Medical Redpill Vol. 1 w/ Benjamin Braddock - podcast episode cover

Medical Redpill Vol. 1 w/ Benjamin Braddock

May 29, 20222 hr
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Episode description

Episode 1 of the Medical Redpill Series: Benjamin Braddock joins the show to talk about Food Shortages, Dissolving Illusions (Suzanne Humphries), Dr. Ray Peat, Monkeypox, and more Follow Benjamin Braddock on Twitter https://twitter.com/GraduatedBen IM Publishing https://impublishing.store/ Ben's Covid Treatment Protocol https://benjaminbraddock.substack.com/p/tools-to-beat-covid?s=r Follow all things Rare Candy linktr.ee/RareCandy

Transcript

So there's a lot going on in the world right now. Few minor, few few, minor things. Couple major things. The major thing is Ray Liotta passing away. So that's our IP to Henry Hill on that one. I believe you Shoeless. Joe Jackson. And I think he died from Chantix personally. But either Chantix, he died in his sleep from a heart attack. So you can go Chantix, you can go mRNA, there's a lot of, there's a lot of things. It's like the trees are out of Adventure and like Norrell Stein

book. Just never know, either way, it's it. It checks our agenda for for that, but it isn't isn't Chantix? The anti-smoking stuff? Yeah, it was a Pfizer, Pfizer. Anti-smoking drug that causes heart attacks. Oh dude, the Chantix side effects are wild. Like even for like a pharmaceutical thing that gets through its predictable like chocolate. I missed out on that because I've never wanted to quit. So yeah, exactly. Imagine quitting. Yeah. Smoking to figure out and then

yes, I do this and say hello. Yeah, I know. Right? With that rare candy. Paint job on our way. I need food for the kids money for the rent. Fuck, I like down baby. I can't do that shit. Now I'll never go home cause I'm fucking broke either way. I know the police Ain't Gon leave me alone on a Plane. By the physically, Rockne crypto told me, I should bring a Glock with me.

So I packed up my piece and I'm sliding slide because we might get caught up in a right little finger drunk middle finger biting fuck I love fucking right as you ride we love to see it. Those rocket I can do politics baby. We just talk from the birds to the breaks. We be in a mix with that rare candy, paint job on our way. If we wit And it's like, I know you see, like David Lynch is still like blown cigarettes in his 80s and stuff.

He's like what if he's like I'm gonna quit, you know and so if you look at the side effects people just typing into Google The Pecan frequently asked questions, this Chantix make you go insane. So that you know, that's that's got to be something. What is Chantix do to your body? So they say that it's actually, yeah, it's the nicotine receptor for reaching the brain so you basically get no pleasure Measure from smoking. That's essentially what it is.

I don't know if you know if that's if that's maybe that's yeah, that's the big patches work too. Is that just how they work in general? Not. I thought the patch is put, put nicotine into you your blog supplementing, it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So this one's like you don't like cigarettes anymore. Yeah, no way messing with your brains ever going to like make you go crazy or anything.

Yeah, I mean this the thing about it is, you know, then it's hitting the The receptor that nicotine hits its acetylcholine receptor. And so it's responsible for a huge amount of your like parasympathetic nervous system. So you know, everything from regulating your blood pressure to your heart rate, Justin just so messing with that resided that just sounds really because I don't think nicotine like a be like a B vitamin analog, kind of thing pathway, one of the B

vitamins. Yeah. So so niacin P3 is actually known as Its proper name is nicotine addict acid. What? And some of it is generated from combustion of tobacco, like from nicotine. So yeah, I mean, smokers are picking up a slight amount of niacin and it's actually probably why schizophrenic tend to pretty much all of these smokers. It's like a self-medication thing, right? Cuz niacin very large doses of it is actually effective and thinking something like a third

of schizophrenic. 60 could be treated with just mega dosing eyes, and that's wild, what? Yeah, and the flush that you get from it, it helps I think schizophrenic have a problem with a might be a genetic issue with creating a certain enzyme that niacin is the precursor for. But getting going down that rabbit hole again, he gets a little a little weird because then the word adrenochrome crumbs comes up. Let's go. Yeah, so is this, it's oxidized adrenaline.

Really interesting is what it is and that that collects in the brain and eventually makes you start to like, They're crazy and paranoid and stuff but the niacin helps restore the enzyme that clears that out. So interesting basically mega dosing niacin or chain smoking cigarettes gets rid of the adrenochrome. Wow I have no idea if this is related to the pizza gate conspiracy but yeah, these people becoming schizophrenic, my choice is that what they lead

are doing, that's what I mean. Yeah. Yeah. And so the the for the fight, for the Chantix drug, there was a recall just I believe last September, I want to say this, yes, September 20, 21, Pfizer, expands voluntary Nation. What voluntary Nationwide recall to include all lots of Chantix tablets due to n nitroso, veteran veteran Nixa clean content. So I don't know what that means. But yeah, that got recalled. So, I don't know. Be could Ray Liotta wood.

Was he do we know if we don't know, if he was just kind of like as he was the first Chantix guy. So he had to have been into it. You know what my thing is. Like, who picks Ray Liotta, right?

Like the it's not like a okay, we have this before they put like four hundred million dollars into that drug like so what when are they going to be like, okay, we need a star, you know, I'm not trying to besmirch Ray Liotta's name because I love them personally, but he's not like a you couldn't go up to like a Zoomer and just like, hey, you're a Ray Liotta, they're gonna be like whoohoo. Yeah.

And they, if anything, they'd be like you'd have to point to a picture, like, from the movie Goodfellas for anyone to know who he is and probably the second biggest thing he did was the Chantix commercials. And I think they're probably going for that demographic the, like, guys in their 60s that big-time, like, their wives and daughters have been nagging at

them to quit for years. And, you know, it's finally like the promise, like, hey, you take this pill and you don't have to, you don't have to have any willpower, just thank you. The guy who's seen it, Guy who snitched and Goodfellas is going to get you to get you to quit. Yeah so I got to introduce Our Guest. Take this is first time on the show I had them on the back wall just a couple of I've made me think it was a couple weeks ago we did it was very very recent

There's No Bully here today. Named filthy Armenian poets is a safe space this time so he's nobody Mabel are bullying you and but nonetheless, I have Benjamin Braddock. Here, we just, we just call him then but then Ben Braddock. First off, you have been skyrocketing. I see I see your stuff everywhere. Now, tweets, I see you're writing and stuff everywhere. We talked about a little bit on the back wall but like what is

this been like lately? You just kind of like going from like a poster, you know, I mean like covid poster. You have your own protocol and all that stuff on your sub stack but to just be like damn my shit so long Dan bong Gino or Dan bong, you know, show and stuff. What's that been? Like I've just been waiting for Taylor Lorenzo show up on my doorstep. Because I live in a standard ground state we have very very I don't do.

It took me to when it comes to people trespassing on your property and them out of for sure. Loud to you. So right, right. Exactly. Well, she's gonna do the the distant related Family First, like the cousins and shit. That's how she, you know. Yeah, it's all clear families remain solid on you, yeah, but nonetheless, wow, that's interesting to think Ink of though, the purpose the

impending, like okay? Like even you know, for me like getting like 100 likes on a tweet which is nothing, but you're just kind of like oh shit, it's gonna like eventually go viral and then like people are going to find out like that. I don't think cancer is real, you know, and then you know, like is that is that going to happen or, you know, but for you it's like, you know, you're just like I said, your stuff goes on. He's big, obviously, oftentimes conservative, but I guess not

always. But just your stuff is on these big shows where like, these guys kind of our Ready to be popular, to be honest with you though, my dopamine receptors got fried when I got the Trump retweet back in summer 2020. It's from what was it? What was it was? It was about, Latinos, not being good. Enough to be Joe, Biden's running mate, just like biting promised to pick a black woman. So I was like, is he saying that? Like like he knows like koala. It was like a dang. Dude.

That's part is, you know, he's like yeah or something. Forgot to switch accounts, but, like, Trump, trump was like Artie, smash. Yeah, you know. Yeah, well, the thing was as I was going to bed, it was, It was kind of starting to blow up and just that tweet and that have and some Good shot. I was like oh, something crazy is going to happen. Like Trump will retreat in the middle of the night. And then Don Lemon, I'll be on my doorstep in the next, the next morning, tomorrow morning.

And I wake up the next morning and my DMs are just flooded. It's like, all my mutual's are just like, bro. I can't believe it congratulation and I'd like what happened, like, what's going on, you know? Cuz yeah, like a good soy face. Like a real ninja, like an actual soy face? Well, I legitimately didn't know what happened. And because I'm getting all these congratulations. But it's not like Trump retweeted you. It was like they assumed that I

knew but I yeah yeah. Did you see the actual notification that he did? Like did you see the one that pops up? Because that's got to be pretty cool. No I ended up. I ended up having to just like go back and finding it on his page. That's cool. Then screenshotting for posterity. Yeah. He can re truth you untruth social. Yeah, yeah, that's right now. Yeah, it's called re truth. Yeah. Yeah, when you watch yourself, so they go. Hey, truth. Sayer, what do you got to say?

Like it's I did have a reply to one of his tweets. Go pretty big one there, but it was about Mehmet Oz. Oh no doctor on dr. Oz dig a member of the New World Order has a picture of him in my Marina Abramovic, the spirit cooking, which is like, every sure this guy's vetted. That confuses the fuck out of me, man. It's like He's just so I think he's good. So man like just you see behind his eyes, like he's got a lot of

shit going on there. He's on the, he's on the grown hard but we have you know, we have, we have mentioned schizophrenias. I do think it's important to say that. I think there's a good chance that it's just a made-up condition that you know, doctors are just trying to convince us that the voices in our heads aren't real and that we shouldn't listen to him.

Yeah and that's that's the theme of every Your movie is that the person with schizophrenia actually is on point and like, you know what I mean and it's there's there's extra dimensional. There's extra dimensional beings. You know, talking about exhausting underground Midway. It's all day can cause you to go crazy if you see the movie. I think it's called Conspiracy Theory with Mel Gibson. Hell yeah, great movie, I don't

know if it's good. Late 90s, late night are late 90s early 2000s around then real good. Funny brought the I literally just watched re-watched. Signs today. That was another great one Gibson man. Like he's back, he's playing the Catholic preacher right now. He's doing his little thing trying to ease his way back in, but it's over for you. Hose when Mel Gibson gets back in / / for The chawla Maze. I'm telling you like everywhere the town.

