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Joe Rogan podcast. Check it out.
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
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Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day. You just said something that's like very important. Can't be dogmatic when you're talking about vaccines or about anything.
B
Yes, it is good to keep an open mind, isn't it? And be flexible and look at a 360 degree view of things rather than your tunnel vision and what you're indoctrinated into, isn't it?
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Yeah. And especially if you know that that indoctrination has been on purpose and profitable. And you know, one of the great things about your book is, first of all, your book's called Dissolving Illusions. I know I've talked about on the podcast a bunch of times, but you, you also highlight a lot of things that we know are beneficial that somehow or another get lumped into nonsense. Like even cinnamon.
B
Yeah, cinnamon is a powerful herb, actually, and it's known to be helpful in glucose handling for a lot of diabetics taking it in capsule form. Now I noticed at the end of my nephrology career that a lot of my own patients were taking cinnamon capsules, but it also has a lot of vitamin C in it. And I think that was probably one of the keys. A lot of those old remedies that we wrote about, the magic in them probably was the vitamin C in them.
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I dismissed all that stuff as total nonsense. I was like, oh, that's hippie nonsense. Like echinacea, like get out of here. It's hippie nonsense. Garlic, come on, get out of here. Then the more I've read things especially like garlic is incredible for staph infections. For some reason it is.
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And it doesn't develop drug resistance like a lot of the drugs that are engineered for it. Yeah, the hippies seem to have got it right. I think.
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Well, it just that that whole idea of natural remedies is so just universally dismissed by non silly people. You know, when you say natural remedies, that's great. If you have a heart attack, go to a doctor, stupid. You know, that's generally people's appeal to authority. Right, but it's. The doctor should be recommending those things too. Like they're good too. Like vitamin D. Super important, you know, vitamin A, super important. And one of the things that you talked about in the book is that I think this is really important. When you were talking about the measles vaccine, you were saying that either if you get an infection with measles, just a natural infection, or if you get the vaccine, you're still gonna get depleted of vitamin A. Like if you get vaccinated for the measles, you should be taking vitamin A as well. Your body's gonna get depleted just by getting that shot. They don't tell you that?
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No, they don't tell you anything. Just Tylenol, which actually makes the vaccine not work as well, in addition to causing all kinds of immunological disturbances at the time that you're supposed to be up regulating your immune system against this dreaded disease. Yeah, but one of the things about the recommended by the white coats and the authorities is that the public believes that so many drugs and remedies are standardized that the conventional medical system gives out. And when you go to actually look at them, and this includes vaccines even though they're standardized, meaning that the manufacturers are told what the regulations should be in terms of production. When people go and look at them, they find it's anything but standardized. It's very variable, which is why we see such variability in the results when people receive them. That's only one reason why there's so much variability.
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And do you think it's the immunity to any legal consequences that has allowed them to sort of operate, Operate like this?
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Well, we certainly saw an explosion of their creativity since 1986. So 19. Actually, in 1986, you're referring to the National Child Vaccine Injury Act. That was passed in 1986. But before 1986, we had 1976, which was the swine flu vaccine fiasco. And that was a situation where there was so much injury that the vaccine producing companies were no longer able to get insurance. And so they went to the government and they said, we need you to indemnify us. And they did. And so the government absorbed all the lawsuit cases that happened as a result of the Guillain Barre that happened from then. And so that kind of set a precedent for 1986. So back then, vaccines were just kind of, you know, pieces of microbe or maybe a live attenuated virus. And then they would put a background of all kinds of horrid things inside of it and tell you it was just a clear, beautiful, pure solution. But that's beside the point. So then 1986 comes along, and because there's so many lawsuits happening because of the diphtheria pertussis tetanus vaccine, that again, the vaccine companies couldn't continue to go on the way they were because they were being sued so much. So then this horrible act was passed, which to some people seemed like a Good idea. And this is always how it goes, is we're going to make you this promise. Yes, yes, yes. We're going to cover all the lawsuits now out of taxes, but it's going to be okay because we're going to pay out these lawsuits and you're going to be fine. If your kid takes one for the team, you're going to be. And what happens is after time, after they get their foot in the door, they narrow down the. They basically have a kangaroo court that decides if you're eligible. And so the qualification tables got narrowed down because in the beginning they were paying out so much of this. So not only did it make the vaccine companies very, very wealthy and indemnified, but as you alluded to just a minute ago, the creativity of the vaccine companies expanded. So after that they could add different, what we call adjuvants, things that stimulate the immune system so the vaccine work better then they start. That's why we're able to be in a messenger RNA vaccine situation today, which that wouldn't have happened if it weren't for the indemnification that, you know, the vaccine trials have always been a bit of a joke, but they're even more of a joke today than they were in the beginning. We've never seen a vaccinated, unvaccinated study that is accepted by the powers that be as, you know, good enough. The vaccinated, unvaccinant studies that they have, they use another vaccine for. You probably know that. So if you're testing a measles vaccine, you could test it against a diphtheria vaccine or a flu shot vaccine is tested against a hepatitis A vaccine. There's no saline placebo because the few studies that exist with saline placebos show how bad the vaccine actually is and how it makes you not only not respond to the disease when it comes around, but more susceptible to it in many cases.
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Have there been any instances where vaccines have been helpful?
B
The question of the century, isn't it? Okay, now we have to back up a minute because I had that same question and I had to go dig deep to all the questions you have in your head right now. I had them too at one point. So here I am, a medical doctor working in the field, believing in pretty much everything I was told, giving hundreds if not thousands of vaccines out to my patients. Hepatitis B vaccines in particular, flu shots, for sure. I was a nephrologist, kidney specialist, and dialysis, etc. And initially, you know, we all kind of have an aversion to needles I think it's a natural human aversion. So when we're kids, we don't. No one's going, oh, I want to go get my vaccines. We're like, you know, okay, fine, sore arm. You get over it. Most of us, we're lucky enough to get over it. So by the time the first instance of a problem occurred in front of my eyes, I was already a fully seasoned professor of medicine, you know, working in a tertiary care medical center. Okay. And so it's been a bit of a process because for me, it was the influenza vaccines in 2008, 2009, that showed me without a doubt that vaccines can and do cause kidney failure and put people on dialysis. That that does happen. It can cause hypertension. So we're not told to take a vaccine history in medical school. We're not told to even look there. It's not even part of. Especially in adults. But when I did start looking there, I started to see more and more associations, let's just put it that way. And so first I had to go down the flu. The flu vaccine bunny trail. And every time I went down that flu vaccine bunny trail, guess what? I was asked, what about polio? So I thought, all right, even though this has absolutely zero to do with polio, because I'm watching people crap out in front of me after influenza vaccines, let's see about polio. Because I knew very little about polio, just like most people walking around out there do that. You know, it was invented by this guy named Jonas Salk, and it saved humanity. We don't see these little crippled kids anymore. We don't have iron lungs anymore. Yay. Well, I would have to say that the polio bunny trail was the darkest one of all. So after polio then became smallpox, and I thought, you know, we still have people walking to Earth that have experienced the polio years. So I kind of like to stick to polio, because most of the smallpox, you know, people that would have been. Would have been familiar with it are off the planet. But there's still some doctors around that'll talk about smallpox, like a guy named Thomas Mack, who's probably close to 90, who was kind of ground zero in the 1940s and knows a lot about it and still says we shouldn't be vaccinating for smallpox today. So then there was that, and then everyone and their dog was talking about autism. And I didn't really want to have anything to do with autism because I was an adult doctor.
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I think we should break down step by step. Like what about polio? Yeah, Everything starts with good health. That's why AG1 is a great addition to any morning routine and why I've partnered with them for so long. One scoop once a day, simple, research backed and designed to support your whole body health. And it actually tastes great. You can forget juggling multiple pills and supplements. AG1 is a more in one solution that combines a multivitamin superior B complex, a blend of superfoods and more. And more importantly, AG1 prioritizes using nutrients that are already in their bioactive form so your body can use them easily. Just mix it with cold water and you're set. No hassle, no guesswork. It's never too late to create a new healthy habit. For 2025, try AG1 for yourself. And right now, AG1 is offering new customers a free 76 gift. When you subscribe, you'll get a welcome kit, a bottle of D3K2 and five free travel packs in your first box. So make sure you check out drinkag1.com Joe Rogan that's drinkag1.com Joe RogAN check it out. Because you said polio once, once we've breached that. Because that's the big one. Yeah, right. This is the one that everybody points to. We don't have cripple kids.
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Yeah.
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What, when you look at the historical timeline of polio, what do you think caused it to go to essentially not be a problem anymore?
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Okay.
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You don't think vaccinations had anything to do with that?
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Well, I also. It's not what I think because that's the thing. Like, look, when I got into this, you know, I want to argue that vaccines are great. I said, look, I don't care. I didn't have skin in the game, I didn't have vaccine, injured kids. I couldn't have cared less about it, essentially, except that it was something in front of me and it didn't make sense. So I thought, wherever the truth falls, that's what I'm going to talk about. So what I say is that what the facts line up to show you is that polio is still here. Polio is still alive and well. Polio is called different things today. Whereas back in the 1940s, 1950s, the criteria for diagnosing polio were completely different to the year that the vaccine was introduced. The playing field, the goalposts, everything was changed. So that despite the fact that there was more paralytic polio in the years after that vaccine was introduced, they were able to show a complete Cascading drop of paralytic polio simply because of the way they changed the definitions of what polio is and what could cause it. And they started testing for the virus where before they would never test for the virus. And when they started testing for the virus later, what they would find that people had Guillain Barre syndrome. They didn't have virus, or they had coxsackievirus or echovirus, or they were lead poisoned or mercury poisoned, which was the mercury and lead were the leading treatments of the day, including bloodletting. They were telling people to take your cigarette and put a little bit of arsenic in there. It's good for your lungs. Yeah. They were literally blowing smoke up people's butts. Like that's where the term comes from. Because they're. If you want to Google that now, you'll see that there's an instrument that does it. So the polio story, where to even begin? And so there's about 70 pages. And so that became my obsession. So when people said, what about polio? And I started digging this up, I went deep into it.
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Did you dive into pesticides?
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Yes. Yes, you have to dive into pesticides. Because the tonnage of production of DDT absolutely mirrored the diagnosis for polio in the days. And the countries that still make DDT today is where we're still seeing this paralytic polio situation happen.
A
And also, weren't the first cases. Didn't they break out in a rural.
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Community, the first cases of polio? Yes.
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In the United States, Paralytic polio?
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Yes. It was out in the countryside. Well, that was probably more because of the sheep and cow dipping. So arsenic, you'd have to look at arsenic. You have to look at the mercurials. You have to look at the calcium arsenate, lead arsenate sprays that were put on trees. But what you're talking about in particular, they would call the cow disease. Go out. And the family, when you would go to the house, they'd say, all the kids have the cow disease. What the cows had before. Well, what were they doing? They would have these trenches. You talk to farmers even today? Oh, yeah, we had trenches. We would just walk them straight through, and I'd be soaked with the stuff by the end of the day.
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Oh, my God.
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Yeah. So they're basically soaking and bathing in arsenic, which is great for killing fleas and ticks, but it's not really great for keeping your nervous system happy. Because the fact of the matter is. And this again, I've got medical references. Everything I can't get away with making stuff up. Okay, I have to put a reference for everything. But arsenic causes the exact same spinal pathology. That and fevers and everything. It literally mimics what they were calling polio and a polio virus back in the day.
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I read this crazy statistic, and I still can't believe it's real, that 95 to 99% of all polio is asymptomatic.
