November 11, 1994: Disease - Lindsey Williams - podcast episode cover

November 11, 1994: Disease - Lindsey Williams

Mar 09, 20232 hr 42 minSeason 1994Ep. 30
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Episode description

Lindsey Williams, author of You Can Live, warns that antibiotic-resistant superbugs and emerging diseases pose an existential threat to humanity. Williams meticulously documents his case using sources from the Journal of the American Medical Association, Newsweek, Time, and Laboratory Medicine, citing a University of Iowa pathology professor who found 85 percent of hospital-acquired bacteria have developed resistance to common antibiotics.

The conversation ranges across the Hantavirus outbreak spreading beyond the Four Corners region, a new airborne strain of pneumonic plague reaching China from India, flesh-eating strep that devours one inch of tissue per hour, and incurable tuberculosis devastating inner-city populations. Williams argues that decades of antibiotic overuse, chemical-laden agriculture, and immune-suppressing vaccinations have created a medical crisis without historical precedent. He advocates building the immune system through diet, herbs, and natural supplements rather than relying on pharmaceutical interventions. Art Bell presses Williams on the distinction between legitimate alternative medicine and fraud, while callers raise concerns about mandatory vaccinations and mercury dental fillings.

A sobering broadcast that reads like a preview of public health debates still raging three decades later.
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