Yeah, they're not, they're not competing for the same role but still, he can't play his son. It's like nobody's gonna believe that. What I had to do some serious writing. I just turn on the The recordings of the voicemails that he left his ex-wife. That was a good character. He was doing there. She's very good method, method method, acting Wilbur, got me back into that, and that's part of his bit, you know, the Lakers tickets, right? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

So, well, you know, that's it's not to Pivot away from Mel Gibson. Because I mean now that if you don't stop Mel Gibson, when it starts, it will hijack the whole episode but monkey pox is the thing now, right? I mean, when I look there's a school. Shooting. I don't, you don't want to know

my take on them. But the the you know, the monkey pox and I actually think the two will eventually be linked because I think this is something that Ben and I and I just in the chat that were and I think we're the only two people that actually are like, no, this is going to be a thing. You know. Like this is going to be a we're Carlos of I think Ben you're a little more on the you think this is actually like a scarier virus, right? Like as far as if you contract it, right?

I'm not CIA. It's one of those things where I think there's a lot of unknowns when it comes to how pathogenic it could be. Because in some of the, my studies monkey pox was not a big deal for mice. Unless they had depleted, CD4 and cd8 immune cells. And coincidentally, hundreds of millions of people around the world, just took a experimental therapy that depletes CD4 and cd8 cells. Which one is that?

I don't recall, the Pfizer moderna J&J and heard of we're on round at it and Pull It. Don't brought back. Yeah. I can't grunts Rome. It's really, it's rum believable. Haven't heard of this morning. Yeah. The poison, the poison, vaccines so-called accidents. Well, I okay, I, here's why I know it's over Cyrus because they're downplaying it. Yeah. But that's addressing it though. Biden said you should take it seriously, really? Oh shit.

Yeah, I think every other place he is like, you shouldn't, you know, I don't know. It's one of those things. It's back to February 2020. All over again. 100% The Washington Post was publishing headlines back. Then I have them saved saying You know one was get a grip America. You know the flu is killing way more people than the coronavirus. Yeah there's excitement. Yeah. All these people in ironically agree.

But it's well, you know, we're going to get into the we're going to get into the monkey viruses. I will say that. I'm just getting over our SD which it was going to be group. It's like if, if you The flu but without the severe fever and muscle aches. And it's just you have the flu in your lungs and nowhere else. So if I sound a little nasally it's not natural. It's just what it even canceled. That's all you have to any disease. You have.

The problem is when you have a disease truth or podcasts like we do you, you just can't cancel, you can't cancel. So the deal with that, is this? There's actually started as something called chimpanzee coryza agent and And the use of chimpanzees and their cell culture and vaccines resulted in the new zoonotic transfer of that to humans where was renamed. Respiratory sink, tail virus and it remains endemic to this day. It killed about 120,000 kids worldwide last year, you know, it can.

It's mostly for children who are five and under it can be pretty serious. I have a doctor friend who just the other day Had to intubate a one month, old who had it easy. So it's a very it's weird in that it's usually pretty pretty mild and adults, but you know, it can hit kids pretty hard. But before the pandemic, it wasn't hitting them like that.

That hard like every once in a while, you'd see a bad way of it. Last summer, we then had like the re-emergence of RSV And all of a sudden kids are getting hit with it. Really hard like they were calling us covid case, they were calling those covid case. Yeah Children's Hospitals were full and filling up and this was happening concurrently with the Delta wave. So you know, across parts of the South and really was serious strain on the healthcare facilities.

And I had some friends who had parents who passed away because they, you know, they couldn't even get them to the Like, you know, the ventilator stage or the ECMO or any of this kind of stuff, because those beds just weren't available. And, you know, without with Delta, if you didn't have early treatment in the first three days, there was a serious chance that it would kill you. If you were over the age of 50. Now, in some cases 11 lady, I knew a friend of my parents, she

had been put on a ventilator. Sir, but they were proning her and she was kind of doing fine, but the proning team messed up one, two, one, one of the flips and caused a pneumothorax. And so then her lung collapsed and yet severe covid and a collapsed lung on top of that. You just can't pull through or so. Wow, this kind of stuff was happening. The the RSV was raging and the RSV is now coming back. It's like, it's like, May write this is not Virus peak season. Yeah.

And it's really picked up steam in the past couple weeks, along with the flu, which is making its reappearance, whereas on. And I didn't want to point that you made stood by that, this is mr. Virus was caused by science in that. It was a yeah, right? That it was a, it was a monkey cell culture line like us, doing science, cause this, your dad. Yeah, this is something that in chimpanzees. It's not that big of a deal.

It's almost like a passenger virus, but humans Causes issues just like how there is a disease. That also first appeared in the lab it's called Simeon AIDS and occurred when African monkey viruses were given to Asian monkeys and it would collapse. So SIV it was a retrovirus a collapsing, like RollerCoaster Tycoon like with animal viruses. Like let's give it to these guys. Yeah, they collapse of the immune system of Asian monkeys, but in its natural host staff. Green monkey.

It doesn't cause disease. Yeah. So and there's been a lot of this, too. I mean, there's there's sv40, which was yeah, if you've read dr. Mary's monkey. No. No, it's okay. It's a pretty wild story. So, there was a to doctors and down in at I think Tulane University in New Orleans, dr. Bernie's Eddie, and dr. Mary Stuart, And they identified a live pathogen contaminating, commercial vaccine stocks and it was another monkey based contaminant. I was the 40th one catalogs, right?

So this is like number 40 out of all the wild viruses, they found this. This doctor ends up murdered brutally, what burn to death in her own home? Well, she was stabbed repeatedly. Arm was cut off and then she was set on like her body was set on fire and weirdly enough. Lee Harvey Oswald's, lover claim later than this was. A book that came out just a few years ago that she had actually her and Lee Harvey Oswald had spent the summer before the JFK assassination working on this

program. For this, this kind of covert research operation. That was researching, you know, cancer in mice and this doctor was also working on on monkey bars is a two lane. So a lot of a lot of weird connections and I ate even bringing up the JFK assassination. Because this is the it's the Eternal podcast topic. But it is a we haven't. Yeah. It is a weird. Instead of this book called dr. Mary's monkey by Ed Haslam.

And, you know, it's a lot of its based on the murder and I was never really cleared up and there's a lot of really suspicious elements of it. And then, a lot of the book covers, just the research that was being done by the government and its two main thrust were studying, monkey viruses. Has and figuring out how to weaponize Monkey virus has to cause cancer chest and I'm at how that given to the. What's that with the polio vaccine?

What's that? Well, the polio vaccine, you know, the polio vaccine was you what it was incubated and chimpanzees and other primates, right? So there's this wildvine cell in the cell lining in the cell lines. Okay? Yeah, this is Wild Virus and sometimes in the live in live - to, they're just like, you know, give them the disease and then start taking like antibodies and stuff on them, but it's like

you're talking blood products. Yeah, and we didn't have we, you know, the PCR polymerase Chain Reaction wasn't created by Kary Mullis until the 1980s. So we had no real way to do any kind of genetic analysis on. These vaccine stocks to get a Full picture of what? What? All viruses might be lurking in there. We just had like microscopes and stuff, which is makes it really hard to find some of these viruses. But even then in the 60s, they were able to find some of these

viruses. So I sv40 was one and it was it painted, the polio stuff vaccine stocks. And, you know, it's a virus that causes tumors? Yeah. Yeah. In the animal model, you put in sv40 and it Consistently produce tumors and you know there's an interview from the 80s that was never aired. It was done by PBS interview dr.

Maurice hilleman which is like the Uber match of vaccine Creation in the in the 20th century Guy created like more vaccines than anybody else but he's talking about the problem of getting into the most double plays. And yeah this is she's just talking The problem of these wild, viruses contaminating, vaccines, right? And he's any in in the interview he kind of jokes. He was talking about this one. Batch of green monkeys that they

brought over in the 70s. We said, we had no idea that we were bringing aids to the United States. They didn't air, it didn't air. It was found, it was found by somebody in the Library of Congress. I think in 2011, you know, that he God Then, of course, it does not make news like, you know, I could too but yeah. So a lot of people involved as mean dr. Robert Gallo to, you know, claimed to have discovered HIV.

It was actually Luke Montagne if you basically stole the credit for it. There was there was a big fight and they finally jointly shared the Nobel Prize for it. But yeah, one of his Early papers was investigations of viral, carcinogenesis and primates and that focused on identifying what? They got primate type-c viral particles that were in a lot of in the vaccines and how they could, how once they were in humans, they could lead to various cancers. So and then I mean Gallo is he's

a big player even in covid. He has the global virus Network, which is a, is a string of labs across the third world. Very much funded by the Chinese. Sure, those are cool. They put their researchers into these into these labs and it's a way for them to pick up exotic pathogens that can then be stolen and you know, added to the pla bio.

Program catalogs and he gets he gets, I've got friend right now, working on an investigation, just on the amount of royalties that this dude gets from vaccines and from other research projects and you know open the books just published one on falchi where tens of millions of dollars of royalties have gone to him personally. Yeah. Damn Damn what? So let's talk about the okay monkey pox, right? So now it's this is not, this is not flying around in the air, correct.

This is not it like because I do think we have to bring it back here to okay. I'm scared because not because I think I'm going to get monkeypox. That's not my that I don't get down like that. But the other way I still think with this, right? Like I and I have this big brain theory about it which I hope this doesn't become come true, but I feel like they've been trying to lock down for reasons, other than covid for a long

time. And I think that if you have monkeypox, right, which lives are retarded. So, they'll hear pox smallpox chicken pox either way. I don't want my kid to get it. Where's the shot? That's where the way they think. When they hear stuff like that, and it's being slowly deployed and we'll see you exactly where it comes from. But if, if you have school shootings, Supermarket, shootings, and another virus

coming. You trying to tell me that does that couldn't manufacture consent for a lockdown. Of course, I don't know. I just maybe I could be too paranoid. I could be to 2020 brain. I don't want to get burned twice. Yeah, that's all I'm saying. I'd say that what this would do is it would it would truly test the power of capital versus the political system because, you know, I was recently at a At a graduation party. That was ridiculous for the amount of money that was in the room.

I mean, you know, you had hedge fund managers in a people who are mining operators to captains of industry that thing so to speak, right? And a lot of them are our lives and, you know, there's concern over monkey pox. But there's also now a recognition that we are right now, teetering on the edge of complete disaster in terms of the supply chains and the Food production system. You've been you've been a really you've been posting some really?