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That's exactly right. So polio virus is what we call a commensal. Just like you have staph on your skin and strep on your skin, and it actually serves a purpose. Keeps other microbes in check as long as you don't get a cut and have not a good immune system to deal from the inside out. So polio. The reason I can say that polio is a commensal is because, again, there are medical studies that showed that people who dared to get on the edge of some of these wild native tribes down in South America or elsewhere, but in particular, I'm talking about a South American tribe called the Javante Indians. So the Indian Health Service got to the edge of it and bargained that they would get some stool and some blood from the tribes so that they could test it for polio. And what they found was 98 to 99% of every person they tested, and it was hundreds of people had evidence of immunity to all three strains of polio. And they said to them, well, where are all your crippled children? Where's your short legs? Where are the people that died of respiratory failure? And they were like, we don't have any of that problem.
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So could it possibly be that whatever you're calling polio evolved and became less powerful over time and more contagious? Does that does happen with some. Some viruses, right?
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Most viruses.
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America's coffee in nature don't become more problematic as they go through the human, the human system, they become less problematic. Remember, remember the whole Covid thing like in the beginning, people were getting super, super sick. It was, it wasn't as contagious, but it was more virulent. And as it attenuated into the human bodies, it sort of filter, it kind of fizzled out a bit. And then we got the omicron which was, you know, less, it was more spreadable but it was much less pathological. And that's the natural. So when you're going to have problems, real problems with microbes, they're usually going to be reverse attenuated, meaning made more lethal in a lab. And then they're introduced into the population. And look, I'm not making this up either. 1916, Upper East Side Manhattan. There was a Rockefeller lab that their specific stated goal was to try to create the most pathological, neuropathological strain of polio possible. And they did that by taking monkey brains and human spinal serum and injection. And there was a big problem with that, which was released into the public by accident. And the world experienced the worst polio epidemic on record. 25% mortality. That's unheard of. Really freaked the public out. But as it, and you can see the epicenter as it fanned out and as it fanned out and as time went on, never heard of it again. It attenuates as it moves through the body because it's a normal human commensal that goes back to its normal state when it's in a human. And that's generally what happens if you have a highly lethal virus and it kills a lot of people. Those people are dead, they can't spread anything. So that's kind of a different story if you want to talk about hantavirus or something like that. But as far as polio goes, no. Polio was only made more lethal by the stupid things that humans did around it. So make it more invasive and to the body just like you can go do stupid things and end up with herpes outbreaks and staph outbreaks. Polio virus is a normal commensal. It used to be until we obliterated it with oral vaccines and replaced it with with vaccine strain. But the wild strains are normal human commensals.
A
So there's vaccine strain, polio that just comes from a vaccine and is transmissible?
B
Absolutely. Today it would be the oral Polio vaccines, because they're the live strains and they're still giving them pulse fashion all throughout India. They did a campaign a few years back in Israel and they always say that a nomad came and, you know, pooped in the sewage system and they find it in the sewage system and they don't want an outbreak to happen, so they treat everybody. So that's today the most common reason to see poliomyelitis disease from a virus. If you test for a virus, they'll usually find the vaccine virus. And that's why today we don't remember when we were kids, because we're about the same age. I think they would give us the sugar cube. Maybe you didn't, but I did. I got the sugar cube and that was the live vaccine. Well, they stopped doing that because after a while the only cases of polio. And it became so obvious that the only cases of polio we were seeing related to a virus when they tested for polio virus, were vaccine strains. Then they started injecting us again. But the early injections caused more paralytic polio than it prevented. And that's the part that people don't understand when they say, what about polio? Because they, like you just go, well, there's no more iron lungs, there's no more crippling, there's no more these poor little kids walking around with their casts. Well, that's not true because the iron lung is now called a ventilator. So that's out the window. Transverse myelitis, which there are about 1,300 cases, I think it's a month diagnosed in one particular. I put a quote in here on that. But transverse myelitis is actually something that would have. Absolutely. It follows the same pathology as polio would have been called polio back in the day. So we still have polio that we had in 1953. Because in 1953, all you had to have to be diagnosed is polio. Anyone could diagnose you. Just one examination with one set of muscles being paralyzed. There was no timeframe on it. There was no testing done on it. And then it was considered a public service to do it because then you were eligible for funding.
A
So what do they call it again? Can you say that word again? Myelitis.
B
Poliomyelitis. Poliomyelitis is the definition of the actual pathology, you know, so it basically means inflammation of the gray matter of your spinal cord. That's what polio, in Greek, poliomyelitis. It means gray matter inflammation. Poliomyelitis Poliomyelitis is what happens in the body. Okay, if you want to talk about what causes it, then, okay, maybe in some cases a polio virus causes it. And all the other things we just mentioned, arsenic, lead arsenate, calcium arsenate, injections, tonsillectomies were huge cause of some of the worst cases of poliomyelitis. And in fact, injections and tonsillectomies and unnecessary surgeries were put on hold during the years where the epidemics were the worst. So that's just proof that even the surgeons knew that.
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Why does it affect it?
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Okay, so if you happen to have poliomyelitis circulating in your body, that's not just sitting in your intestines and say it made its way into your body, because we can. Things can go from your intestines into your body, and you happen to have it close to a nerve that's up, say around your throat, and then you go and take the tonsils out, then what you've done is you've given that access to the blood compartment, the lymph compartment, and the brain stem, which is right there local. So those are the people that would get what was called bulbar polio, which is the ones that put you on a ventilator. And it's highly lethal. It's the worst kind of polio to get bulbar polio. And it was very well known to have been coincident with tonsillectomies. Not only that, but tonsillectomies changed the structure and antibodies and the immunity that occurred in the throat and changed it for the worse, not for the better.
A
Do you think they're unnecessary? Or is there some times when people have to get their tonsils removed or is it just a nonsense practice?
B
Okay, so again, it's not just a cut and dry answer, because let's just say that anyone who's ever brought their child to me because their tonsils were touching or they were snoring has not had to have a tonsillectomy. Now, does that mean that a tonsillectomy won't solve that problem where you're snoring and your kid's maybe not oxygenated? No. If you let it go that long, probably you're going to need a tonsillectomy. I have seen so many cases reverse. It's a very easy thing to do. But as doctors, we're not taught about all the things that you were talking about earlier, the natural remedies, but just simply gargling with a solution of sodium ascorbate vitamin C can make a huge difference because tonsils are like. They're like porous golf balls, if you want to think of them that way. They've got pits in them. And so food you eat and bacteria and pus can build up. But if you just start rinsing the outsides of them and start nourishing the body from the inside and getting rid of things that the kid might be allergic to, which almost every kid's going to eat, if your parent doesn't know better, it can make a remarkable difference in these kids that have these huge tonsils. So I think that a lot. I think everything else should be done first before taking out the tonsils if there's time, because I'd say 95 to 99% of the time, you can prevent that child from needing their tonsils removed.
A
Before we go to smallpox, I want to talk about this because you just brought it up. One of the things that Brett Weinstein has explained to me me is that aluminum is when the concept is that giving someone a shot with aluminum in it and triggering an immune response, if they're eating certain foods during that time, they can then develop an allergy to those foods, like certain people with peanuts and various things like that that used to be very common for people to eat. But then a bunch of people developed like pretty severe food allergies. And he makes this connection that he believes is reasonably. It's a reasonable connection to say that.
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There'S something absolutely 100% and it's not just something he's dreamed up. Again, provable medical literature in the book Dissolving Illusions, the physiology, the pathology is known. It's very well known that. That the vaccines that have aluminum in them skew the immune system. So the immune system kind of just. If you want to break it down really simply, you have your TH1 arm and your TH2 arm. Your TH1 arm is your really important one. Those are your T cells, you know, your lymphocytes, the cells that, you know, chew up any garbage that's going around. That's the part you want activated in any infection you have, whether it's Covid or measles or smallpox or whatever. Then you have your TH2 arm, which is there most mostly to deal with parasites and things like that. And it's mostly an antibody arm of immunity. That's the one that vaccinologists are obsessed with making sure there's enough antibody. So the vaccines that have aluminum in them, as opposed to the live attenuated vaccines, which don't have aluminum, all the other ones do. So your DTAP is going to have aluminum in them. All your killed vaccines are going to have aluminum in them. And that is very well known to trigger that TH2 response, which is the allergic response, which can set up your body for autoimmunity. And so part of the purpose of breastfeeding, which is part of the blueprint for humanity and every other mammal, is that the mother is able to introduce antigens in the world to her baby through her own breast and things that she's been eating and breathing in, and then the baby's able to develop tolerance. So while vaccine scientists are obsessed with getting antibodies and ramping up in infant inadequate immune system, the fact of the matter is, is that it's more important to learn what not to react to when your immune system's developing rather than to becoming defensive against every microbe that could get you. So that's kind of the paradox there. And one of the battlegrounds for immunology within immunology and for those of us out here that are going, what are you doing here? You know.
A
Anyway, you were also talking in your book about the importance of breast milk and the importance the amount of nutrition that's in breast milk for a child and what it does for a child and the differences in their immune system, the differences in a lot of different aspects of their development, which is pretty fascinating. And most people kind of just assume it's food, it's just food, but it's a lot more than that.
B
It's so much more than that. And I was actually quite startled when I really went down that rabbit hole to see not only, I mean, it is food, it's excellent nutrition with short chain fatty acids and sugars that the baby needs. It actually trains your gut to be healthy in the long run as an adult, which trains your immune system as well, but what that mother is putting through her breast milk, you know, things like something called Hamlet H A M L E T, which stands for human alpha lactalbumin made lethal to tumors. And this is a substance, this is a protein. It's like a transformer protein that can literally turn into a cancer busting molecule that is being used by the oncology industry. Okay. And when it's not in that form, it's a powerful protein that fights off pertussis, all kinds of pneumococcal bacteria. And when it's not doing that, it's food. Okay? So it's like it's got so many different purposes. Stem cells are coming through that Mother's milk. Activated T cells. Activated T cells have another substance in them that is kind of hijacked by the oncology industry. And that is when they're immunosuppressing kids for leukemia or whatever, and they come in contact, say, with chickenpox. What they can do is get somebody like me who's immune to chickenpox naturally and take my memory T cells that remember that. And there's a substance in there called dializable leukocyte extract. When you put that into another child, even if whether they eat it or inject it into them, it transfers cellular. That th one important arm of immunity. I just told you, it transfers it onto them and protects them for a long time. So that's kind of in the old days, when mothers had measles in the old days normally, and they were able to pass this powerful immunity through that, that DLE factor, as well as all these other things, including preformed immune globulins. I mentioned something like 80,000 stem cells. It's just incredible. And we still have only hit the tip of the iceberg in terms of what we know about breast milk. But breast milk also, it's been proven again, that if you are going to vaccinate your baby, if you're breastfeeding, the vaccine will bring that baby more into a TH1. If you're not breastfeeding and you're giving formula, that baby's going to move more into a TH2 in response to that vaccine. So, like, if. I think if most women understood the powers of breast milk, they would do everything possible to be able to do it.
A
I think you make a very compelling point for that. I just. I think it's arrogant that we could assume that we could replace something with a bunch. I mean, have you ever read the ingredients of formula? Like, how could that be good?
B
Parasites. We have parasites that have been parasites upon humanity for such a long time. And that's what happens is that something is discovered. And for some people, maybe it can be a good idea. But then the parasites take it and want to. So when it came to breastfeeding, it was, you don't have to do that. You don't have to bother yourself like that. You don't have to pull your boobs out in public. You don't have to become a dairy cow. Just strap them down. The milk will stop, and then you can start putting this wonderful. When I was a kid, I was fed soy milk in a warm plastic bag. That was the fad then, growing up. So the formula industry is A huge moneymaker. And some women do prefer it. Fortunately, 75% of women in the USA today do initiate breastfeeding. So that's very much better than the polio days when almost nobody was breastfeeding and they were using milk in the infant formula that had been contaminated by what the cows were eating.
A
Oh, my God.
