. They don't know what Becker's work is. "Why is the red blood cell the key to this story? Because it has no mitochondria. That means there's no electric potential in a red blood cell. Why is that a key part of this story? Because Becker found that the current to dedifferentiate red blood cells is 1,000th of one millionth of an ampere of current, meaning it is the most fucking small thing in the world you could ever imagine. And the biochemical paradigm that still exists today. . . this is in the 1960s he finds this. They couldn't fucking wrap their head around this. "So what was Becker's next logical extension? Well if a small little current does this in our body, what does this mean for all the things that are plugged into the AC power grid? How is that impacting our ability to heal? How is that impacting diabetes? How is that impacting limb regeneration or bone regeneration? He was asking the biggest questions that you now hear guys like Bobby Kennedy talk about. "Well dude, this is what I've been talking about for 20 years. I kept my focus in on his work. "So when you begin to realize why darkness at night's a big deal, soon as you put a light on that changes the voltages and the currents tremendously in your body. So you literally looking at a screen ruins that DC current for regeneration at night. Like game, set, and match. It's over, based on Becker's work. "But what also does it mean? It means when we have sunlight, like you behind me, this is how you recharge the battery." —Dr. Jack Kruse on the Bulwarg Disclosure Podcast @ 37:50–40:00
Why would I get fat?'s avatar
whygetfat 1 year ago
"And then when they decided to cancel light bulbs, and they did it under the moniker that you hear from the World Economic Forum, 'Oh, we need to do it to save energy for the CO2 footprint.' That is total bullshit. "Turns out that those lights are the biggest endocrine disruptors out there. "When you hear people like Bobby Kennedy and the Means brother and sister talk the shit they talk, it drives me fucking crazy. The reason I get crazy about it: you blame fucking food for what light causes, you never solve the original fucking problem. That is my problem with them. And here's the irony. "All these forever chemicals, none of them realize that the answer is already in centralized science. There's a guy named Mourou that won the Nobel Prize for something called chirped frequencies, that you can actually take really strong light, monochromatic light, and you can get rid of fucking forever chemicals. "So guess what. If you want to talk about that shit, great. We already know how to fix it. But guess what fixes it again: fucking light. We're back to the light story. It needs to stay on the light story, and it doesn't need to go to the food story. "The food story is fucking superfluous. It drives me fucking crazy when people want to talk about it, because the one thing that is very crystal clear: nobody in MKUltra and nobody in the Brain Health Initiative is using food to fucking change people in the way they think. Yeah it does make you sick, but it's not the fucking key story. "The fact that these Means people show up with Bobby leads me to believe that this is another psyops from big tobacco, big food. […] "We all fucking know the food in the United States is a problem. But it's not the magnitude of the problem that these people want to believe. And when they push this narrative, dude it makes me really crazy. And then when you see the link of this brother and sister tandem to the same universities that are tied to this story at ARPANET and MKUltra. And you find out she didn't finish her residency." —Dr. Jack Kruse on the Bulwarg Disclosure Podcast @ 01:15:04–01:17:14
Why would I get fat?'s avatar
whygetfat 1 year ago
"Technologist, the transhumanists, want you to believe right now that artificial intelligence is the new great craze that's out there. It's not. If you ask any technologist out there, Joe, you have them on your show here, ask them, 'What's the target of AI?' You know what you're going to get when you ask him that question? Crickets. "You know what the target of AI is for biology? It's our children. Children are artificial intelligence for us. They take their father's sperm, their mother's egg with the mitochondrial DNA, and they make an alien. You're not like your mother. You're not like your father. There's lots of things that are kind of the same, but you're different. And there's a lesson there for you to understand. "It turns out that when a baby is born, a human baby is born, remember it's pretty much useless. It doesn't talk. It needs help to shit, to eat, everything else. "And part of the reason for that is the key program in us that has to be turned on is something called the leptin-melanocortin pathway. It's why every baby is born with blue eyes, tons of fat, and usually pretty pale skinned, no matter what the race is. If you've ever seen an African-American baby born, they look pale as fuck. "The reason why is they're designed to be in the sun. […] Salvadorian people, when they have babies, they bring the baby out in the sun almost immediately. Because guess what? That's what turns the program on. "And what did I say to you before about longevity? That's exactly the best way to do it, because what are you doing? You're turning that system on. That system is called the POMC system, stands for a gene in us that humans have. . ." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Joe Burnett @ 36:56–38:46
Why would I get fat?'s avatar
whygetfat 1 year ago
"Mitochondrial biology tells us that the visible spectrum of sunlight is really important. So the more of that you get, the better it goes. There's been about six meta-analysis in centralized medicine that show longevity is a function of how much time you spend in sunlight. "I will tell you the only thing that they miss, is that it's not just how much time you spend in the sunlight, but it's also how dark your nights are. "In other words, remember I told you that the decentralized law for biology is that there's no central controller. So you have to do a good job, like I'm doing now being outside of my house in El Salvador. "But when the night time comes here at 06:30, we turn all the lights off. Like there's no TV. We're not doing anything crazy. It doesn't mean you can't have fun. You can still go out and do different things, but you need to protect yourself then do it. Protect your skin. Wear a lot of clothing then, wear blue blocking glasses. Then you can still go out and have a beer with your buddies you know here and there, or go out and pick up chicks. Whatever you want to do. It doesn't matter. But be smart about how you use time. "Most people, I think, have got the wrong opinion of Uncle Jack, where they think I'm not a technologist. No. I don't like technology because I think we abuse it, and I think your generation's been told there's no downside to it. "What I'm telling you is I want you to use it wisely, use it smartly. I don't want you to be Hal Finney. Hal Finney, Paul Allen and Steve Jobs all died from an unabated use of technology. Every single one of them. That's their story. "Yes, they may have done great things. But if you actually go and read Steve Jobs biography done by Walter Isaacson, what does he say in there? He says directly in there that, 'I would never let my kids use my own technology.' Think about that for a minute." —Dr. Jack Kruse with Joe Burnett @ 35:07–36:54