Yeah, good stuff but it's sad, you know, the good stuff about that. So, yeah, I just got to plug your Twitter account. I graduated been, I mean, you've you had the huge threat about the food shortages. I don't want to get you to off topic what you're saying, but for the food plants, blowing up that was that was one that blew up. And that's going to mean just the other day. There was a big fertilizer shipment in Canada, doing Eldon wait now, That was actually

fertilizer. I thought that was like a joke on our side of Twitter that it knows. No, no Sanrio Les posted that in San Rio was the one that went like viral from that. Like, it was just like that. Like I thought that was some of us. Joking about it, like making the Clear Connection. I didn't know. It was like we're honestly for I remember one of the I remember one of the rationalist tried to

like fact check my grandma. You know, it's not that unusual that a plane last week crashed into a potato plant. Like four hours later a plane crashes into a General Mills plant in Georgia. Now, I don't worry, I don't want Source. Yeah. And the thing too is like, you know, then I had a bunch of people said, oh you're you know, you're you're hitting at a conspiracy if there's something you know you know this is more of a plane. No, no, that's what everyone

else is saying. I'm just noting that this is happening, right? Yeah, your document, your mind. Your mind is already your mind. Is already jumping there. You didn't put any opinions in those threat in that thread. It was literally just the amount of times that have Yuri bookkeeping. Yeah. You weren't like sterilizing or any. Yeah, you weren't like, and this is what happened. That's where a lot of people get in trouble. Is I remember there was like a Doctor.

Naomi wolf was like this in covid, like she was talking about covid being transmitted through like fecal stuff as far as like through the vaccine. So and she was doing that as far as just documenting vaccine injuries and she got in trouble for that take you, you didn't give them any bait. I mean granted, they'll still be Be mad at you because you're just reporting. I mean they liberalism every day

is just denying reality. I mean I had some add some blue check journalist reach out for comment with the last name of Rothschild and I was like well oh was that? Well I was going to Elon Musk. It's the same. You don't have to say but I don't remember actually because I don't keep track of them all. Yeah they breed those blood and I don't know I don't mean if he was even if he was even related to the banking Later from his just Stolen Valor, you know.

But at some point that was what I had this moment where I was thinking. I was like, well, you know, obviously the Rothschilds don't run the world because their family has been reduced to begging for quotes in my GM or question. He was like, kind of coming out. He's like a Q&A on Research or whatever else. I don't know. Oh God. There's there's two very easy. Yeah.

Yeah. Explanations for this one is that workers have really, just stopped caring about their jobs in the past two years, a hundred percent at fault for a while. You know, I'm not throwing off on workers. I'm just saying that, you know, people Soldier to want did their jobs and, you know, around late last year really started to burn

out in a big way. And yeah I keep in touch with a lot of a lot of guys who you know, Work in the real economy, not just email Joss but people who work in logistics, purchasing manufacturing all the something and they're saying that yeah, we're seeing accidents going through the roof because people just aren't there, tuned out, they don't care. All right, people been understaffed, they're not getting raises that are keeping up with inflation. Also been working this home.

Yeah it's really I go back to work and maybe they It's like yeah it's like the last third of Atlas Shrugged. It's what happens when insane bureaucracy and Central planning continue and erode. A culture to the point where yeah, no one really takes takes production seriously or their job, seriously, or any of this and stuff. Just starts falling apart. That's one that's one.

Angle. The other angle is that, you can say, okay, well, we're living in the Book of Revelations and These all of these things are happening. And yeah, you couldn't have a human conspiracy that explains it, but you could just say that there's a supernatural Force, that's combining to create a disaster, you know, whether Olmec corn, demons do die. That's why you'll never be used.

Yeah, you know, it's like there's this there's some even if you're not a Christian you could say that, you know, nature is reasserting herself or what. Exactly these people always think nature is putting a guillotine. Over our head at all points, like the lives. It's like the, you know, something's happening like, you know, you you're wrong. But you have you, you know, you

have lives are always panicking. And they always think the world's ending regardless, because all of these factors are coming along in the food system, food, some production system, right? So yeah, you then have the fertilizer issues, you know, with the farms. You have diesel shortages that are looming, so we may not even be able to run the Harvesters to cut. Yeah, right. Whatever it does get planted.

And then you also have this freak wet spring, you know, I looked the other day and I think, you know, Minnesota is only planted like 11% of their normal wheat plant, you know, acreage under production because they just, they can't get out in the field to plant. Like I haven't been able to get most of my garden planted because it just won't stop raining over here. So never rains in my state. So I feel like no, One I can when I hear other people getting rain. I'm like what?

And that's that's the other thing to those like the West is in this crazy drought and you know, like Lake Mead is almost bone dry. And you know like the you see like knots just out in the middle of what looks like the desert. Yeah it's brutal. What the waters receded so much and it's like, oh okay, we're we're in this weird Confluence of like everything that can go wrong is kind of going wrong and the formulas.

Are you even talking about the for the whole for Yang, which you can come at that from any angle, it's still bad, you know? Like it's, yeah, it's insane. You know? That's, and it's hard to even get your arms around all of this stuff because there's so much going on. Yeah. And it's pretty but I don't know about you guys but for like food was always my first red pill,

you know. I was like reading like Mercola shit when I was like 12 or 13 for some reason, you know and And that set me on the path and and you always hear and then you see the documentaries and you hear all the talk like you know the food system is going to collapse its industrial walking. You think my kids watching the corn and he's reading dr. Mercola, yeah, exactly. What? What? Yeah, give me like that. Yeah. It's like, you gotta you gotta

be the infrared sauna. Add first, you know, nobody, but you always hear it. But then in the back of your mind, you're like, well, you know, isn't collapsing like things. Start Trucking along fine but then you know, it's like watching a slow. In train wreck, no pun intended. You know where it's a. It's like it's happening. You know? It's pretty fucking wild and and it's taken a different. Of course, it always takes a different flavor than you, think

it will. We are in terms of predictive power or whatever, but yeah, it's going to be wacky like a decade. Yeah. I had a, I had a local. So I went last week before my local. Not last week.

Last year, last summer time. Last summer sometime before my local government and, you know, they're having like their public comment section and all and you know, I just I was telling these people like you guys have got to do something to get agriculture going again in this County because we have too many people throughout the pandemic who just bought up a lot of land. So they can just live outside of the city but it's not being used. So do some kind of property tax

incentive. Something like that because you know, we had food shortages early in covid. We could see this come back very easily and when we have those food shortages the was the one place I could actually get food from was local farmers. Yeah you know at my local grocery store which is in a very nice area it's just a bunch of suburban moms that go there from you know, People who have money, right? Not the place. You expect this to happen. My meat cutter.

Got physically assaulted by at least three women, because there was no meat and they just started just tripping out. Yeah. And just, like, getting up in the guys, like one woman slapped him in the face. Just hauled off and slap and you know, because I didn't have any meat there. Yeah, because she's gonna hit her with a straight-up side of the Hill. Well, yeah, that's all my neighborhood was a cop.

Didn't? I was like you guys have got to find out from the grocery stores like when they're going to get the food shipments and and you need to have officers there. It's like this case chained to his fucking hand because there's so much money in there but yeah so yeah I mean you know not to not to be such a Doomer to everybody robot everybody.

Like it's fun. Is everybody thinks something is fucked up right now regardless regardless of you know because there's there's really no contingent of the world. That's like this is fine. You know, everybody say like this is cooled. Everything's everything's cool. And but we're so far off on what we think is what we think is, right? Or are you know what we think is going wrong with the world? Like some people just think it's

impending fascism coming. Yeah. Well as the as the war clouds were looming and it also all kicked off in Ukraine, right? I was Eating I had a bunch of, you know, vet vet, Twitter, Bros, you know, sort of lashing out at me because I said that this this whole situation was going to lead to Major food crisis. It's like you're just being an alarmist and you know blah blah blah blah. I was like no. No, I'm not. I'm not even pregnant to getting here. I'm like it's very obvious.

If you understand that Ukraine is the Bread Basket of Europe, that not only do they produce most of Europe's, a lot of Europe's Dude, Ryan their wheat and some more on this kind of thing. They also produce the feed that Western Europe feeds his livestock with you, understand that. And if you understand that Russia and Belarus are some of the very top fertilizer producers and then wash is one of the major food producers if

he needs. Most of the Middle East and North Africa. In terms of wheat, if you understand all those things you know it's not you know it's not be It's not even making a prediction to say that a war here is going to result in serious food issues. That's not a prediction that's just the simple facts. Like it's, it would be a miracle for that, not to happen already

happy with gas. How can you people not look at the gas prices and be like that won't happen to food and so then it starts to play out and it's like okay this past week The Economist had this cover image and it was like you know, wheat blowing in the wind but in Said of like bits of grain.

It was skulls that were attached to the stalk and it's talking about how yeah we're headed for, you know, a serious famine and Mike. I've never said that, you know, we're going to be like starving to death in the United States. What's going to happen in my view is that food will just get even more expensive here. And the actual starvation will start taking place in the third world which will then sparked the mother of all migrant crisis. Right. Like what happens when Africa

goes hungry? Yeah, Middle East goes hungry like it's going to be like what we saw with the Syrian Civil War but it's going to be that times 10 times 100 and you know we're going to be dealing with a massive Refugee situation, massive humanitarian situation, you know which will then itself be would be a major disruptive event. So you know all of it all this stuff's coming. Down. And It's it's interesting to see. Yeah, yeah, interesting, yeah.

I you know, I'm I defer to you on stuff like that. I'm I just advise people, you know, bulk right, eat a pint of Haagen-Dazs every night. Don't worry about cutting right now just you know. Oh yeah. You know, if you're in the dating Market, you need to be finding girls who look like Lana, right? Right. You know, you just I mean no matter the economy, but yeah, yeah, yeah.

Yeah, in my opinion I was going to say it's funny because we all know like those you know I'm not against prepping in the least. I think that's huge, you know, Boon for any family or individual whatever. But we all know that guy that has like their personality type. You know it's prepping. Sure and and then everyone rolls their eyes, you know, so it sucks when that guy is right, you know, and it's like the annoying ass like You know what I mean?

But it's like, but it's right. That's something. I something I learned about those guys was talk to this lady. In Brazil who was telling me about how her dad was, this type of guy, but with money, he did not believe, he had no confidence in the Brazilian banking system or the currency. Yeah. And so he would take all this money and put it into American dollars and He stuffed the couch cushions and their living room with it and just had just dollars stashed all over the

place and everybody in town. Thought he was an eccentric, crazy whatever. And then 1994 came and Fernando Kaalia. De Melo was the president instituted this radical plan to get inflation under control, which was to freeze everybody's bank accounts above like 600 reaiize so much Above like $200, right? So that morning when it can, you know, the shock hit everybody? Like the banks were closed, like, no one could get their money out any of this. And people had no idea like, how

are we going to buy groceries? Are we going to do any of this? You can't came into the living room and sliced open. One of the couch cushions and just started throwing me a hundred-dollar bills in the air and laughing is like, who's The crazy one. Now that's fucking awesome because just, you know, this guy just like he was just get a bullied basically, by, by people in. Do, you know, people just like constantly picking at them or yeah dawg. You like it was crazy.

And yeah, that's there's a It is like it is a thing if you're if you're that type and people around you are like that it does make you a little, you know, resentful and so yeah. As bad as the events are the Vindication of it from, it is sweet. So pretty sweet. Yeah. Absolutely. My grandfather was a prepper in the other way, for Y2K, which he bought a bunch of like songs and dinners and neutrophils shakes, but just because he was kind of a fat ass and drink and drink.