B
And so that was another part of the polio story that's not been told.
A
So the cows were all eating these pesticides.
B
Yes.
A
And herbicides.
B
Yes.
A
And the cows were getting sick with it. And then these people were drinking the milk from that cow and getting sick.
B
As well, eating the meat. The cows wouldn't have been necessarily getting sick from it, but it would be concentrating in their milk, and so the milk would have been expressed. But you just brought me back to another place. Cows were also used during the smallpox era. And what you're saying is true about that. So they would basically take what they thought. Sorry, it's just so dark that sometimes you have to laugh. But they would take pus from other animals, scratch it into the belly of a cow, then take the pus off of the big pimples that would form on the belly of a cow. The cow could become very sick. And yet that cow could still be butchered up at the butcher shop. The butcher would get sick, sick with pemphigus or some hand and mouth disease or, you know, things that the cows normally catch. And so those cows could still be used to produce meat in those cases. I don't know that it was used to produce milk. I don't think that would have. I don't know. But I know it was used to produce meat because the butchers were getting sick and the people that were eating the meat were getting sick. And certainly the people that took the vaccines that had certain who knows what in them because. Because it was shown, like into the 1970s, 80s, and even recently, I have a reference from after the year 2000 that there was more bacteria and fungus in the smallpox vaccines than there was smallpox virus. So it was because they had this thing called pure lymph, which was pus that came out of the horse's foot or a donkey pus skin or a cadaver of a human or a cow's ulcerating udders and scraped into glycerin and called pure lymph and marketed all over the world as a. This is the. Joe, this was our success. This is the one vaccine that eliminated, eradicated a disease. Can you believe that fairytale? I'll tell you another one like it doesn't get crazy. This is our success. This vaccine that I had described in great detail with what was in it and what people saw under microscopes and then later tested genetically was what was called a quasi species, meaning they don't. Even after. After a while, it became its own thing. It wasn't from a horse anymore, it wasn't from a human anymore. They called it humanized horse pox. When they genetically characterized the dry vacs and then ordered that every dry vac specimen on the planet be destroyed, I think that was around 2009.
A
Why did they do that?
B
Good question. I don't know. Hiding the evidence? Possibly. But they now have a new vaccine, vaccine which doesn't work, but they wanted to bring this one back. When I was in the peak of my career in 2003, I got a letter on my desk stating that they needed people to get vaccinated for smallpox so that those other people that were getting vaccinated would have somebody that could treat them that would be immune to smallpox. Because it's well known that if you get a smallpox vaccine, you get these horrible scabs, that you're going to spread smallpox and you're going to have a horrible itchy time of it secondary infections. You will need a doctor at some point. Well, it turns out that the trials that they did on super healthy people, soldiers that were in top shape, were so bad in terms of cardiac disease and other diseases that the government put it on hold for a second and said, oh, no, no, we can't do this. Meanwhile, guess what? They were using the same vaccine in the 1700s and 1800s, late 1700s, all through the 1800s into the 1900s, they would. Sometimes you probably saw the picture of the child's arm considered a good take. Five huge ulcers on the arm, with sanitation being what it was, no antibiotics. Can you imagine having your baby have five scars on its arm, ulcerating from these things, having fevers? Sometimes the arms became necrotic, sometimes the disease spread all over the place and there was nothing to give them except bloodletting mercurials and arsenicals and heating them up in a dark room with no sunlight. That was the treatment for smallpox. So you tell me why smallpox was so lethal.
A
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B
That's right.
A
And just the way people lived is almost unheard of. You wouldn't be able to imagine just the smell of human feces everywhere. Like streets were filled with outhouses, there was animal shit in the streets. It was no sanitation, there's no running water. It's a disaster. It's a disaster. And there's no good food. So you got malnutrition. You're exposed to numerous pathogens and just waste. You probably have fecal matter on everything. It's probably unavoidable tracks in your house. It's everywhere you go.
B
It's your drinking water. The drinking water was the. You would skim the top off for your drinking water back then. And we know that co infections make any primary infection worse. You know, if you have measles and you get a CO infection makes it worse. Covid with a CO infection, anything makes it worse. You end up with, you know, pneumonias and pus pockets in your lungs. So yeah, thank you for that description. I don't think I could have done it much better myself.
A
But that's, that's the, that was normal. Go watch Gangs of New York. Like that's that's obviously a drama. And you know, it's probably not completely accurate, but I bet it's pretty close. Yeah, but it's pretty close down. People live back then.
B
Yeah, the slums like you can actually like in here. It's not all medical articles quoted. Some of the quotes that we use are historical quotes from, you know, anthropologists that would go through the slums in New York. You know, the Ellis island was just bringing people in, bringing people in. And these. They would sometimes have 20 people in one room with no privy, dark, you know, like you say, some of the. And the sewage would run underneath the house, so the smell of it would be coming up through the whole time. And then you'd have them working 16 hours a day. At the 8th, anything upwards of 4 to 5 years old could be sent to either coal mines or canneries to bring money in for the families to barely survive. So people weren't being paid very well. But you just said smallpox being what it was. But what people don't realize is that in the 1600s, late 1680s, doctors were describing smallpox as one of the easiest diseases to treat if you simply just supported the human. Again quoted. And then what happened is the Industrial Revolution and people were taken with the land enclosure acts out from the farms and brought into cities which didn't have the pigs, basically were the garbage men back then. So the pigs ran wild, thank God, because if they didn't, it would have been even worse. Horses were your cars, so horses were dumping everywhere. Some people just. They said there was a foot of horse manure to get through to walk across the street. So it was horrible in pretty much every way you can think of. And then the human oppression on top of it, in terms of the poverty that was there and the wealthy elite at the top kind of, you know, living the good life. But it was starting to filter up to them at some point, which is why it was actually individual people that sponsored the first public drinking fountains and things like that was probably partly to save themselves, because if you can. If you can stop disease from running rampant through society, look, they still had to go into the cities to get things. And even if you sent your servant into the city, your servant could bring you home something lovely from the city. Yeah.
A
This is not the picture that was painted when we were children of what society was like.
B
No. We were told that this vaccine was so important and it was so effective that we don't need it anymore. I actually ended up with one when I was very young.
A
I think what we're talking about when we're saying the conditions, that these conditions aren't known to most people and that these conditions coincide with these diseases. And it's probably not just a correlation.
B
So the conditions correlate with the diseases, and the conditions also correlate with the death rates. Okay. And so there were many of the diseases that we're talking Say, just diarrhea. Do you know diarrhea killed more people in the Civil War than bullets and lots of other wars? Diarrhea. Diarrhea can be caused by lots of things. Nothing that we vaccinate for, essentially. Well, I mean, today there's rotavirus, but that wasn't a thing then. It was more, you know, typhus and things like that, so. And cholera.
A
Are they getting it from water?
B
Yeah, that's what that would have been because they would be out, you know, in the, in the, in the bush or the trenches, you know, drinking what they could. So redirect me again. We were just talking about the. Okay, so the, the diseases that there were never any vaccines for. We see the death rate come down at the same exact avalanche as the diseases that we did vaccinate for. And in some cases there's a little blip when the vaccine comes up and things get worse for a bit and then come back down. So again, the point of the book was just interpreting the data that's existed for a really long time, vital statistics throughout the world as to the decline in death rate. In some cases, disease rates went down too. But the most important thing was the death rate, because that's what people. Your baby could die. You have to have a vaccine, right? It's not. Your baby could have a rash. So different diseases have different severities and different solutions and different ways to treat them so that they never have to present to a hospital. But like you said back in those days, there wasn't. The pharmacies basically had your mercurials, arsenicals, if you were lucky, some homeopathics. That was pretty much medicine back then, until aspirin was invented. Which was probably one of the reasons why the 1918 looked as bad as it did, because they were giving people up to 10 grams of aspirin a day, which can cause pulmonary edema in a healthy person.
A
So what was the logic behind the arsenics and the mercurials? Like, how did that become an approach that they used for medicine?
B
Well, I don't know. Actually don't know the answer to why they started doing that.
A
Those are two really bad things.
B
Well, I'll tell you how. They prescribed it. As they would say, give one grain until emesis occurs. That means throwing up. So give it until the person throws up. Because back then they believed that if they could get you to throw up, they thought bringing stuff out of your body was good. Bloodletting, throwing up and diarrhea. And so that was the threshold for giving a Lot of these drugs. So they thought instead, how can you get someone to have diarrhea as a doctor? Okay, well, we can give them mercurials and arsenicals that will do the trick. And so they thought that they could purge the body.
A
I think in medicine, past, present and future.
B
Yeah.
A
Okay. Paradoxically, is a therapeutic agent that has been used since ancient times for the treatment of multiple diseases. So does it actually cure some stuff in small doses?
B
What good is it cure if you have a dead patient or a patient with neuropathy? You haven't really cured anyone, have you?
A
Right. Well, isn't it dose dependent? Right. It says arsenic trioxide, the active ingredient in traditional Chinese medicine, was shown to produce dramatic remission of acute. You could say that word, Leah. Ma'am.
B
Promyelocytic leukemia.
A
Thank you.
B
Yeah. Similar to the fact that they decided that vitamin A could do it. Okay, Right.
A
Trans retinoic acid. So retinoic acid, which is vitamin A. Yeah. Okay, that's interesting. There are still a lot of poisons used in oncology. I'd say it's less risky for vitamin A than arsenic.
B
I mean, that's probably slightly different.
A
Slightly different kind of arsenic or a lower dose of arsenic is that they.
B
Measured things in grains back then, so I guess that's probably like maybe like a milligram, something like that.
A
But the Chinese medicine's probably the root of it. Right. Why they thought it was medicine.
B
Could be.
A
And maybe they used the wrong arsenic or. That's possible.
B
I guess you start trying the things that you have. Right.
A
Mercury is a crazy one, though. Haven't they known that's poison forever? Like wasn't that quicksilver though? Wasn't it in the same thing or.
B
No.
A
I don't know.
B
It's a fascinating metal because it's liquid. It's a liquid metal. A lot of people played with it when they were kids. I know. Some of the smartest people I know talk about how they played with the mercury ball when they were little.
A
Yikes.
B
And it's in thermometers. And obviously it works quite well. There's a use for mercury, but the reason that it's put into the. Actually in the MMR vaccines and some of the flu vaccines is because it's an antimicrobial. It'll kill everything. So maybe that was part of that. Because it will kill everything. It will kill the microbes in a petri dish. So in order to. Because this is one of the realities of vaccine manufacture, which I want your audience to understand is that Vaccines. While it might look like just a clear liquid, in order to make a vaccine you have to have either a cow that you put ulcers on and scrape the pus off, or you can evolve it as it had evolved to maybe getting some tumorous cells that came out of a cocker spaniel's kidney or monkey balls or monkey kidneys. And you plate those cells out and then you inoculate it with what you want to grow to put in your vaccine later. But in order to keep those cells alive, you have to put animal blood on it, you have to put different nutrients on top of it. You have to put antibiotics, kanamycin, things like that. Related to the COVID here, mercury. Okay. So in the end you can kill. You can make sure when you have your final product that if you put of mercury in there that it's less likely for any of the fungus or the spores or the bacteria or the adventitious viruses that you didn't know about that were there before will be in your final product. Wonderful. So you have a product now that you can be not completely sure has any of these deadly microbes, but now has mercury, which the only places it's actually okay to have on the planet mercury is in vaccine, your tooth or toxic landfill. So if you were to drop a vaccine at a vaccine clinic onto the floor, the HAZMAT guys would come and you're not allowed to just pick it up. If it's got, if it's a mercury containing vaccine, the HAZMAT people have to come and take that away. Yet we're okay to take, you know, a portion of that vial and inject it into, you know, a child, a three month old child. How does that work?