A mall before. Why do gay things like respect pepper, not irrational. It's really yeah, it's really interesting. The different types types of Preppers because you have like the Y2K type structure like you know, kind of the techies. And yeah, all that and then growing up you had. I remember, they were the evangelic also. It's like, are you keep a seven-year, a revelation on Hammer Anvil?

Yeah, yeah, the tribulation, which was, I don't know if it's Still the case but I know it was pretty big in the among the LDS. Sure the Mormons to do canning and stuff like our local Mormon church had a like canning kitchen, that was like fully set up for all of us and and they would like people from outside the church, use it. So that's tie their give classes on how to really let me play basketball there. Sure. So, you can stuff that's pretty.

That means it's serious. They really haven't. It's my, my own family tradition, in this came, you know, because I grew up, and it was just a way of life. Like we had a big Garden. Do you know, my mom canned a lot of food and, of course, you know, we helped because takes a huge amount of prep work. You're doing this massive batches, all this stuff that came from.

My from her mom, her mom's experience, and the Great Depression. And when they were like, nearly starving to death, and my mom's Aunt, Aunt Ruth. I remember whenever we go to visit, she had this pathological need to feed you while you were there, whether you were hungry or not rice. Sometimes like twice in one, visit to get a men and then would like give you cans of food. As you left and right.

Yeah. And I didn't know, I didn't know this since, you know, as a kid I just was like it's just kind of strange you know mines have like a mess. It reminds of the women from My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Yeah. So it's like, why is this and I remember at her funeral hearing about why she was like that. It was because when she was a little girl, living through the Great Depression and Appalachia, they saw people who were actually Starving to death, right?

New of people who actually died of starvation, which, you know, it seems as Americans. It's all, we feel so insulated from all of this. But yeah, it's just a few Generations away and that was a fact of life and literally going to die. We go on diets. We're like, I need to stop young. Yeah, so yeah. So this ended up this ended up just like showing up in my becomes like a kind of part of your family too. Addition.

And right and that my mom's generation and then like my sister today is still like the same way. Yeah. And this all just stems from a shoots a generational. Trauma, the Great Depression. Yeah. Yeah, you know, you forget what was behind it but the the Habit still remain but the great side effect of all that is, you know, you have a, you know, to this day I have a canning room you know a dedicated Room in my

house. That's just filled with food as a chest, freezer and camping supplies and all that. And it's I'm jealous on eBay. Yeah, deep freezer. And yeah, well, I was going to say there's a whole orthogonal. There's now there's a whole dimension where everyone's on the apps on the phones. I'm going to fucking Rogue solar flare could take down the grid for like six months, you know. And that it had instantly do it, right? Yeah. Yeah. Where you going to say? No.

I was actually going to get to our get to the meat of our discussion here. What about the Dr. Suzanne Humphries is there anybody any closing remarks and legs? I was a fantastic talking about Revenue. We're basically doing Revelations. Yeah, yeah. Well, do a comment on on monkeypox mind, just probably worth mentioning that it was first discovered in 1958 in monkeys that were being used for

polio vaccine research, right? And the first human case was recorded in 1970 in the Congo. Go during a period when they were trying to eliminate smallpox through Mass vaccination campaigns. And I think also going team here and it's going to become a theme here later in the episode guys. Yeah, yeah, it's insane. Dude. It's like science is like gasoline. Dude. Like and I'm like and now it's like those put this fire out of gasoline.

Yeah. And now I'm seeing some cases where women and children are also getting it. So I'm starting to wonder about the transmission. Because there's the classic Trope of the Hershey Highway and you know I don't I don't you know but if there could still be a that could still be the highway still used to try but I mean the the the Rope is gravel does Robert Frost poem. Yeah, that's what that was about.

But anyways, the yeah the the yeah, women and children getting it but again, do we know is there really like is anybody Truly know how its transmitted because that's how I'm wondering, like, does anybody know? I know that even before all all of this, there was, you know, the precautions, the hospitals were supposed to take basically treated this as an airborne disease interest, you know, there's only, I think like four hospitals in the UK.

There are even supposedly qualified to treat monkeypox patients. So it's, you know, it's weird because we're We're getting these contradictory sets of guidances from the World Health Organization and the cdc's that's, you know, telling basically the civilians, like, it's really difficult to transmits.

Probably sexually transmitted and, you know, remain calm, this had the other and at the same time, they're telling hospitals, like you can't keep these people in any room that's connected via air exchange to Another patient's room because like they could get that, right? So it's the disconnect there and remember, infamously the CDC, and World Health Organization took like forever to acknowledge that covid-19 Airborne.

So that's the other thing is like, I'm not taking anything that these people are saying, at face value. You know, after all we've been through. Yeah, you can't. So yeah, I'd say, You know, we don't know exactly. We don't know if the early outbreaks like if this is just a social chain you know, and this is why you had, you know, nearly the first outbreaks, it was just nearly all gay men who are getting it and it's like it

okay. Is that a function of them being at a party and then going to a gay bar and then going to another gay bar or, you know, it's just like the social networks or Or is this like, you know, AIDS all over again?

Like we just, you know, there's no way to tell this early and and so now if you're seeing it and you know, starting to see like women and children getting it, if that continues at any, you know, I think great degree and that would suggest that, you know, there's something Beyond, just sexual transmission. Like, it could be some sort of routine household contact.

Or Worse? Yeah, no, I think that if you wanted, you want to be able to even, you know, all of us have were in one way or another somewhat early on covid and stuff. And we thought we had it right away. But it's like right now, like you said we're in February of 2020 and nobody had it figured out, very or 2020 and, and it's and it's something to watch. I just know that the fear model works. The fair model works and that that can be deployed again.

So even if even, if monkey pox is nothing right, even if it's absolutely nothing, even if I don't have a chance of getting it, any of that kind of stuff, I do have a chance to suffer from the response. And now we're what's, that's

what's scary, right? Yeah, I still fear this virus, which is where we'll get to with the Suzanne Humphries here in a second dissolving Illusions, is that I will fear the response more than the virus most times, you know, That's that's, that's, that's what it is. So any, who might as well get right to or so dissolving. Illusions by Suzanne Humphries, if you've been listening to this program for quite a while, we've basically been championing this book. It's basically RC scripture and dr.

Suzanne Humphries now I don't know much about her as a person. There's people that know a lot more about her than I do. But what I like to do when I introduce somebody to somebody or You know, a figure that people I not know a controversial figure because she's definitely that I like to read the negative review as an introduction because makes her sound better. And this is from Medica life. Meed I Ka life.com, dr. Suzanne Humphries on.

Medic has quack scale. So the the sub caption here is dr. Suzanne humph Rings, ranks 5 out of 5. Five on the medical X scale. So she, she checked all the boxes. Now, this is just their description of dr. Suzanne Humphries dr. Suzanne Humphries scores. A five out of five. On our quack skin, she represents a high risk to the general public and we encourage members of the public to seek alternate medical or health

advice. Do not follow recommendations from this individual relating, to your personal health, or the health of others and be wary of any products sold, or recommended by this quack, If you're not sure about how the quack scale works, click here for a detailed record, okay? So anywho they do decide to give out her her credentials, right? She's from the Lewis Katz school of medicine. That's basically Temple University and go owls and she she's licensed to practice in the state of Maine.

Still, her license is valid. So cancel culture suck my dick and She's a resident of Banger, Maine, which is very funny that she lives were Stephen King lives. And yeah. So she wrote a book. She wrote a book called dissolving. Illusions is from 2013. And before we get into the meat

of the book. So you have a you're the one that put me onto this book so this is like the this is like a circular type thing been going to feedback his thing to you it's you see on Rumble. It's almost connected in that way. Human Centipede style not to get too graphic, but nonetheless, been, I was surprised because I had deferred to you and Ben and I are in a group chat, I think him. And I are the ones who have maybe the most wacky Health takes.

I think that's fair to say out of this stuff. It's You know, I think people might roll their eyes a little bit, some of the stuff we say that's fine. Haters, Gonna Hate, and I remember talking about this book dissolving Illusions. I remember, been kind of just be like interesting to a my head. I'm like, whoa, you haven't read it and he's like, I'll read it. I said, we'll come on the show right after you after you're done. And so Ben, I want to know because your you didn't come in

here. Completely clueless on vaccines, right? I mean, you didn't, you didn't come in, Knowing nothing right to this book into the show or into the book, know, the Bunny the book. So you're getting the, but you you knew you had some kind of my brother had. Had a really severe reaction to the DTaP vaccine back before the reformulated. It that's whooping. Cough, no area there. Isis. That was the same as whooping

cough, vaccine makers. Now, don't have any liability because there were so many injuries and so many claims that the vaccine makers were like, oh look, we're going to get hosed in court unless you guys just make it impossible for us to be sued. So yeah, that's when you know car Instead all the stuff in the eighties to you know, protect them from protective vaccine manufacturers, from immunity from Bright, gave them immunity, sorry, which is absolutely

insane. Like, you know, you cannot overstate how insane can't mandate anything without that. Yeah. Truly it's not profitable to mandate it. Once you figure out what's actually happening when these things get deployed, you can't make the The money off of it. Yeah. Because it allows them to trim fat in the clinical trials.

It allows them to roll it out in, you know, certain countries that and and you know, inoculate populations that don't necessarily know that that's happening and and they're able to do all these things and still please the investors because of the lack of liability. I mean it's a Mario star. It's getting the star in Mario Kart is what they have right now and it doesn't go away. Yeah, man. Imagine if we gave this to auto manufacturers, right?

So if your Ford Fiesta catches on fire, you're not allowed to support, literally any like every commercial, right? Every commercial during, if you stay at home, sick during the day, here's how you can get money for this. You know, I mean for if you've been affected by this, if you've been affected by this mesothelioma all this kind of stuff, vaccine injury, sorry, you know, like are we even sure that happened? You sure that happened, you know? Like that's how that goes and

now. So so okay, so Ben has As at least has a baseline level, you know, I don't know. I want to see skepticism going into this, but you at least knew that these things weren't infallible. These weren't The Avengers right? These were these things do have flaws in PSI. I had a I had a lot of skepticism particularly just that the flu vaccine you know, because everyone I knew who was getting the flu vaccine was getting the flu and yeah many

such cases. And I actually because I had the flu pretty bad a couple of times as a kid. You know that at when I was in college they were like giving away a 20 dollar gift cards to Chipotle you got a flu shot. So I get the flu shot and then two weeks later I come down with like the worst flu of my life and it's like, okay well this stuff is garbage. So you know, yeah.