A
It doesn't sound logical.
B
Six month old actually.
A
There was also the issue with the different types of mercury, right. Is it methyl and ethyl, the two different.
B
Yeah, apparently ethyl is good and methyl is bad, according to Paul Offit, senior vaccine scientist. But the fact of the matter is once mercury is methylated, fish can methylate mercury and they can get rid of it. Once we demethylate mercury, it's in us until you do something like something called chelation, where you can put a chemical into the body that can grab onto it and pull it out through your urine, otherwise you're stuck with it. So in my opinion, all mercury is bad, shouldn't be put into humans, shouldn't be in our food sources, shouldn't be in our environment. Except for in the. Look, you can even find uranium in nature, right? It's what people do to it to concentrate it and how they use it, that becomes a problem.
A
Wasn't the issue that one of them, I don't know, it's methyl or ethylmercury leaves the body quicker.
B
Yes, it's ethylmercury that leaves the body quicker because methyl is a chemical that gets put onto it naturally. And apparently I'm not an expert on mercury poisoning, but apparently methylmercury we don't have the ability to excrete, but ethylmercury we do.
A
Yeah, but wasn't there also an issue that it crosses the blood brain barrel?
B
Well, anytime there's inflammation, anything can cross the blood brain barrier. It's the aluminum that we really know crosses the blood brain barrier and that's still in vaccines today. And yeah, anyway, we'll get into blood brain barrier if you want to. That's a whole other story. But yeah, so mercury, obviously it can get into the brain, it's found in the brain, it can get into your adrenals and your other glands and important areas of your body. And even the thing is that even at such low levels can cause problems. No neurotoxin, it has no place for circulating or being deposited in the human body in any form.
A
But isn't it fascinating that they've done such a good job promoting this that people are going to get outraged at what you're saying. They've done such a good job and you've got a lot of courage. I don't want to commend you for that because writing that book and being here talking about it takes a lot of courage. And it's from regular people who want to believe the vaccine. They're scarier than anybody. The people that are just rabid vaxxers and they want, they stand for science like they're the warriors for science. And they get very aggressive about it and they don't even want to breach the subject. They don't even want to look at it. Because the more you look at it, if you're a logical, rational person without like a deep seated ideology attached to vaccines and you just look that the reality of it, you just go, what is this? How did you trick people into injecting how many a year now for kids?
B
What is it in the 70s? I believe we're in the 70s.
A
That's insane.
B
Yeah.
A
And then you want to demonize anybody who says anything about vaccine side effects. You are the craziest of kooks. They come down you with the hardest publicity campaign. It's so transparent. You see it coming a mile away and you're still shocked by how blatant it is. And no one wants to look at the actual issue itself. And no one wants to say like, well, is she right? If you read your book, is she right? If you're right, and I think you're right, like we've been lied to and we've been tricked into thinking that this is all settled science. And that's what's infuriating. It's not that it's anti science. It's like this is not science. What you guys are doing is not science. You've subverted, you've perverted that notion and you've done it in an amazing way. I mean, hats off to you what they've done in terms of brainwashing people to believe that all this is, it's not just necessary, but it saved millions of lives. And anybody that is against it in any way, shape or form is a quack and you should be deplatformed and never talked about again and polite, like public society and cocktail parties, you'll be shunned.
B
Yeah, well, the way they were able to get away with it is 226 years worth of propaganda. Because the fact of the matter is that ever since the beginning of the smallpox vaccines, there have been vaccine deaths. The reason, and look, we've added, I brought you a special copy. This is a limited edition. In the 10th anniversary edition we added 200 pages, we added a chapter called the White Plain. The white plague is also tuberculosis. Tuberculosis was a side effect of the smallpox vaccine. Tuberculosis rates were rampant. In fact, the inventor of the smallpox vaccine, his child died of tuberculosis and so did his two test subjects that he used. And it was well known to follow smallpox. Lots of doctors talked about it. But in about two or three years after the vaccine was accepted in England, you hear doctors speaking out about it, cursing the day they ever agreed to do it to people, to children, to anybody. And so what happened is that the government came down harder and started making it mandatory and would take your furniture away and started intimidating the doctors. And that's an age old thing as well. And I experienced it. And any doctor that's ever stepped out of line and said something bad about vaccines will either be intimidated or worse. So 220 years of. 226 years of propaganda. And so I'm just going to give you one example and I'll give you a copy of this to have and you can put it up later if you want. But in 1984 because there was so much going on in terms of the public learning about the problems with the diphtheria tetanus pertussis vaccine and the polio vaccines that a Federal Register was issued by the government and went to all health departments in the United States, which is supposed to be just kept there and never circulated. And it said, said, quote, any doubts whether or not well founded about the safety of the vaccination program must not be allowed to exist. That's literally what it said. It's straight out of Lennon. So you had that. Then you have the changing of the goalposts and the outright lies within scientism. Because it's not science. It's a religion that calls itself science. And we still are a victim of that today. Most science today is sponsored by the very people that are going to profit from it. And I think even. Look, even Jenner, who invented the smallpox fancy, never did a scientific study. He never did a controlled study. He never did non vaccinated people. Vaccinated people and then exposed them to smallpox in a large enough group. He would cowpox them and then expose them to smallpox. And it was well known that smallpox followed cowpox. So it's just been. Look again. I never expected to be here. I just wanted to be a healer. I just wanted to be a doctor. I wanted to be a nephrologist and teach medical students and make the world a better place for people. That's all I ever wanted. This is a nightmare for me actually to. While I've met some incredible people and I've had a really good life and I have no regrets and I would do it all again. No doctor wants to be put in a position where their integrity is doubted, their sanity is doubted. And if you want to pull up a page called it is called Rational Wiki, I think maybe anyway, I'm considered as a Sith Lord, a very. And in fact, I didn't know what a Sith Lord was back then. I had to actually look it up. So I'm like Darth Vader. So a bit. It was a bit of a compliment. But on the other hand, most doctors can't tolerate being called quacks or having their reputation destroyed. And you know, I went from treating the CEO of actually the. The head of the laboratory at my hospital for hypertension to becoming somebody that was doubted on every levels after a while because of one thing that I said, which was, can we stop giving vaccines to my sick patients, to people who are having chemotherapy while they're having chemotherapy to my patient before I've even seen them on the ward. Can we just hold this up and give it to them on the day of discharge? That was my request in the beginning. That's how this all landed here. And had they not not tried to intimidate me, doubt me, and pushed me to research and show that what I saw was actually real, I would still be lockstep working as a regular doctor because there were some good things about it. So look, even if you look at what happened with COVID let's just look at that. Like, how did they pass this off? Look at the media today. You know that they're giving Covid vaccines to six month old children. Now we know how bad it is. We know that it ruins stem cells in pregnant women. They don't give stem cells to their babies. The industry's upset because the placentas, no long stem cells. And they used to use those stem cells in research and cosmetics, et cetera. They're not getting them anymore because of what the COVID shots did to the placenta and those infants. That's not being talked about in the media. Nothing bad about the shots being talked about. When we have Kevin McKernan and all these people looking at it going, there's SV40 in it, there was a staphylococcal endotoxin gene. There were two snake genes in there. You know, it's a definite gain of function. Nope, we got to put it on the vaccine, the baby vaccine scene schedule. Because any doubts whether or not well funded about the vaccination must not be allowed to exist. That's why that sounds like a religion and it's been.
A
It sounds like a cult. It sounds like a crazy cult that the whole world's been sucked into. Giving a Covid shot to a baby today is insane.
B
Three of them, they get three by the cert. You'd have to look up the schedule. But I believe it starts at six months and they get three of them kind of boom, boom, boom.
A
The doctors really recommend it.
B
This, it's on the look, there's a group of people called acip, the doctors usually with vaccine interests in their bank accounts that make the recommendations for the vaccines. And they have recommended that 6 month olds. So if your doctor is following the ACIP program, you have to be offered that vaccine. And now that doctor, this is another part of the story is that Dr. Is likely to lose $250,000 a year if they don't do that. That because there's incentive given to hospitals and doctors, which is What? Naively, I was on the other end of when I woke up in 2008 and said, wait a minute, why are we doing this stuff to my sick, inflamed patients? You're giving more inflammation. It's because the hospital would lose something like $40,000 if they didn't give a vaccine within the first 24 hours of admission.
A
Oh, my God.
B
And they would get 40,000. It was all a money game. That's really the bottom line of it. And I didn't know that until a nurse years ago who was a high level administration. She said, suzanne, this is why they did that to you. Oh, wow. Okay. Well, at least it makes sense now.
A
Nobody wants to think of it as a business. Nobody wants to think you're making business decisions at the expense of someone's health and possibly whether or not they make it. Like, what are you doing?
B
Well, that's been the case since basically the medical profession was infiltrated in the early 1900s by high level interests that didn't want us thinking for ourselves and carrying on with the natural cures that actually work. Carrying on with normal midwifery. There was just so many changes that happened as a result of best practice medicine, not to mention the forming of the AMA by a couple of real quacks. That's a really good story. And the AMA would give their stamp of approval. So say you created an infant formula. Well, it would say AMA approved and your infant formula would sell even better. Remember when doctors smoked camels because camels were bad? Those were the days.
A
And this is also the time when this coincides with when Rockefeller was designing the school system. Right.
B
Well, first Rockefeller, I think oil was one of their primary.
A
So that's the pharmacy aspect of it. That's right, yeah.
B
Oh, so you want to talk about school systems?
A
No, but he did both. Right? He was a part of both. So he was a part of the reason why natural cures are so easily dismissed and why it's so dismissed because Rockefeller put the entire medical establishment on oil based. So all pharmaceutical drugs that are made by using oil. And he did it because he sold oil.
B
You know, one of the ironies. It kind of works.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
Like I got rid of a really bad case of mange and a dog by kerosene. Putting kerosene diluted in olive oil. And they had been through everything. They could not get rid of this mange on this beautiful dog. Oh, wow, that's crazy. It's a cane Corso dog. And yeah, so mange is horrible for dogs. Really bad. But one spray, it was done.
A
I had a dog that I picked up.
B
You have to keep careful around the flames and stuff.
A
I had a dog that I picked up off the street and took her in and she had horrible mange. But it all went away with just food. I just gave her healthy food.
B
No, it can't. Jo, come on. You had to have an expert help you.
A
No kerosene, no nothing.
B
Just love food. That was an argument I had in the hallway once with the senior chief of medicine. He was like, he would always say, so how are you today? Normally be like, good, you know, superficial composition. I said, by the way, I'm having real trouble with the H1N1 vaccine. My patient's getting kidney failure after getting it. And he turned dark on me. I never saw him dark before. And he said, no, that just didn't have time to take effect. And of course then I heard every kind of soundbite in the book from him, which I didn't know were sound bites at the time. And then he said, well, what do you think is happening with meningitis and these college kids? I'm like, oh, come on, that's a total no brainer. It's like their nutrition goes down the tubes when they leave home. They're smoking, they're staying up all night long, they're hanging out with their pals, they're doing everything they couldn't do when they were at home. Oh, you got to be kidding me. So you think it's their food that's causing problems? And I, I was like, well, what medical school did you go to? I was actually taught that nutrition matters and how it matters and why it matters. But that's been almost completely. If you want to sneak vitamin C into somebody's hospital room, you know the best way to do it. Don't bring in a jar of vitamin C, because they will stop that at the door. You get yourself a McDonald's milkshake or a burger, and you just dump that milkshake out and you put something else in there, a smoothie with some vitamin C. And they will say, off you go, that's perfectly fine. That's going to be great for this person, this child. That's how you can get it in. Because they think that McDonald's is wonderful. In fact, McDonald's are kind of situated proximal to a lot of hospitals and the Ronald McDonald houses are there and everything else. But bring in a homeopathic or magnesium or vitamin C and you've got to get permission for it and go through so much red tape and a lot of time you'll be told, no, you can't give it because, oh, you'll cause bowel necrosis, you'll cause diarrhea, you'll cause kidney stones. Everything in the, the book that doesn't actually happen with vitamin C. It's what most. Look, they've measured vitamin C levels on people that enter hospitals and pretty much everybody's deficient or on the border of deficient when they enter. And pretty much everybody when they leave has got borderline scurvy, if not full scurvy. Fortunately, they go home and start doing other things and can rebuild some of their vitamin C scores. But there's a lot of subclinical scurvy walking around out there. And those are the people that are going to do the worst with the vaccine and then the worst. They're going to do the worst with it.