My assumption going into this one as well, efficacy on some of these vaccinations is really nothing and there, you know, as a chance, like, in the case of DTaP, that you could have a reaction to it, if you give a bunch of these two children, I could see how, you know, they could end up with autism, whatever. But, you know, I'm still like I was taking the moderate view of like, okay, well, you know, space, Out the childhood vaccines right. You have a lot of unnecessary ones.

We should make our vaccines more like the traditional ones like smallpox because those you know eradicated she's this is before you read the book, you're thinking little Carly. Yeah. Right. Right. Because that's yeah, that's what you hear. Constantly write like this. One smallpox is the one. It's the Babe, Ruth. It's the fucking one. Like, hey, not me. Maybe I'll concede a couple of injuries happen, but don't You

come at my smallpox? You know I mean like that's that's where it is. Yeah. And then polios like, Willie Mays. Yeah. It's like that. Yeah. Polio is definitely the one recently because the Boomers lived through that. Yeah, some of them now Polio. I was woke Lon. I wasn't broke on that one because I read the moth and the iron lung by force Moretti only two hours from ready. That's a name. I haven't heard in a while day. Yeah yeah, yeah. He laid out the case like this

is like, Metal poisoning. Yeah. And this was first known as that the teething disease because you only saw it and teething babies and that was because they were rubbing Mercury on their gums, you nose and the teething valders, you know, and then like the pesticides and islands like okay. Well this this really makes a lot of sense. Yeah. And for the record. So there's a couple things about polio. This is in the book, it's not now obviously later in the book she goes kind of chronological.

only here, dissolving Illusions, but like polio I feel confident saying a lot of that stuff is DDT poisoning, right. A lot of people DDT is the exact aside. Now, there was like this insect fear especially in like the 40s and 50s. I want to say, you know, you have FDR's, the polio guy, you know, all these, all these things you have no not have actually been polio really, are you that never Gillian bar, From the vaccine. Oh no, I don't know. But yeah, who knows?

Yeah, that's that's crazy. Yeah. What the disease was with the stroke of a pen, you know, it's like they they talk about this in dissolving Illusions, right? I'm skipping ahead here, but just because polio came up, they spray fucking these bugs with DDT, and it's literally all the symptoms of polio happen. Yeah. Well, I know. Bring them out the beach. They're spraying them at the polls. They spray The Cribs with it. They were even spring it on sandwiches in the school, lunch box.

So, like flies wouldn't land on the sandwiches? It's spoken. Great incredible. Yeah, you would see it on the shelf and then like, in countries like India. They would like their, yeah. You'd see it. Like, like people would spray their food before they would eat it. Like it was insane these for these places that have these, you know, that have these like all the bugs, it's scary and like how the whole thing about the vaccines is bright.

It is Is the whole thesis of dissolving Illusions is that we give too much credit to these vaccines. We ignore all their flaws and we ignore the fact that this country has progressed infrastructure Ali. Really tens fold in like a little bit of in a little bit of time and that seems to get no attention, right? And all this, it does get attention.

But in an indirect way, it's almost like working, it's the robin to the vector, the Batman vaccine type thing, you know, it's, that's the thesis of this, right? But we were doing so many medical errors, right in the past without, with all with all this stuff and it's it's scary man. Like it's really scary when you think about it because like you, you know, Getting a velvet, you know? In the present. I mean, this is carried over into you. Look at our current vaccination campaign, right?

And it's we still haven't worked out how to make, you know, safe and effective vaccines. And we still, you know, we still want to emphasize vaccines over, you know the basic things that made all of these old diseases go away which was not drinking literal sewage. Yeah. And now we're back to using sewage on the crops. Like I mean that's how I got into the deer herd, right? We're just spraying, Municipal, sewage all of our Fields. This is have, you know, I have to, I have to show, I have to

show this. The, this is just, this is kids getting sprayed. It looks like they're in a pool with DDT, and this is from that Frogger that fucking fogger. Yeah, I know. It's fucking raved. You know, another thing that really cause polio to be as bad as it. Was though, is the treatments for it, right? Where they would forcibly straighten out the kids limbs, so did another disease.

I know it's like put him in a cast, leave the cast of 14 months and, you know, the muscles just totally atrophy. Yeah. And then writes like, yeah, they need braces after this, and it talks about and dissolving illusion. So there was this lady in Australia who thing ended up being like the founder of physical therapy. And she just used techniques like, you know, massage and strengthening the muscles.

Like, what we would recognize today is pretty standard, physical therapy, and your conventional doctors weren't doing this because they were afraid that like, if you, you know, massaged or, you know, hardly even touched these muscles that they would just, I don't know if shatter or vanish into the atmosphere or something like that. So that was that was one part of this. It was really crazy. Is like, yeah, I didn't know what the treatments were at the time.

You read through, this sounds like this sounds like a lobotomy kind of thinking you know. Right know and to sort of scale back to the beginning of the book. Now you have you have a doctor and I'm forgetting his name right now. There's the doctor who writes the intro of dissolving allergic. Oh, Roman histrionic, I think is his name. Yeah, this Janek and he's talking about he all these people Suzanne Humphries the other dr. Roman mr. Granick who These Guys.

These are not Skeptics by Design. These are not just lifelong Skeptics of these industries. There's always a moment that brings them to this and he I believe was saying his kids got vaccinated without consent for certain things like at school and that freaked him out. So he started looking into things and these were things that All public record, these things I've of injuries that he had not heard about in all these years of medical school

injuries. He didn't know about, you know, he didn't know what to attribute to infrastructure things. And these guys are getting and these kids, I don't believe his son, his kids had any reactions to it. Now. They did, they did his ex-wife got him, got them vaccinated with dtp Mr. And polio shots, almost without his consent. and then I think later had later had Later collapsed, right? And was having seizures.

Yeah, so yeah. I mean, this is a big problem to. I mean, I've seen cases personally, with the covid shots where Ex-Wives or ex-husbands, yeah, have used this as a form of emotional terrorism or some kind of Leverage. Oh yeah, you know, like my brother's X actually tried this on him with their six-year-old. And you know, she basically wanted him to agree to like a renegotiation of all the custody and financial stuff in exchange.

For not getting the daughter vaccinated, as you said, like a total, blackmail situation and I ended up I ended up having to intervene and get a lawyer friend too scared to death of this woman. But yeah, now yeah, this is going on all over the place. And, you know, Gotten messages for people, right? And one, one guy has his dad was vaccinated against his consent in like a pre-surgery.

Oh, yeah, that area. Yeah, they just come in and, like, nurse came and stuck a needle in his arm, and that's what Suzanne Humphries Fang. Was she was a nephrologist in the hospital, you know. And she was like, yeah, they were vaccinating her patients against her will and then they were doing it to like old people. They had the flu and they're like well let's give him a douche. Shot. You know nothing? Yeah. Like it's like a medicine or something, you know?

Yeah. And it's like you have that shred of just like skepticism that it. What's scary is that so many doctors, there's a lot of there's always this narrative that certain doctors oh man, they just can't speak up no some of them are also just like insanely bought in. Yeah you know to this stuff and like by a makes it a lot easier when you have to psyop less

people man. Like I mean you saw at the side worked a bit continually having to hey shut your mouth or else will fire, you you that's not fun to do the At work like that. But you have these these soldiers, he's foot soldiers. Like these doctors and they've been going on in history, but like, for the longest time because the way she starts. She taught it Suzanne Humphreys. In this book, talks about like so many different viruses and they all look begin like covid.

It's scary. You know what I mean? Like, I know I'm not in my lab made, I mean, these are more natural just bacterial. Viruses. So now the common, it's so tough to attack this books. You don't know where to start but the the common thing from I don't even want to say, A lives because even anti-vaxxers been like, a live. Theirs lives that are like anti-vaxxer pre covid, like a kind of flipped a little bit

with that. It became a political thing but like, there were, you know, Robert F Kennedy's live like, I mean, like there's these Pete. There's people in the it kind of was like a weird, hippie live mom thing for a little bit like for a while. I mean that was, it's also other people but that that exists, there's still some of that. Yeah, that the at the March I was at in, d.c. back in, January, it was like the weirdest Coalition chart.

Weakly. I had ever seen because you have this combination of like Maga people, you know, more upmarket right-wing libertarian types and then you have like Buddhist hippies like the smell of marijuana hung very strongly in the air, you know, like It was, it was like burning man, met a Donald Trump rally sick. Yeah. It's except you need vaccine to go to Burning Man. Now so it's not. So so, so anywho what I mean,

was what I'm saying? These doctors, they play such a big part in it because for the longest time, you have these diseases. So first off the lips, think that that these these these diseases or just ravaging people because they were there they're just - Raticate humans, they're just there. These viruses have always been here. They've been there and we just developed a way to survive in the world.

That's that's the way these people look at this stuff that people the vax Enthusiast. Suzanne. Humphries always says, in the book of Acts enthusiasts say this and she argues that it's all infrastructural, almost all these things are bacteria. Based are our infection based like say I mean, she goes in really the whole first, you know, No couple parts of the book is just about how disgusting the world was. It's not even about disease.

I mean, they'll bring up diseases that would come from it, but it was mostly about how basically you had to try to essentially not get dysentery to survive. Like, even in any war in Wars the Spanish-American War, it was like a two-to-one dysentery to like, combat death ratio and, and stuff like that. Also the Civil War and the civil war Civil War was crazy to think about because I was seven

hundred thousand deaths. 200 or two-thirds of those were disease and they knew it. They knew what the generals would say like if your you need they would like promote gut health. I mean I you know, maybe they wouldn't go about it the best way, but like they would promote, you know, good soldier has a good gut and that's what we need. It's like, literally about not dying. It's like, it's like not getting

Tommy John surgery in baseball. It's like, yeah, I know you're good pictures, don't get, you know, fuck up your arm, you know, and that's essentially how this was with with soldiers, back then, and then you'd have childbirth, right? Which is why the liberal pockets in the lips of accent. Susie's would always say, you know, life expectancy back then is insane. You want to go back to that how

bad it was. We couldn't deliver children at all, and, like people argue there still issues with that. Now, it was 15 20 x as bad back. Then, if not more, the fact that doctors didn't even figure out, they had to wash their hands to deliver a child like and they made the one guy that suggested it and do like a fucking psycho, you know, like Liam Yep, exactly. Absolutely. Yeah, yeah, guys, like one thing.

One thing that is interesting. I was like the the rate of pregnancies that end in live births has basically been unchanged since the 1700s because we had our dramatic improvements and infant mortality, but then we introduced abortion to the mix and that's like totally cancel them. Whoa, dad. Wow. That's almost like some like some Universal balance shit or something.