A
Subclinical scurvy in modern society, just from poor diet.
B
Well, you know, it's not just the poor diet. So any kind of stress will consume vitamin C. A cigarette will consume 75 milligrams of vitamin C. And they tell you that you only need 190 milligrams a day. That's the FDA requirement. So you just have a few cigarettes and you've depleted your stores. So we don't make our own vitamin C as humans, humans and guinea pigs, we don't do that. And so we have to consume it. And we're reliant upon our fruits and vegetables or supplements to do. Or if you eat organ meat, you can eat the adrenals that are loaded with it. But aside from that, it's your fruits and vegetables that are going to give it to you. So if you're under a lot of stress or you're taking medication or you have a lot of inflammation or arthritis, whatever that's going to consume vitamin C. Because vitamin C is an antioxidant as well as an antiviral and, you know, good for your nervous system. So, yeah, most people are walking around, skimming the edge. If you have, you can see kind of a red line on some people's gums, they're probably vitamin C deficient. If your gums are bleeding a lot when you floss, you probably need some vitamin C. And, you know, you could have an infection, too, but it will deal to the infection as well as the integrity and the collagen inside of your bones and your soft tissues. I mean, it's like one of those things that's so important. It should be given upon admission to every hospital.
A
And what's really crazy is if you're one of those people that thinks that all you need is a balanced diet and you're eating like a piece of chicken and some lettuce, there's no vitamin C in any of that.
B
Or not enough, probably not enough.
A
Yeah, not enough.
B
Won't do it.
A
Yeah. If you're not consuming, like some sort of liposomal vitamin C supplement, if you're not taking something on top of that, you're probably not at an optimal level to survive anything, which is. It's also. It's like part of why we have so many metabolic diseases. We have bad metabolic health. We have metabolic diseases. Like they should. It should be super obvious, like, oh, everyone's like, really unhealthy and doesn't have any nutrients in their system, and they're all getting really sick from all these different things. Huh?
B
Yeah.
A
But everyone's like, no, you need medicine, you need a shot, you need a this, you need that, you need to get on this, you need to get off that and get back on this.
B
And you're a hippie. If you want to just eat kiwi fruits and get your vitamin C from that or have oranges or broccoli. Oh, my gosh, broccoli makes you a total hippie. Or kale, forget about it.
A
Nuts.
B
Now, see, we have a different kind of malnutrition today than we describe in the book. Back then it was people were toxic from basically drinking poop water and being worked to death and having diseases all around them. Them. And so they were protein, calorie, malnutrition as well as vitamin as well. Today we have kind of dysnutrition, you know, like dys. Dys. Nutrition and that. Everyone's fat, so they don't really look malnourished. Pretty much, you know, you. You go on a cruise or you go to the beach. You even go to Bert Kreischer's house. Big bellies now. Big belly is the thing. What was that?
A
I said go to Bert Kreischer's house.
B
Who's that? That's my friend.
A
He's gonna hate that.
B
You don't know who he is, but, you know, so today we've got inflamed guts from, you know, glyphosate and, you know, the wheat that's been altered to make us inflamed and then just the chemicals that are added to our food and the vitamins that actually don't help us and set us back that are fortifying our, you know, bread and milk, lack of vitamin D. So we have a different kind of a problem, but essentially causing the same bodily dysfunction.
A
Yeah. The wheat thing I used to think was none nonsense until I ate pasta and bread in Italy and I was like, okay, why do I feel so much better?
B
Yeah.
A
Why do I not feel like I just ate poison? Because I love, like, pizza.
B
Oh, yeah.
A
I love lasagna. Oh, I love it. I love it. It's so good. But after it's over, I'm like, I'm incapacitated for like an hour or two. For like a two hour period. You just, just like a shadow of yourself. Just.
B
Yeah, you think, oh, maybe it's just the high carbs. But you just proved that it wasn't because in Italy you were okay with it.
A
I ate a whole pizza in Italy and I was waiting for it. I was like, I'm gonna eat this margherita pizza. It's so good. They made it brick oven. I was like, this is so good. I'm eating the whole pizza. I don't care. I don't care what it's going to feel like. Afterwards, I ate that whole pizza and then I was like, where is it? Is it coming?
B
Waiting for the.
A
Never came. Never came. I felt normal. I felt like I just ate food. Food. I was like, this is nuts. Like, no. Crash.
B
Yeah. Bread in Scandinavia, same.
A
That's what people used to eat.
B
People don't know that. What's that?
A
I said that's what people use.
B
Like real, real food.
A
People need to understand, like, what they did was. And this is according to Maynard from Tool. Do you know Maynard Keenan, the lead singer of Tool?
B
No.
A
He actually runs a farm. He. He has vineyards and he has like, like he's Caduceus is his wine label. And he's like, really good at growing things because he has a restaura restaurant. He was explaining to me that what they did is they just engineered it to have higher yield so they put more. It's got more complex glutens in it. So it's not the normal organic wheat that grows in Italy, where they don't have genetically modified crops.
B
Right.
A
So you can still get that flour and you can still get that pasta from Italy and it's much more consumable.
B
Yeah.
A
But the American stuff is just thick. It's just your body's like, what is this? It just comes in, like sludge.
B
It is interesting.
A
It feels like I ate glue. That's what it always feels, feels like when it's over. Unless it's really good sourdough bread that doesn't seem to have that.
B
Yeah, yeah, I kind of agree. Like, I'm not gluten sensitive, but I definitely feel more awake when I don't have it.
A
Yeah, it's not good on holiday or when you want to eat it. But it's so delicious.
B
I know, I know.
A
It's so delicious. But this is also a problem. And this goes back to when RJ Reynolds was going through all their stuff with the lawsuits that were coming from people realizing, oh, my God, cigarettes give you cancer. They're not good to, like, smoke if you have emphysema. I thought they were good for.
B
Add some arsenic and it'd be great.
A
There was a movie, and I forget what movie it was, and it.
B
Thank you for smoking.
A
Well, there's that. There was a movie where Leonardo DiCaprio was young and he was sick and his doctor was prescribing cigarettes to him. And like the mother was saying, did you smoke your cigarettes that the doctor told you you're not smoking? Like, you need to keep up your health?
B
Well, you know, there's something to that because you know about the nicotinic receptors and you know, the smokers got less Covid than the rest of us. And I did hear about that.
A
Well, also, doesn't nicotine kill Covid like people were saying that nicotine? No. So that's what it is. That's how it kills it.
B
What happens? So the spike of COVID just the evil part of COVID has all these horrible lab engineered proteins encoded into them, and two of them are snake toxin proteins that bind onto your nicotinic receptors. Okay, so if you can smoke nicotine or take nicotine gum, then you're going to block those receptors up so you can trade off some of the stuff that's from the spot.
A
What about like nicotine pouches?
B
Yeah, like that would probably. If you're having long Covid or any kind of post Covid syndrome, that's related to the nicotinic receptors, you only know by trying it. But listen, I always say start small. Don't go out and be a hero and take a whole dose at once. Start with a quarter of whatever it says and wait and see what happens.
A
Yeah.
B
Because nicotine's a powerful drug.
A
Try a cigar. Pick up the cigar habit.
B
Yeah, there you go.
A
It's a wonderful habit. Yeah. That was an uncomfortable thing. In the beginning of COVID they were saying that for some reason, smokers seem to be having a much easier go of it. Like what how do you have a respiratory disease where smokers are, statistically speaking, getting less Covid?
B
Yeah, well, I mean, I've been around. I did a tour one time and there were two heavy, heavy smokers on the bus with me. And they were the only two people that didn't come down with whatever flu with all the rest of us got not even that flu. Couldn't even live in their throats.
A
It kind of makes sense if you think about it.
B
Well, it changes the polarity of your mucous membranes, the charge of the cells on your mucous membranes. And that's probably part of why even the viruses can't adhere properly. Properly.
A
We're not encouraging cigarettes.
B
No, we're not at all.
A
But we are saying.
B
But if you are, it should be non cured, naturally cured.
A
Oh, like American spirits. Like those kind of deals.
B
I get all my smoking friends to convert to that brand.
A
Does that help?
B
Totally help.
A
Come on.
B
Are you kidding me? You know how many horrible carcinogens there are? Do you know, back in the native days when they were smoking and people were smoking natural cigarettes, it was almost unheard of for them to develop lung cancer.
A
Right.
B
With a natural tobacco.
A
American spirit cigarettes are not.
B
Sorry, they're absolutely wrong. It is.
A
It's marketed as natural and additive free, which may lead people to believe that they are a safer option. However, there's no scientific evidence to support this claim. They may even have higher levels of nicotine than some other brands, but the nicotine is not the problem. So.
B
That's exactly right.
A
Just by them saying that there, that leads me to think that this might be propaganda because saying that nicotine is not the problem, that's who is our source. Or rather saying that they might have more nicotine. I'm just. But I understand. But I should understand that nicotine. Cliff, he smokes. I know, I know he does. I'm just saying. AI doesn't make sense. What doesn't make sense is that it's saying they might have more nicotine. But that doesn't matter.
B
They're not addressing.
A
Not to skip time to save time so we don't have to go through. Oh, no, no, no. I'm not saying to you, I'm just saying to them, like what they're writing seems to kind of be silly. Marketing of American spirits as natural can create a false sense of healthiness. This. Which may make it more difficult for people to quit smoking. I think smoking companies wrote this. I think the other companies fed this information.
B
Spitting up blood on the packages and stuff. Do you see?
A
Oh, In England you get those.
B
No, they have it now.
A
Oh, they have in America here. They used to have it in America. In England you'd go to England and they had photos of people with like rocks.
B
That's where I first saw it. But it's moved to the rest of. I know, it's hilarious. It's like. And they still buy them and smell.
A
Well, the interesting thing is, and I'm glad you brought this up, is just cancer in general. There's things that cause cancer, that they're just everywhere. A lot of things in the environment can cause cancer, but sometimes things get into medications that can cause cancer. And what is SV4?
B
I just wrote down SB40 while you were talking. And I'm just going to give you an example of what you're saying is correct. The fact of the matter is that all cancers in humanity have gone up since the inception of vaccination. My opinion, my educated opinion, is that our lifespan should be 120 years. And I think with the knowledge that we have and the wealth that we have on this planet, ingenuity we have on this planet, we should be able to be touching the 120 year mark more commonly than we do. So when vaccines started coming into humanity, we started introducing animal disease into humanity through the skin. And then we started doing intramuscular injections after the hypodermic needle was created. And then you started having deeper injections of animal disease and of chemicals and mercuries and things like that. So along comes polio research. And the polio vaccine even to this day is made on African green monkey kidney cells. Now, the African green monkey kidneys early on were basically taken out of their wild habitat in India. And millions of monkeys were brought to the USA for use. Unbeknownst to them and discovered by a scientist named Dr. Bernice Eddy, is that there was a cancer causing entity inside of the the substrate that they were using to make the vaccine on the petri dishes. And that entity was Simian virus 40. SV40, called SV40 because before there were 39 others discovered before it. Now we're up over 100. So that information was suppressed heavily. Bernice Eddy was offered a ticket to wherever she wanted to go and as much money as she wanted. And she said, no, I'm staying. Long story short is they just kept taking her away from her work and distracting her. And There was another doctor, Jay Anthony Martin. Anyway, so SV40 was around, and then Maurice Hilleman validated it later and said it came from the African green monkey kidneys. Now it's benign in the African Green Monkey, SV40. It is not benign in human beings. In human beings, it was called the perfect war machine by Dr. Michelle Carboni, who was one of the primary researchers looking at the carcinogenic potential of Simian virus 40. So Simian virus 40 would have been in the live polio vaccines because. Because there was nothing to kill it, but it was most likely also in the killed. And African green monkey cells are actually still a listed ingredient on vaccines. So you can go ahead and look that up. It's a fact. So how this affects me is that I'm a kidney specialist and I looked at the curve of kidney cancers that have gone up since the inception of polio vaccines and SV40 introduction so what this virus does, it enhances two cancer promoting genes and it inhibits two cancer suppressors. Okay. That's why it's called the perfect war machine. So that was in the vaccines that were injected. And so the bad news is that we don't need vaccines to give it to us anymore because we're going to give it to each other forever and it's never going anywhere. That was introduced to humanity like a lot of other diseases were. Through vaccination, we can give it to our kids, we can give it to each other. It comes out in the urine. And so it lives in the green monkey kidneys. It lives in our kidneys. As a kidney specialist, there are a lot of mysterious diseases. Lo and behold, there was some research into some of them. And the research was just put. This is the other thing, the research that's really important just gets killed. The funding gets killed. In terms of SV40 kidney cancers, there's no doubt that the rate of kidney cancers has gone up alongside with the, with the infection rate of humanity for SV40, as well as diseases like glomerulonephritis, which they do find the pathogen genetic material inside. And even in the old days, they found it in the tumors but not the surrounding areas. So that just tells you that it was a stimulant for the tumor cells to just start propagating. So that's just one of the things that. That's just one of many, many of the obvious ones. And even though it's been well defined in the medical literature, you will still see that they only admit that it causes mesotheliomas and one other thing, not that it causes all the other things that it does that it's been shown to cause in the other medical literature that got its funding revoked.
A
So SV40 is now contagious amongst people.
B
Absolutely. Yeah. We probably both have it. Most of us probably have had it one time or other. You know, whether it's lying dormant in our kidneys. It depends on everything. Depends on your background immunity, which depends on what you're doing for fun and not fun, and how you're eating and how much you're sleeping, et cetera, how much sun you're getting. Sweating. Sweating gets rid of a lot of stuff. It's really good to sweat.
A
It's just such a disturbing thought that this was introduced to people through vaccines and now is spreading. And what's the worst health impact that it could have if it spreads to you and not through a vaccine? If you didn't get it through this vaccine and you just get it from another person?
B
Oh, it's the same thing. It's not going to make much difference in terms. It'll gravitate to your kidneys, obviously. It probably goes to lung as well. Brain tumors were a big problem with it back in the polio days. Dr. Michelle Carboni was looking at the brain tumors with that. There's a really good book called the Virus and the Vaccine by Book Chin and Schumacher. It's an incredible book that details everything about those years. The scientists involved, the suppression, the oppression, the lies, the skullduggery. Then they would bring in the scientists who had no experience in actually detecting SV40. And lo and behold, he couldn't find it. And he was the one that got to make the ultimate statement on whether SV40 causes human disease or not.
A
How could they keep injecting that into people if they know this?
B
Oh, and the stocks that contained SV40 were still basically being used by the vaccine manufacturers up into the 1990s and probably beyond, because there's two different kinds of SV40. You're making me remember a whole bunch of things that I thought I forgot. But there's the fast dividing and there's the slow dividing. There's two different kind of strains of it and the original test. So when they made a vaccine, they would test it for 14 days looking for SV40. If it didn't have it, off you went. Your vaccine was good to go. But the problem is there was a slower dividing SV40 that remained in the vaccines that were injected and probably in the stocks that are. The stock is basically like your mother tincture or whatever. It's what you use to kind of inoculate all the new batches over time. And so the stocks were found. That's again, quote Dr. Attorney Stanley Kopp's quote in the book about the SV40 still being in the stock up and through the 1990s and you know, God only knows if there's, if it's still, if they're still using those same stocks. I don't know because I haven't gone into the more modern times of SV40. But yeah, we all have it. And there's no doubt in my mind that it's just like another one of the things that the parasites have finally pretty much put into us to set us back.
A
Demons. It's like real world demons. It's so crazy that someone would know this and still have this as an ingredient in a vaccine.
B
Well, they'll say that it was just an unfortunate set of events that happened because they took wild monkeys from India. See, I could work for them. That's their excuse. And they say we cleaned it up. You know, we started our own monkey colonies and we started breeding our own monkey colonies that were now found to be free of SV40. The only problem with that is that as I said, they had already inoculated human humanity. And it's with a virus that can be spread vertically and horizontally as the scientists would describe. Meaning we've all given it to each other. I think there are going to be very few people walking around today that haven't been introduced to it.
A
Have there ever been a comparison of pre cancer rates pre SV40 and post SV40?
B
Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. That's what I did is in one of my videos I did that and looked at the cancer rates since they were, you know. So again what they'll say is, well, we just didn't look at the rates beforehand, but the rates were quite low before you can know what the surgical, what the nephrectomies were. So it's kind of an easy thing to look at because that's the treatment for kidney cancer. You take the kidney out because you got another kidney and it's a slow growing tumor even though it can metastasize. But anyway, I did look and the rate has skyrocketed for kidney cancer. Pretty much everybody knows somebody who had.
A
A kidney cancer and that was not common.
B
No. And also these protein losing diseases, which is again, it's not controversial. It was documented when they looked at the areas that were affected in the kidney with this horrible disease that makes people lose the proteins that need to stay in their blood, in their body, out into their urine. That the SB40 was related to that. It's called focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. And it's a real problematic disease in children and adults. Ultimately you have to go on horrible chemotherapy drugs that ruin your immune system and then transplantation if you can't stay on top of it. Big money maker. Now, do I think that that was the purpose? Look, I don't know what was in the hearts and minds. I don't know what was accidental and what wasn't. But I do know that there was intentional suppression of the truth. Any doubts whether or not well funded must not be allowed to exist. That is a fact. And it's always been that way. And there have been scientists and doctors talking about that since the beginning of vaccination.
A
It's just too horrible to believe for most people, I think. And then also you're correct. It goes against religious dogma, you know, especially with people that are like, firmly on the left.
B
Yeah.
A
Trusting the science and trusting the experts, those are. Those are two things at the firm. Right.
B
It's kind of a childlike situation that humanity, most of humanity is in is that they're, you know, I think most people are good and they want to believe everybody else is good and they want to believe that the government is looking out for them. And it's a really. It's a kind of horrifying. Imagine if it was true that your government actually wasn't looking out for you and that might be one of the causes of your decreasing lifespan. Imagine that if the government might not care so much if your baby ends up with no stem cell cells or your baby gets cancer or autism, which will be outright den. I mean, look at autism. Hello. Like, do we. How many? I don't even know where to start with that. But that was another thing where there was no doubt whether or not well funded, allowed to exist when it came to autism. And every autistic parent, parent of an autistic child will tell you this. Everyone that's tried to lobby and get to the truth with autism will tell you that the brick walls and the plexiglass and the lead walls that went down were intense and still are intense. And the lying studies that they use to uphold vaccines don't cause autism are so easy to dismantle. But you know, Joe, you know, the lie gets around the earth three times before the truth has a chance to get out of bed. And that is pretty much what happens when the media is owned and like, you're like one of the cracks in the matrix here. Quite frankly.
A
I think for a lot of people it's too horrible to believe, especially if they have an autistic child, that this was caused by a vaccine. I know a guy who told me that he believes the vaccine had an impact on his child having autism and then later was shaming people for not taking the COVID vaccine. That's how strong the impulse is. Is. And that's how good the propaganda was, and that's how cowardly a lot of people are when it comes to fighting against a narrative. They get very scared of being socially ostracized, and they just. They can't speak their mind. They can't tell the truth. And they'll whisper it to maybe this one guy that they're friends with, like, hey, you know, I don't want to take it, man, but I have to for work. Like, yeah, I don't trust them either, but, you know, shh. Don't tell anybody I said that. You know, you don't want anybody thinking you're on the bad side. And we all saw the propaganda on television. There's some amazing montages that people put together lately of people saying horrible things about the vaccinated people, unvaccinated people, horrible things. Saying that it may be ghoulish to laugh when unvaccinated people die, but it might be necessary. Like, what?
B
A few of us have to take one for the team.
A
It was just the weirdest propaganda campaign, and people were doing the job of the man. It wasn't the man forcing the people to do this thing. It was people doing the job of the man and going after the people that hadn't stepped in line. And I think for a lot of people, it's like they felt terrible that they had to do it, but if they did it. Now I'm righteous. Now I'm on the good side. Why don't you do it, too, man? I fucking did it. You should do it too. You're fucking selfish. And you get a lot of that. You get a lot of people who. They know they made a mistake and they want you to make that mistake too, you know?
B
Yeah, it would be good to know what really goes through their heads. I think Covid was, again, it was unique. But when you talk to parents who have autistic children, the vast majority of them not only know absolutely without a doubt that their child became autistic usually within 24 to 48 hours after a certain vaccine, but that every doctor told them it wasn't the case. And then they go digging deep into the scientific literature and learning how to sometimes resuscitate that child's brain or detox them and then recover them, and then they're actually beaten up even worse for doing that, because they're just neurodiverse. You know, there's nothing wrong with your child. They're just quirky. No, your child banging its head against the wall, walking around with a baby bottle and a diaper at the age of 18, your big hairy son doing that. That is not neurodiverse quirkiness. That is a serious pathological disease that probably could have been dealt to at the time and should have been prevented, should have never happened. So most parents that have that situation are on fire. It's a minority that will say, have the situation that you have right now. Most of them, that's a wake up call, which is why they get beat up and suppressed even worse than I do. But when it comes to Covid, there was the psychological campaign, I think was very effective in that people that I would have never imagined took the ghost, like friends of mine who I in a million years would have. I would have bet my life that they would say no to it. Ended up getting it, didn't want it, were really upset about it later, but nonetheless did it.
A
Had they read your book?
B
Yes, I see. I didn't lose any friends during COVID because I had already lost them back in, like, 2009. My family and friends were solid. My tribe is here, but yeah, so. But I still love this person, and she's, like, really upset about it. But it's like, it just shows you that the psychological campaign, like, to get into that person's brain was really. But I don't know about you. But there was. I never had a doubt. I never. I was like, well, you're gonna shut me down. Shut me down. You're stopped me from traveling. Go ahead. Stop me from traveling.
A
I hadn't read your book yet, and I was all gung ho to get the vaccine. And the UFC had allocated 150 something vaccines for all their employees. We were doing shows during the pandemic, so I showed up in Vaccine Vegas, asked for the shot. They said I couldn't do it. I had to do it on Monday at the clinic. I couldn't do it at the ufc. I was like, okay, fine. And they said, can you come back in two weeks and do it When? During the next UFC fight. I said, fine, I'll do it. Then during that time, it got pulled from the market for blood clots.
B
Which one? Which jab was it?
A
Johnson and Johnson.
B
Okay.
A
And then two people I knew who got it at Strokes.
B
Okay. In that two weeks?
A
Yes.
B
Well, you've got a few angels, don't you?
A
Yeah. And I was like, hold on, on. And then my whole family got it. There was, like, a bunch of things that happened. My whole family got it, and everybody was fine, and I didn't get it. And I was trying to get it. Like, I had sex with my wife. I. I hugged my kids.