Like we can't get that number. Either way, we're going to throw a curveball at. Yeah, we couldn't figure out how to deliver like mother died in childbirth. Like, it was nothing. Right? And then the kid, wouldn't survive have the time to and if it was by a doctor, if it wasn't intended to survive from midwives, because midwives were not examining, Bodies before

they went in to deliver a child. Now is one of the big factors that contamination is like these, these doctors were doing, we're like cutting open dead bodies and doing autopsies and then without washing their hands going in to deliver babies. Yeah. And of course, the introduction of men to this process. That was where we got the whole thing of women laying on their back to deliver babies, which is really weird because, like, no, A mammal.

Does that right? Like that, the more natural position is for a woman to be on our hands and knees? I agree. Now seems that now, seems like an odd way to deliver a child but just ask and I can't, she had, you know, about her story. Thanks. Yeah. She had a, she had an accidental home birth, fuck it. Yeah. Those fucking I mean, queen, I mean I that's that's that's sick. And and so the the Around this time to this and we're talking about like 1700s 1800s.

You're seeing industrialization happening. And industrialization is at its most exploitive of workers, right? It's it's awful. You have the average person working 12 hours a day. You know, they say women weren't allowed in the workplace back then not if you were poor you were you were working. If you were in one of these major cities you were you were working. They had children as young as three and four working Separating coal, right?

Finding picking pieces of coal out and stuff like that which I'm sure is even just for like lung shit is just bad and all these terrible things and tenement style housing and I don't even mean like bug pots. I'm talking Flats where abandoned Brewery, how things that were just people were leave it, you know. Look like it like a sick Ward you know I mean like where they like the ones in covid they had like makeshift you know and stuff to put on that.

You it looks like that and you have these people. Just living terribly. So you see these things, they're emptying bonding bodies and the basement. That was one part of this that really burying dead bodies in the basement, but throwing dead bodies in the only water supply. Like they would just throw them over, like, animal carcasses. Hey, we're done with this animal. Throwing it into the water supply.

I mean, you were talking about comically bad errors to the to these people that were constantly dying of bacterial infections, right? Which again to the vacs Enthusiast says no, these have these are always here. Here. This is the you know you can attribute this to, you know, they have no problem attributing, the black plague two racks to rats, right? But even you know, a later virus. They can't attribute that to like dead bodies floating in

your water supply. Horrible working conditions, all these things that like if you ask them, one on one. Do you do you think that's cool to do? They'll be like no, absolutely not, that's terrible. You're going to kill people, then they'll be like well that's how everybody died. No yeah well you know you let it to it earlier they do the package deal where they're like Yeah, we had vaccines better sanitation and nutrition, and it's like why are those equally equally weighted?

Are they, you know, they're obviously not, you know, not of course the vaccines take all the fucking Valor right? And and in there under the fault, you know. So let's stick with infrastructure right now, before we jump into the next one like infrastructure. I know it's the it's the main thing. You can't Suzanne Humphries lays that out beautifully. Again, there's so much more detailed even than what we're talking about. I mean, you're talking about.

It's just fact, after fact, after fact, Act. She's getting direct quotes from you know, not direct quotes, excuse me, but researching and finding quotes from doctors back then workers back then Memoirs, all these things of people working in these like insane candle factories and stuff, just just like just inhaling all types of toxic shit and and not really living for very long. And you know, these I think it's typhoid fever is one of the first big diseases in this book.

That's that's Chin. And a lot of this stuff is just bacterial infection, like a lot of the meat even rich. People were having this stuff happen to them. It was it was a class this thing but not really because rich people didn't even know how to preserve meat yet. Like they weren't doing it properly. They were just leaving fish out like, and then just picking at it a couple days later. There's just, yeah. That was tough formaldehyde in the milk.

Yeah. So your pure just like, poisoning your baby's calming as embalming your guests already, ya know. Yeah, yeah. Milk milk is not pasteurized exactly the I believe in formaldehyde was for pasteurization, which is insane. You know? Like it's just it's it's insane. Like all these, all these things happen. And, you know, it was also while it was also to hide the flavor of it spoiling right? So like, I mean, that's right, you didn't you didn't have cold chain Transportation, like you

didn't have like spring houses. I mean, this was a problem of urbanization in the wake of the Revolution in a, in a large sense because you had cities with way more workers than they would have had and pre-industrial times. And yeah, I mean, it's it took us a while to adjust to living this way. And I think that part of that, just how bad these diseases were that tells you something about, you know, how crazy and what degree industrialization change

the world. Like it was just you know and saying that there's just immediately people are just dying left and right and you know the middle Act into the cities and all this sort of thing. So it, you know, it took us a century or so to figure it out. How to do this, you think about the massive change to how we've ever, you know, how we've conducted society and it's like a even then it's like as sad as it is you.

You understand why it happens. It's like if you were there back then you wouldn't have known but like you know the big thing is just introducing like soap and water.

The fucking to like the medical field is all these things because like you were really gambling getting a medical procedure done by Back then, for one you were, you know, you had some money, you know, you, or you had access to a doctor, like a real, like a, like a doctor, but for a lot of, a lot of people back then you were really gambling because again, you just, you had brought you, the doctors would be touching

examining dead bodies. Like you said, midwives and or like, I think it was and then other stuff like the doctors would be examining dead bodies and then go perform a fucking inoculation and you know some of the early inoculations like smallpox was basically like Rubbing shit into an open Legion. You know what I mean? Like it was her just like just grow. So they would, they would pick off the scabs.

Put them in a big jar of water and shake them around and I was like a bunch of scabs and so like people were getting syphilis from the inoculations, right? Because it's it's kind of like what the monkey virus has contaminating, the polio vaccine. It's like, when you're picking off these scabs and throwing them in the jar, it's not just smallpox of this person might have. Yeah, so it's such, you're

kidding. The psalm of, it's like, let me just before I do this blood transfusion, let me just go out and collect blood from 80 members of the community. Mix it all together in a jar in this like, randomly. Give myself infusion from that. That's right. Price is Right game. Yeah, it's like, yeah, it's been the wheel and or three and know the the and it's all these. Again, I can't. I can't stress enough how much you just simply need to read or listen to this book it.

She is a fine audiobook. I'm not at, you know, everybody hates audio books, I understand it. But like this is just pure nonfiction and just facts on facts. So it's just like it's you can listen to it the way you listen to a podcast, it kind of makes sense. So I don't I don't blame anybody for doing that. It's how I've done it. And I also have a copy for reference and stuff too, so I run it on a plane next to a med student on a cross-country flight. That's right, I love it.

One point. And she, she asked the flight attendant to reseed her. Yeah. She's like she's like, hey, this guy's guy has polio right now, huh? Yeah, I know. He does. Yeah, exactly.

But yeah, it's wild. Like, you know, the whole concept of, you know, these vaccine and, you know, they talk about the ep the injuries and the early adverse event and the mandates is, what's really scary is they had smallpox because smallpox, like we said, is the smallpox is basically what all The foundation of all vaccines is smallpox. I think, in my opinion, Maybe I'm Wrong there, but I think for for this, you're right. You're right. Okay. So I, this is exactly where this

comes. We're all were all the championing of it. The reason that vaccines have so much fans is because of smallpox, but they've been told a different story because for one as we said it didn't work early, it didn't work at all many times and like many viruses smallpox. Ox always seems to be at its all-time low as far as cases and even deaths and then the

vaccines come in, right? And then there's a spike and then all of a sudden the the the case fatality rate doubles like that was what happened with smallpox as it is, it is it double, right? I think it was at 16 and went to 32% of a death rate at post-vaccination. Yeah. Like it's wild like this is all true. Like, is all true. Then it's like, we're old. We rolled out the vaccines on everybody in the states and then suddenly we get hit with Delta and people are dropping left and right.

It's, yeah. And it'd be bad enough if these things didn't work as advertised like I kind of did nothing 16 percent but the fact that yeah, but the fact that they felt it made it worse and it happened in many diseases across many cases and it's medicine. It does not Grant perfect Community, which is worse than no immunity in many cases. And Definitely worse than not treat. Like, you know, treating with intravenous vitamin C or

whatever. Whatever your in do, you know, it's like that at all since the virus to mutate. So that, yeah, events are getting more reinfection. Yes. Well, I guess my audience. It's like, you get it. It's like an antibiotic that you'll get antibiotic-resistant, strains. I like how the med students accept that, but they some reason to go blank, when you bring up what you use, we you just brought up. You know, it's like accept the premise of all this shit but they just can't bridge that Gap.

You know, something you mentioned that but it was really, you know, reminded me of just how insane I felt while I was reading. It was the accounts of people who are punished for not taking the mandatory smallpox shots, Food Lion, the catcher's soldiers, being sent to jail like kids, you know. Like one father, I think it'll already lost one kid to the smallpox vaccine is no made him. Get the other one vaccinated. Yeah. You go to school but then not only Could you not take your

kids out of school? You would be find on top of that, for, when your kid was not in school and this is in the 1800's. This is before they have technology to really enforce that like the we do now, you know? Yeah, yeah. I was, I was just like there really is nothing new like know, everything that we've gone through in the past two years

you will find in this book. As already happened, you know, like the the mass demonstration and lyster right where you had Eighty thousand protesters come out in the streets against the compulsory vaccination law. And you know that the slogans they had, you know, like the three pillars of vaccination fraud force and Folly, right? Like that Echoes what we saw in the demonstrations this time, you know, with, with the anti-vaccine demonstrations, once again in England, some of

them in lyster the same. Very same thing. And, you know, these people showed up and they actually got it. They got the city taken out of the compulsory vaccination. Do they just stopped enforcing very vaccination, requirement. They put new leaders into place and they got instead of managing smallpox with vaccinations. They started with, you know, sanitation and basic quarantine measures and cleaning out. The houses and all this sort of thing. And for so long, everyone.

The rest of England was saying that like, there's going to be a huge plague and it's going to kill us, all right? Because none of these people, unless you're vaccinated, you know, any any of this. But then when smallpox outbreaks, like, did it, start happening again, like 1891 1894, why? Sure had less than a third of the cases of smallpox and less Than 1/4 of the deaths in proportion to population than Birmingham which had near-universal vaccination and was almost next door. Yep. Yeah.

How do you know? You just, you can they do and they've done it and they've stopped many people into thinking it but the the group part about this book is that for one I never want to talk somebody out of vaccinating, maybe their kid or something like that. Even for convenience sake alone, if that's what you're going to do. That's what you're going to do now. I will say this if I recommend this book Can you read it? I guarantee you. You want. What that I'd that's why that's

all I'm saying. I will never force you to, but all you have to do is read objective information and you probably won't It's just so, it's just so crazy. Exactly. Yeah. You if anyone reads it, yeah, like, like, you guys are saying it's all the same Playbook. That's what got me was the all the vaccinated towns and meat, and Canada fully vaccinated for measles having measles outbreaks, and then they would blame them on the unvaccinated. And you're just like, wait,

what? You know, and it's, yeah, it's absolutely essential. They say, it's like a military service, where you're only, as strong as your weakest link, the weakest link to them, is the unboxing. It's like having a Right. Tackle in football, it just ruins your whole pass protection, right? Yeah. You have all this out, you just like, well we can't do anything because that guy didn't do it.