B
You mean you didn't get Covid?
A
No, I didn't get it.
B
But you didn't get the jab either.
A
No.
B
Yeah.
A
No, I. I didn't, but I didn't get it. First time around, I was like, this is crazy. There was two days when I went to the cuz I was trying to get it, and it was. Which sounds horrible, but I was not.
B
Allowed to not get it.
A
I just wanted to get over it. Like, my kids got over it so fast. Fast. Like, my one daughter was. One day, she had kind of a headache, and she tested for Covid. She thought it was hilarious. She started laughing. You know, she's like, oh, my God, I've Covid. But we had already told them, it's not dangerous for kids. Don't worry about it at all, you know, because there was a lot of kids that were talking about getting vaccinated. I'm like, you are not getting for them. I was like, no way. Like, it's not. I'll do it if I have to work.
B
What made you say no way? Like, what did you think about it that you didn't even want your child to get it just in case.
A
Totally unnecessary. So no need to risk it. Totally unnecessary. They got Covid. They got over it like that before the vaccine, but what did you think they would have before the vaccine? But this is before the vaccine. So after that, I was like, there's no way. Because there was pressure from their friends to get vaccinated. I was like, you're not getting vaccinated. You have seven times better immunity than someone who gets vaccinated. Which is proof. And this is just antibodies. Right. Which. And you enlightened me in your book to the fact that there's cellular immunity that's different than just antibodies. Antibodies is one type of immunity to things. Right?
B
That's right. So it's that TH2 slant that we were talking about.
A
For me, with my kids, it's like, they're vaccinated, but we did it on a delayed schedule because that's what my doctor recommended, and we had a really good pediatrician, and it worked out great. They're fine. But I was a Little worried. I thought it was quack like to be worried. Like this is science worried about, about what could vaccines could do to the kids.
B
The regular ones.
A
Absolutely. And the schedule, the way they wanted to just bang them up like real quick and with weird ones like the hepatitis B one. That one was like, when I hear that I'm like, what are you talking about? You're gonna give a kid for a sexually transmitted disease a vaccine when they're.
B
A baby, A one day old baby.
A
That's crazy. And also is their immune system even working right? I mean will it even extend? Accept this and turn it into an antibody. Like have you proved that like you're.
B
Just jabbing kids proven that the child, the infant will make antibody and that's all they ever have to prove. What they don't ever want to prove is that when you give like say your child had gotten a COVID vaccine, there's something called original antigenic sin. They change the term to linked up a top suppression. It happens with flu shots. It happens with lots of different vaccines. Is that if you program your body to attack the strain of vaccine that you're a virus rather that you are injecting against and then a different strain comes along, it actually has negative efficacy. You are one that's more likely to succumb to terrible problems from the infection than because of your vaccine rather than actually protecting you. And that's been a well known. Look, Anthony Fauci writes about it. Morens and Fauci wrote a paper basically admitting everything I think it was in 2023 or 2024 about these shots. And he said the COVID shooting shots are exactly the same as the flu shots. Despite that, despite Fauci and Morens talking about how these shots would never have been licensed if they were held to the same standards of dpt, et cetera, et cetera, that they don't provide lung immunity, only provide blood immunity, negative efficacy. Their conclusion at the end of it is that we must make better vaccines, more effective vaccines to add to the already existing vaccine program. It's not that we shouldn't do this, it's not that we should pull this off the market. That's always the logic. Again, they never will admit to any problem with vaccines to take it off the market. It's always adding to it, not removing a vaccine. Okay, you think it was bad, let's start six months now, six month old babies with parents that are just like you back in the day going, okay, if you really think it's necessary because oh, granny doesn't want to catch COVID We're going to do it.
A
Yeah, that was the logic. Worry about granny. But, you know, this is the Great Barrington Declaration, right, Where those guys were like, why don't we take the people that are vulnerable and isolate them and treat them and care for them and not worry so much about everybody else and not shut society down because it's going to have profound impacts. And they were called kooks. And that's what's crazy. It's like during the. Censorship was so rampant that prominent scientists and physicians were removed from the social conversation because they disagreed. People who were actually.
B
That's always the case, though. That's always been.
A
It's just. But what is happening on social media and it's so transparent, these people getting removed from Twitter. You're like, this is wild. This is so crazy. Then you find out that the government's involved, the government contacted them and asked them to take things down. You're like, what are you, what are you saying? This is nuts.
B
Medical papers were retracted. I mean, there's this one guy named Pradhan P R A D H A N who. He showed that There is a GP120 protein on the spike and he said it was an uncanny similarity to the GP120 and HIV and that there was no way that that would have come out of nowhere and showed up in the 2019 COVID epidemic. And he showed genetically how. How that just couldn't possibly happen. A flurry of emails went through the CDC and to NIAID and to fauci, and within six days of that paper being in pre print, it was removed. Six days. And we've got access from the Freedom of Information act to some of those emails. They're a bit heavily redacted, but that was the series of events that happened with that. Because any doubts whether or not well founded.
A
All the things you said about the COVID vaccine, I'm sure are correct and true. But isn't it also different than the vaccine that they used in the test?
B
Yes. The vaccine that was produced for the general public, I believe, at least when it comes to Pfizer, they used magnetic beads for purification, which was totally different to what they did for the one they gave to us. And they produced it using. Oh, I can't remember exactly how they produced it, but they didn't use plasmids and they didn't use all the different components that were given to us. I have a slide on that somewhere that I could show you about. There were two aspects of the Test vaccine that were very different to the. It was both the production, how they produced it and how they quote purified it.
A
And what's the significance of the differences? Like did they do it just to make it?
B
Oh, well, there was no. They just didn't have the plasmid. They wouldn't have had the lipopolysaccharide with the DNA from the E. Coli that was in there that they told would never get past our deltoid muscle and would be disintegrated. Well, lipopolysaccharide actually is a transit protein that can bring everything right through your cells. Our cells are made of. It's like a lipid on the outside. So that was the whole purpose was to shuttle this into your cells. Not only that, but the vaccine produced the plasmid part of the vaccine that's injected into you. The messenger RNA has a substitution for something called uridine. They call it pseudouridine. And pseudouridine was put in there because they didn't want the immune system to destroy the vaccine too quickly. They wanted it to really be able to take hold of your body so you could have a strong response. Well, that's one of the reasons why vaccinated people had such horrible time with actual coronavirus when it did come and one of the reasons why you didn't. Maybe you were exposed and I don't know if you've had an antibody level tested. But again that's another long history thing is people who don't get sick while everyone else is have been accused of witchcraft and sorcerers and the past and sometimes hunted down and killed. In the times of smallpox, the groups of people that were into cleanliness, that was a real problem for them.
A
I did do nasal swabs to see if I had any antibodies. I did do that and I didn't.
B
Well, that won't tell you. Antibodies. That's a pcr. That would be your PCR test or your rapid. Which one did you do? The one that rapid. The rapid antigen test. But that's only going to tell you if you've got active in your nose. What you want to know is if your immune system again, there's a good use for antibodies sometimes not to see it's not the end all and be all in terms of your immunity. But it will show that you have had an experience inside of your body with COVID What was bizarre to me.
A
Was that there was this narrative that you were going to get it no matter what. And that's why and this will Stop.
B
It from you getting it.
A
Yeah. Well, this is before the vaccine was even a rank. There was this talk that there's no way to not get it. Like, if it's around you, it's so contagious. You're gonna get it. And that's why I was shocked that I didn't get it when my whole family got it. Like I said, I didn't isolate at all. I did it on purpose. And I had two days in the gym where I was sluggish. And so I was like, I feel kind of tired today, but a weird tired. So I'm just gonna go through the motions. I just like, really light work. And the next day I felt the same thing. Like, yeah, another light workout. Let's just take it easy. No need to push it. Just gotta break a little sweat. Never stressed myself. And then the next day, I felt great. I felt 100% like. I started working out. I was like, oh, I feel good. And then I was fine. And it's like, okay, I guess I didn't get it. And then everyone in my family recovered. And then I went from there to a couple months later. I was doing this gig in Flight Florida, and I was up with my friend John Showman, who's a pool. He makes pool cues, shout out to John, good friend of mine. And we were playing pool till like 5:00 in the morning, and I had like five margaritas and we're having a good old time and laughing a lot. And then that night, I was like, oh, I don't feel so good. But it was alcohol and no sleep and playing pool and, you know, and big shows and giant arenas and flying on jets and being tired all the time, you know, that's what it was. And then I got sick. But even then it was like a couple days.
B
How was that? How close was that to the time that you just said you felt a little tired in the gym that day?
A
A few months.
B
Okay, A few months difference.
A
Yeah, it was a few months because by that time the vaccine had been out. And this was, I guess, the delta, which was. Everybody was like, this is the bad one. The delta's the bad one.
B
You're supposed to be fearful, you know?
A
Yeah, it was a shocking time for me because before that, I never would have guessed in a million years that I would be even questioning other vaccines. I would have never guessed that I would have told you that vaccines are one of the most important inventions in human history. And it saved us from polio, it saved us from smallpox. I would have Been that guy ranting off all those statistics. I would have told you that. But then I read your book.
B
Sorry, sorry.
A
I read Robert F. Kennedy's book. I read your book, and I started reading Turtles all the Way down, which also. Which is really interesting because they wrote another book called Turtles all the Way down and someone else published it that has almost the identical cover. And that book is a pro vaccine book.
B
Nice.
A
Like, they literally hijack. They're like, what do we do? Oh, this is what we do. We fucking confuse the shit out of people. Make one with the exact same cover. Exact same cover, exact same name.
B
Wow.
A
And they made it a pro vaccine book. It's kind of wild. I mean, it's really kind of ingenious. Like, what a great way to, like, flood the market with bullshit. And the RFK junior Book was bananas. I mean, people had told me to read it. And my initial thought.
B
And the Fauci book.
A
Yes. My initial thought was, that's that guy that's like that anti vaccine kook. That's what I thought. And I've apologized to him for that. When I talked to him on the podcast, I said to him, I said, I succumbed, like everybody else did, to the casual narrative. What's the casual narrative? Oh, that RFK guy's a kook. Talks weird, got a weird voice.
B
He's ruining the world's immunity. Well, I had the same thing when I was first waking up. I had a friend who had unvaccinated kids. They were part of a Steiner school, and they were like mutant freaks to me because they'd never been on an antibiotic. They were bright and happy and interactive and talented. And at one point, one of them was playing with a hammer and nail. And I said to her mother, I was like, you got to be careful because she doesn't have a tetanus vaccine. And someone in the room said, well, Suzanne, what do you know about tetanus? And, like, in my head, I'm a full fledged doctor at this point. I thought, I don't know anything about tetanus. And outside, I said, I know you don't want to get it, and I know it'll cause lockjaw. And then I started reading about tetanus, and I had to go back and, you know, kind of apologize. And then I did a big. I have a big video out on tetanus and the actual truth about the tetanus vaccines and actual tetanus, which, you know, that's even harder for most people. Like, most people who don't want to Vaccinate. Their kids will vaccinate for tetanus if they can get a single shot. And second only to polio. Everybody's got their two vaccines, their two diseases they're afraid of for their kid. That makes them feel like they're at least doing something.
A
Well, the polio one always gets thrown in my face. They say it all the time.
B
What about polio?
A
Yeah. And I just go, I don't have the time to do this.
B
Thank you.
A
Read the book. I just to explain to someone the whole DDT connection and the fact that livestock was getting polio. Like this is the thing. Dogs don't get polio. They don't get human derived polio. It doesn't cross species. But they were getting paralytic polio symptoms because they were getting poisoned by ddt. Right. That was a big part of the whole thing. That was very confusing.