And it's like, you know, even if they get and if they get 100% vaccination at that point you've already lost so doesn't even matter what happens after that. So you know I like at that point it's that's how they win. I'm at that point. They're not interested in eradicating disease. I mean it's like we didn't eradicate smallpox we didn't write find it funny this morning we did we didn't do with vaccinations, I guess. Yeah. More. So, the case.

Yeah, Bill Gates still has that. Yeah, hard part of his sleeve. Yeah, it's yeah. It's insane. And, and but, yeah, like that's, I mean, you know, open up the floor to a little bit more discussion on this because I only had one more thing I wanted to talk about with Ben, but like the, the just like I said, read this because it's not Suzanne Humphreys opinion and she writes like a leftist. That's what I was telling. A lot of people is like her.

Case that she makes for sanitation is actually what the left and went and I don't think this can happen with the Contemporary left. I'm not even saying trying to salvage the left here but I just mean in at the turn of the century in the 1900s, the left was fighting for sanitation. Yeah. Like it was for their, that was their biggest thing sanitation workers rights because what ended up happening is, you know, Suzanne hovers, likes to credit, you know, Susan B, Anthony and things like that.

And you know, do do all that stuff, you know, and maybe the what is it? The the Amendment that allowed women to vote and stuff like that and not necessarily debate. I want to get into the Progressive Movement and the reform tenancy which then burn itself out with Temperance.

Although if you do you think about Temperance and the, you know, the Volstead Act and on you know, the prohibition, if you think about it in the context of the level of alcoholism that they were dealing with it that point it didn't. It's become a lot more understandable. Right? Of course, that was there was why yet prohibition? I mean, it was because like domestic abuse essentially and it was insane. Like, it stores from that time. It's like, this is really surreal.

These, these people were wild, did we get too hot cocky? Men did we get too cocky, but any at the, you know, so yeah. Like, that's I'm sorry. Any any any closing thoughts on dissolving Illusions? Because I wanted to say that I just, I thought it funny during the Covid era. When the they started pushing the vaccine mandates which I did not think was going to happen as fast as it did or to the degree that it did all fully admit that like I knew they were going to work on evacs. Whatever.

And I knew that's scary. Yeah. But it was it was all that all the vaccine pushers and a lot of leftist everything were using the people would be like, well you never done this before. We never had a mandatory vaccinations like this. And then we go like not all. We did it for smallpox like On ironically is, it's not like, it's a known. Yeah. And like what it all rests on this is X. All rests on is the exact championing of the smallpox vaccine without that, plus the light.

The the lat, the two biggest components. And when we have Jeremy on next time, I really want to get into this. But like when we, the two biggest components of vaccine enthusiasm comes from the quote unquote success of the smallpox vaccination and then the liability the lack of liability. Those two things don't happen.

None of this shit these don't take off it's considered like a failing experiment like you know so any yeah anywho but yeah so then any closing thoughts on Illusions just said you should read it? It's yeah antastic book. It's so tough to it's like, you know what, very high quality autism is one of those rare books where I could pick it up and read it and a couple of settings. I just it was real page-turner. What do you guys think?

Okay I got to talk about let's talk about autism for a little bit and not necessarily ingest in relation to the vaccines because this is something. I've been thinking a lot about like although although yeah with the vaccine what do you, what do you think we'll turn that train around? What do you think about the whole, the whole thing though? Everything that's going on the Diagnostics, the trail of the train metaphor brother. Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Lee. It's, you know, that you know, people are everyone that Messiah up that it that it actually is increasing you know, that it's always been this way. We just didn't diagnose it all this different shit. And that could be of course the siop that injecting heavy metals in the infant's blood stream has nothing to do with it. All right. Yeah, getting rid of plastics. Stop burning rubber into the air and go way more Luddite than we are now. Yeah, and like, acutely heavy

metal detail. And and fuck the childhood vaccination program. Those are, those are the, I mean that is probably the biggest one but. But but yeah, those four things I do that and I guarantee you it drops off the fucking map. Yeah, yeah, exactly. You know what else? And and bansi Dolls. Let's go. Well, look at my avatar here. I'm dead. I'm now more. Yeah. I don't even want to get into because we've done that but like, I'm down because it doesn't really affect me that much at all.

So, like I'm down, I just want people to To know it's not the catch-all thing. So I kind of want them to ban them in isolation and I want to just literally do that experiment and see see if I'm wrong. My room. Right. You know that it's not all that you know, there's so much more to it but you know, I don't know. I think there's a lot. I think there's a lot of factors

involved. I just you know I'm hung up on the inflammatory response with with seed oils and my own experience of getting rid of type 2 diabetes and okay. Migraines largely from cutting those out. Like, I had tried the low-carb, keto fasting, all these different things before it wasn't until I made the connection with really focusing on very high quality animal fats and you know, olive oil and coconut oil, that those problems

went away. So it on my information disease to so So it makes sense that it's a wide wide spectrum thing and that you can't be suffering from low grade information from birth and not expect bad things to happen, you know. Exactly. And so so I guess that ties into the last time we'll talk to Ben about in this is we're both kind of My calls and I are both a little bit. We don't know as much about this guy but I see him floating around all the time. Ray Pete, I know you're a peak

guy. Our friend Fredo is also a repeat guy. There's quite a few. There's guys out there people, I really respect. So I want to know about this guy. He's seed oil, right seed. Oil is kind of one of his his things right? Or am I right? Yeah. I mean, he's a, he's energy and I can see was talking about this. Okay, Loop to go and he was, he was saying that like look, it's

not even. He's like, if you look at the extraction processes that these go through the amount of processing and, you know, they're stripped out of, they don't have any of the antioxidants that you would find in a natural fat. That would be like monounsaturated, right? So I real hot, real high-quality olive oil has An A and vitamin E, the kind of account for these less saturated longer chain fats.

So you know, is pretty obvious. I think to him that seed oils, not really the term for it and it would just be a mega six, you know, polyunsaturated fatty acids that they tend to depress the thyroid. And, you know, there are a lot of main issues when it comes to just mitochondrial. Health and these fats you know from a basic chemistry perspective and you know he's also big on thyroid health. Avoiding stress is a is a very interesting way of thinking.

And, you know, it's writing style and all of that. It It's it's very unique and you know whether you agree with them or disagree with them on a lot of his points he does add a certain way of thinking about these problems that's unique. So even if you don't come to the same conclusions assume his his way of kind of conceptualizing, this stuff is really useful. Once you pick up one, it interesting. Is he it's and and what are some other big parts of his you know,

philosophy. He's a he's a fan of aspirin. So it's a one thing that's big with him is he's a lot better on talking about the role of hormones. Then you're sort of conventional wisdom would get. So he, you know, he was the first place. I read that estrogen is actually a stress hormone. The reason that women have more of it is, Because their cells divide more rapidly. So they have a higher level of cellular stress and that, you know, it's not just, it's not so

much, a gender thing. It's more of anything about it and stressful, terms and serotonin, not being the happiness, neurotransmitter, but actually being a being related to stress Thousand other one and it's one of the only people out there, I've heard talk about the problems that come with excess serotonin levels and you know, how you can get rid of that. That's a big thing that is starting to pop up everywhere that serotonin is not necessarily.

Always did all the time and yeah, I like it and I like yeah just from my purse because I'm always like it will try new shit, you know and I'll tell you it's a bit. It plays a big role in anxiety actually. Yeah, I'm sure you're the type kind of like I am or if your anxiety levels of kind of high or yeah, you just you're not hungry. That's me some people stress. It's totally opposite reaction but I'm just like and it's a

vicious cycle. You know you stressing you get the, you get the, you get the weight gain, you get the cortisol. I mean, I would just try it for any like bio hackers out there try and do the. I'm sure you got you found the same thing where you know, There's endless ways to raise your serotonin and endless ways to raise your dopamine try like a dopamine month or serotonin

month and then a dopamine month. Not saying both are important but just try it and 9 times out of 10, you'll feel the dopamine is the more important one to match. Yeah, yeah. And it's, I don't know. Maybe an especially, yeah, maybe there's like a dude element there, too. Because we're like, the, you know, I think it's connected. I've got a, I've got an antihistamine. I called super hepta Dean and the way it actually works is it's a serotonin antagonist.

So for me too, don't try this at home but I experimented with this one myself, it's an anti serotonin agent. I felt like if I if I take just a half of the tablet that was prescribed to me for allergies, that's enough to restore my appetite and get rid of like the Body anxiety, kind of fight or flight, right feeling. Yeah. And and, you know, you think I'm saying it's a, you know,

serotonin antagonist. Like, okay, you would think that taking something like that would make you depressed, if you follow the conventional, you know, logic of Serotonin. So happy neurotransmitter and find out and said it's like, no, I just feel really, really chilled out. Out actually more like a shooter transmitter, you know what I mean? Yeah, it's fucking nurse. It's all rise and shitty. Yeah.

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. And so, so I guess in conclusion, with all this stuff is that if you were to read something like dissolving Illusions, you will, the scariest part is not the disease part. You know what, and, and what I want, people, or even the vaccination part. I don't even think those two things are the scariest part. Some people might disagree, That's fine. The scariest part is that the

doctors are just as retarded. That's the problem with all that stuff is that the doctors are that much more hard-headed right

there. That much more of a foot soldiers from any of this stuff and so we're you know you have to find guys like rapey you have to find guys you know all these other people you know find guys like been Braddock who has his own covid protocol on a sub stack which is great and you fight you have to go, you have to find the stuff, you have to actively look for it because the consensus medical opinion is you can't trust it on. If you know, the history of it,

the real raw, unfiltered history of it. There's just no way you could trust them with anything in the future. Yeah, they only have more protection now. They only have more protection. They don't, they have better technology, and more and more protect. Yeah, and the tech might hurt you too. So shit. That's the way ya. One thing I'll say on that is it is, I think more now more than ever to use that tired old phrase, it's really important to look after your health in a very

proactive way. And really to learn as much as you can about this stuff because, you know, we were talking about shortages earlier. There's now a shortage of CT contrast fluid if you go to an, ER, you know, with Like pain in

your stomach or whatever. They might just cut you up for an appendectomy right away instead of doing a scan to confirm whether you have it or not like that's that's where we're at and you know we have this vicious cycle where infants are being admitted to the hospital because they don't have their specialty formula you know for allergies or whatever being admitted to the hospital's fed back, you know put back in relatively good shape discharge Wind up back in the hospital

again because you can't get the formula and the hospital's don't have enough of it to like discharge them like with a supply of it. Yeah, so we're you know we're rapidly becoming like Venezuela and I try to remind people as much as I can. You know, Venezuela back in the late 1980s, had a standard of living that was easily comparable or better than that of the United States.

You know, it was like having Having an american-style standard of living except you're, in a beautiful tropical country that's like, eating right? Lot. Better weather than the u.s. oh, yeah. It was like it was like paradise, right? For a lot of people and that all went away and just a couple of decades to the point where, you know, they're the kids lost like an average 5 inches of height or whatever it was from the malnutrition.

And you know, the hospital's had no electricity, no basic supplies needles were being reused on people. You know, people were eating trash, you know, kids were just dying left and right, I'm not malnutrition and like that's that's with basically in my lifetime. It's going from that to that. So You know, don't get too cocky America Bros. That's all I'd say this on getting cocky and don't I think it's better to have the knowledge and not need it than need it.

And not have it. So and find out like be able to identify a scam. Have that skeptic brain because you don't don't have faith in elected of the. I mean I mean I guess elect it's not really the word but paid people, you know, in the medical industry you didn't elect a These people don't have faith in these people because you can watch the theranos documentary and be like, what an idiot who would fall for that? I can watch. You can see even people that freaked out about Martin

shkreli. The Sackler family, all that stuff, hey, whatever. All that stuff is bad. Totally agree. But like, why does it stop there? Why does it stop laughter approved TV? Content comes out about these things to wear. Wow, you're allowed to freak out about this but don't fucking look underneath the mattress on this. Like, don't don't do that because theranos I'm Sorry, if you felt if you thought their nose was stupid. But you fell for moderna.

I don't know what to tell you. That's all just just last week. My dad was in the hospital for back surgery and you know, I'm there setting with them and a nurse comes in and, you know, she's about to, like, give them something I asked what it was and she was like a fentanyl as like, yeah, he has COPD, he can't have fentanyl because he could just stop breathing. Yeah, Yes, like he had to lauded before he did great with the law, and why can't I have Dilaudid?

And then she's like, oh, I'll go get some Dilaudid and then he like almost died there in the front. Yeah. It's looking like the discharge him with Percocet, which makes a, which they already. He already told them, like, makes them basically hallucinate and just, like, give them Dilaudid also to get like, what? Yeah, it's it's an issue that he accidentally took a Percocet instead of a muscle. Actually yesterday. So he like spent the day in the bed tripping, he was just try to

relax a little. Yeah, yeah. This is, these are people. Like again, we're talking about, like, the infrastructure has progressed, but the doctors haven't. So you decide which, what helped society and in 2019, medical error was the third leading cause of death. Still its 2020 that I was going to bring that up. I love what he told me disappeared from the top 20. I love that.

I love the Bros that deny that there are no, no didn't and they like come some convoluted reason why it's not true when it is. Yeah, it goes from third leading cause of death to not even on the top 20 of the same year. That families aren't allowed to go inside the hospitals and you said, you can see from that it wasn't. If it wasn't for people there to make sure that that stuff gets reported, right like medical

errors and all that. Like if you don't have Patient Advocates there, they will not sell. Report that. And we saw that because there's no way that medical error then went to the third leading cause of death because it was the leading cause of death. Yeah, because you take all the, you take those massive covid casually over a million people dead. And a huge chunk of that. Was he after genic?

Because I, you know, I know, because I've talked to so many doctors and nurses who worked in those places and so many people who had loved ones who are in those places, Who either died or nearly died and it's staggering, what went down like every hospital was like a killing field in a sense, especially with the ventilators, you know, in last summer they they had before July, they had gotten to be pretty good. About not using the ventilator if they didn't really need to

within when the July surge hit. They Started putting people in ventilators again, because it was an easier way to manage them. All right, you put him on a vent. You give them fentanyl, they're unconscious. They're not going to be ringing a bell asking you for anything and invent an oh yeah, and they did that the hospital. They get the bonus money, the stemming. Yeah, yeah, exactly.

And it's like, it's like this is a fucking desert room desert fear that stuff that my and barely survived it. She was You're doing fine. She's doing fine. And they come in and they give her that stuff. And she starts having hip had a pulmonary syndrome, which is where the liver becomes inflamed, and it starts poisoning the lungs. And so then suddenly like the respiration messes up, but the blood pressure drops and all

this stuff. Anyway in the in Gilead Zone from Des of your trials, they are Ready. They knew from that, that it was making people's livers get super inflamed. Liver enzymes are just going up across the board and then they should have known that when your liver is inflamed that starts messing with your lungs. Yeah, there's a direct relationship there and they went with it anyway. Well, it turns out, they actually had a drug that wasn't as hard on the liver, but it

ended up being the same thing. So like rum, Desert. There's actually a prodrug and you it has to be turned into the drug in your body. But Gilead had the other one which was already the think it was already converted. It have to pass through the liver and they didn't use it. Because if they had used that one, the patent it was under they would have learned much less profit. Yeah. Yeah. So is near. Yeah. And how much how much of it per dose?

How much money is? It per dose of room does of ear too? Because it's quite a bit quite a lot. And it's one of the first things they think it was. I think it was like five or six thousand for a course of it. Yeah. Yeah. And then plus like drama and then people took it. Seriously. So that's how much. That's how much Gilead gets paid for the rum desert fear, but the hospital also got paid a bonus from the federal government if they prescribe the Run desert

here. So it's like the feds were paying people to be Gilead customers like they got a bonus on the whole bill. It was a I think a percentage just like they got a Bonus if the patient was on a ventilator it's like, all right, let's get as many patients on ventilators. That was what the administrators were pushing. I mean, it wasn't like the, you know, most doctors they were their hands were tied and a big way just, you know, I mean, they with the electronic medical records and the Charts.

They can just snatch on your computer, stitches on you to tell it, right? Or like ordering certain drugs for a patient like if you have a lesser human element nowadays? Yeah, compared to let back then back. Yeah, doctors have very little latitude. Like administrators will just, you know. And the thing is, is if they get fired, then they can lose their like, they're admitting privileges and their license can

be in Jeopardy in some states. Like, if you get fired from Hospital. So then you just can't go into private, practice and like Suzanne Humphries. She had to go before board and defend her license. Yeah, yeah. Just because just because she questioned the conventional wisdom on vaccines and she liked she dared to mention that there might be an association between her patient's kidney, shutting down and the swine flu shot.

Yeah, so yeah. And then like when you want to I looked up debunking of dissolving Illusions and I found a Reddit thread from from this and it was just just to close us out here. You need to reject the entire framework of the medical industry. If you are this skeptical on covid, it didn't start with covid. It won't start with stop with covid. Colby was just the like I said the room, Raiders black light where you see all the jizz on the wall that was just, it was on full display.

So it allowed and the beauty of all this. If anything could be taken from it, is that I have seen more skepticism of the medical industry than I I ever have in my life and that's that's been great to see. Now you know you get on these Reddit Pages, read it if you're going to speak out against vaccines red, it's not really the place for you. Really not the place for you. And there was, there was this person that did it like a 14, bullet point debunking of dissolving Illusions.

We're really, most of the points were just that they were misleading. She was cherry-picking. Stats Coke, right? That's the cope when, you know, you're wrong. And you can't prove the person wrong, and you just have to kind of say, they do not seem to be Picture. Now somebody asked in the comments on Reddit and said, well okay, but her claim is that the infrastructure was more for public health being better rather than the vaccines. So what do you do to dispute

that claim? Because they never did in this 14 bullet point thing. Now the person, the Reddit person that the original poster that commented and said, well that's not what most anti-vaxxers are claiming they think it's the mark of the beast and that you will die. If you take it and all that. Some all the straw, Manning all this straw Manning, when not engaging with Suzanne, Humphries point, but felt the need to do a 14-point dissertation, debunking

still had that. And then at the end of the day, you know, they would, they said, I have to do more research as far as the introduction. Infrastructure. Did Susan, Humphreys. Did the research? Yes, she did it. You'd put your butt in book

form, not reading fact. It's a book of facts is what it is. It's not, it's not a story, it's not a the middle of the Midway. Curve really does apply on Issue because you know, your two biggest vaccine, skeptic demographics by education are high school dropouts and PhD is yeah, yeah, yeah right then. And there horseshoe Theory, we're good. We got this. So I mean I'm actually in the middle of those two but like it then nonetheless you know, I'm not not all, you know, not all

of us but yeah. So look back and talk to you all night but I can't, but I'm here, you gotta come, you gotta come back, you got come back, you gotta come back. We're gonna have to make this. Like a says, the medical red pill series is meant to be a few of them were going of our friend. Jeremy, the Fredo back on very soon. He's coming back. He's in Davos right now. Switzerland at the world

economic Forum stuff. Not speaking there, of course I got to do. Yeah, you said that in the chat, I thought you were being making like a know he's. Okay, that's why he couldn't come on. He was like hey I got to go to Davos. Is that cool like eggs? My bad? I think we need to do a wee. A kind of live field trip recording session. Maybe. I don't like funny. You mention that? Yeah, exactly. Well, I don't go out to Malibu and, you know, set it to the what's that?

What's that hippie Wilma shop? There, be a great place to record an episode are one. I would not care. What are no, not Erewhon. It's it's like a smoothie shop. It was set up by a dude who's like an ex heroin addict great place because you know, you get all these like Funky smoothie tight on drinks and stuff that's first place. I saw like Bulletproof coffee or anything like stuff with Makkah or green it all the anyway they have.

Like I remember they had like this rotating cast of red pill medicine books on the shelves and it's like you know, wheat belly and but I remember there was some on vaccines. It was very like skeptical of them, vaccines autoimmunity, and the changing nature of LS, all that kind of stuff. Anyway, yeah, yeah, yeah. Follow follow at graduated been on Twitter. He'll be back. All we're going to do more stuff, man.

We're going to have to because because they're we still gotta, we still got much more to talk about. And as always, you know, if you're here because of because of been, you know, hey we got plenty of medical stuff to. We got music stuff all types of stuff, you know? And yeah, listen to rare candy, and like I said, follow follow been on Twitter. Some of the best threads out there, and you've got some riding out to it. It was, I believe you had an interview with the front.

What was the interview with the French guy that was Renaud Camus, the guy who coined the term the great replacement. So that's that was a cool interview chance to really get to what this means you hear the buzz word, a lot in the media lately but you know, it's not a it's not a theory as he says, it's not a conspiracy that was good. And then I have a Peace on Lana Del Rey and I am 1776 publishing. It's their art and literature for dissidents first issue. Print issue.

Just got it the other day. This is absolutely beautiful. Like, this is one of the coolest things that's been put out from our sphere, aren't wise. And so, I'm going to give a big shout at them because they're gone, terrific stuff. I am 1776. Well, there you go, guys. All Right. Well thanks again. Ben I really appreciate it. Thank you. All right guys, everyone have a good night.

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