B
Well, they started killing dogs, you know, in New York in that incident I told you about, where the vaccine, the gain of function strain escaped. People were throwing their cats out the window. Some 20,000 cats in New York City were killed during that time because there was a belief that cats spread the disease.
A
Oh my God. Jesus Christ. That's so crazy. And it was all a mutant man made virus. The man made virus thing is a wax wound up.
B
Wound up. It was basically a natural virus that got kind of wound up by.
A
So man made to the final form.
B
Yeah.
A
That's just crazy that that's a thing that we do. Because if this gain of function research was so important, wouldn't you have a cure, like ready? Like if you've been studying this for so long? But didn't they. But it didn't. Didn't really cure it. Right. You know, I mean, wouldn't you have something that like stops it dead in its tracks?
B
Not allowed to cure? Look, I was living in a country where the government said there's no cure for Covid. There's no treatment for it, and there is no prevention for it except a vaccine. And lo and behold, we found out that there was a contract between the government and the pharmaceutical industry to have the emergency use of the vaccine trial on the population only under the condition that there is no other treatment available. And that's why the treatments were shut down, Right? Yeah. Because emergency use. There has to be no other treatment available. If you have ivermectin or if you have zinc and all the other things that we use with success. You know, there were so many people that I treated that should have been dead. I gave Covid to a 95 year old woman who had chronic lung disease called bronchiectasis. She should have been the low hanging fruit. I was starting to feel a little bit unhappy one day, really, just sluggish like you mentioned. And when I was done seeing her, she goes, I just want to give you a hug as you come over and. And I was going, oh, no. And after about three days, I was like, I've definitely got it. I tested and I rang her daughter and I said, I've got to tell you, I was exposed. Margie was exposed to blah, blah, blah. And she's like, yeah, mom's not feeling so good right now. And then two weeks later I thought, I've got to call back again. I've got to make sure this lady's okay. She said, oh, no, Mom's out at the hairdresser getting her hair done. Two weeks later, I still wasn't recovered. Two weeks later she was out getting her hair done.
A
Was she a smoker?
B
She probably used to. I don't know if she can't remember that detail, but there was. My senior partner had leukemia. He should have been absolutely dead. Well, not on my watch. He wasn't going to be dead. So he survived the entire thing and died like two years later of something else.
A
So, yeah, the most shocking aspect of getting attacked and like all the CNN stuff to me was that no one had any interest in WAG recovered so quickly. Because if this is supposed to be this death sentence and there's no trouble treatment, and then I'm a guy in my 50s and I got over it quick and then no one cared at all about that. All they wanted to do is mock this idea that I was taking veterinary medicine, which I wasn't. But it was just the fact that they used that term horse dewormer on every TV show. Like, wow, this is. It's wild to watch the machine. It's uniquely wild when it's coming after you and you're like, but this is like such a dumb checkers play. I'm like, this is so stupid. I'm still doing my podcast, you fucking idiots. And like, everyone's gonna know that you put a green filter over my face. I'm gonna show everybody that. You think you're just gonna get away with that? No, you're gonna, like, lose all of your credibility, you idiots. It was just so fascinating to watch, like, this distorted understanding of, like, what America is willing to believe or the world is willing to believe. Like you're only preaching to the converted. The super Hardcore closed minded, converted people. Everyone else knows you guys are a joke now. And that's the good part of getting through Covid. The good part of this enormous gaslighting experience that we all just went through, where people are finally, after four years, apologizing to friends. Friends, you know, for calling them a plague rat. You know, like. Like, literally, they. It got down to that, where friends couldn't be friends with people anymore because they weren't vaccinated. And people are kind of like realizing, like, oh, my God, not only did I get Covid more than anybody else, because I got three shots. Like, I had a friend tell me this, he goes, I got coveted more than everyone I know. And I had all three shots. He's like, I got Covid eight times. And we were like, how many times did you get it? And everybody that got it naturally was like, I got it once, maybe I got it, I got it twice. But the second time I got it, it was literally a sniffy nose. Just literally. And I was joking because we used to test everyone, including the guests, everyone that came here, we tested for Covid. And I was joking. I'm like, maybe this is it. Maybe I got it again. And she's like, you actually got it. I was like, no way. This is Covid. And it never got worse. It stopped right there. That was it. One day. One day of a sniffly nose. And then a couple days later, I said, all right, let's try and get tested again, see if we can still do another podcast. And that was good, but I had to cancel all that.
B
You have to have a healthy immune system in the lab.
A
But the fact that that's the thing, it's like, there's real science behind all the things you talk about in your book in terms of the nutritional aspects of healthy foods being an important factor in your immune system. Healthy. We were talking about juices and vegetable juices and all the different times that it's helped people overcome certain diseases. And vitamin A and cod liver oil, which also has vitamin A, which was always prescribed to people that were sick. All these things. This is real science. There's real science in nutritional supplementation and the effects that it has on the immune system. And there's a real science in nutritional deficiencies and what a negative impact it has. This is all real. And if they truly cared about you, they would be telling you about that as a primary way of defending your body against disease and against all sorts of things that could go wrong. All sorts of things like get fit, eat healthy, and you're above everything, take supplements. You're above everything. Like you're in the top 1% of people that are going to do great in life when it comes to getting sick. Just that. Because most people don't do that. So you have like, what percentage of people, like, really eat healthy and really try to exercise on a regular basis? Is it even 10? Is it even 10% of us?
B
It depends. Maybe what state you live in.
A
Let's just have a guess nationwide and see if there's a chart, see if there's a statistic. Let's guess what percentage of people eat healthy, take vitamins and exercise regularly. Early. I say 10%. What do you think?
B
Yeah, it could be because you still have your teenagers and your young college students that are in sports and things like that.
A
A lot of older people are. Yeah, but a lot of people like, you know, even though they have a hard job, they still realize, like, I gotta go to the gym before work and just, just get it in because if I don't, I won't have any energy. I'm better off this way. I know it sucks, but just do it. There's like people in it that have enough discipline to do that. So I would give it, I think it's one out out of ten. That's what I think. What do we got, Jamie? I mean, this is impossible. Yeah, it's a little impossible. What about AI Run that through chat. Well, I'm just. How are you going to get the answers? My point, not like, well, let's see.
B
What percent Americans honestly answer the question.
A
In a poll that they're, you know. Well, let's ask Chat GP just for I just my point. Chat GPT has to find the answer somewhere. Right. But let's see what she says. Well, okay, let's just for funsies, let's just say I know right out of the gate the answer is that 86% people take vitamins and supplements, which is 4 in 5American adults. Is that real? That's good. If that's true. That's really good. I wouldn't think that's true, though. I don't buy that. That's what I'm trying to say. Yeah, I don't buy that. That's, that's written by a supplement company.
B
Yeah. And what supplements and how, you know, sometimes you can overdo, you do a hair mineral analysis on people and sometimes you find things that are, you know, pretty shocking in terms of that came from supplements. You know, you can overdo it with even selenium.
A
Sure.
B
You can end up with big problems.
A
There's also a problem with cross contamination. One of the things that we found out when we were selling Alpha Brain is that in the beginning, when we would hire a lab to make the formula for us, you have a list of ingredients, and then they put together this thing, which is a nutrition nootropic, that we'd find stuff in there that we didn't have in there. And it was from their bins, so they didn't clean their bins. So it's like, why is vitamin B12 in this? Like, why is this and that? Why is that? And it's just because that's the same factor. Manufacturing place where they make all kinds of stuff, creatine. And it doesn't say how I got the answer, but it says less than 10%. Okay. Likely less than 10%. Okay. If you're talking about people consistently do all three, it drops significantly less than 10%. Maybe even closer to 3 to 5%, depending on how strict your definition of healthy is. Yeah, that was a good guess.
B
We're talking about adults here, presumably. But, you know, one of the facts is that the foundation that your immune system is created and developed in is probably, if not as more important than that, and that is being born the vaginal birth versus a C section. Not putting down people who have had C section. I'm just saying the science shows that there is a distinct difference in C section babies immune systems versus non C section. There's a distinct difference in breastfed babies versus non breastfed. And there's a distinct difference in babies whose mothers have a healthy diet and breastfeed versus mothers who don't have a healthy diet and breastfeed. So that foundation actually makes your gut grow normally, which is a large part of your immune system. It colonizes your gut because the bacteria from your mother's gut goes into your gut, goes from her gut, through her lymph system into her breast, and then to your gut. And so all that foundational stuff is something not to be ignored because it's going to make you deal with diseases better. And if you have to get vaccinated, it's going to make you deal with vaccines better, even as a child. Not that I'm in favor of that, but I'm just saying if you want to set things up as, you know, solidly as possible to be able to take that insult. The problem is we don't know 20, 30, 40 years later what the associations are, because between bone diseases, skin diseases, cancers, autoimmune diseases, we have some Clues. I have some clues that nobody wants to look at. But we've got this long term problem that nobody looks at. Long term effects of lifestyle, of vaccination, of even SV40. There was one study that started tracking 1000 SV40 people that they knew were infected with SV40 looking for diseases later in life. And they stopped it after 19 years in again axed when they still had over 700 people left in the study because they said too much time had gone by. Well, the fact of the matter is that's when the study should have started. 17 to 20 years later is when they sort of started looking at that point, not one year, two years. But you know, most vaccine trials and drug trials, they don't. They don't. Vaccine trials, it's like two weeks is almost a miracle for someone to follow out that long, forget about looking months or years later. Doesn't happen.
A
When you first decided to write this book, how much apprehension did you have?
B
0.
A
0. You were just fully convicted to get this idea out?
B
Well, you know, it was a bit of a process if you want to know it. Yeah, sure, yeah. So what first happened is that I kept getting challenged while I was. I stayed on for two years as a nephrologist in my hospital. So I wasn't kicked out. I left because like my soul just couldn't hang out there anymore. And so during that time, even though I was kind of ostracized behind my back, everybody still respected me as a nephrologist, but I still had to go. And in that time I started doing public appearances like I went on the Gary Null show and started doing things like that, just talking about smallpox and polio because those were my focus because everyone's saying, what about smallpox, what about polio? And then when I started finding out, I just, I became obsessed with it. It was so interesting. So I was morbidly fascinated by the whole thing and back how everything I found was absolutely contrary to what the mainstream dogma is. And what I had was a mountain, you know, pile high to the ceiling. And they had sound bites. They had nothing to fight back with me on. Nothing. So this guy named Roman Bistrianik heard me on the radio show and he rung my office. And after his third call, I was like, I guess I better call this guy back. And he had this idea for a book and he had done all the charts and the graphics, graphics and started writing the narrative around that of what the historical document showed. And then I came in as kind of the medical person that was obsessed with polio and smallpox and happened to know quite a bit about pertussis. So we started writing the book together. And there's probably about, there's gotta be. If you were to take a full time job, 20 years, at least 20 years. But for me it was condensed because I became obsessed after I quit my job. All I did, I basically had no money. I lived in a tent with a pop up camper that was my office. And I was like crazy Ted Kaczynski obsessed with polio in my tent. And wow. So no, I didn't have apprehension. I was like, this information, it's been. So the US polio surveillance unit charts were supposed to be available in libraries. Lo and behold, every library I went to to find them, I was told they're not here. There's only one library, the AMA library. And you have to have special high security clearance to look at them. Well, I won't say how, but I got a hold of them. And what those documents show is that it wasn't just Qatar laboratories that had a problem with live polio. It wasn't just Wyeth, all the vaccine, we didn't talk about this, but all the vaccine companies had a problem with live virus in their injectable vaccines during salk's year. So 1954, 1955 up to 1959, they all were producing vaccine with live virus in it because Salk wouldn't listen to the scientists abroad who were saying his inactivation could curve was where the sun doesn't shine. So that beginning of that and just tracking all that down and asking the questions that you asked, well, where did polio go? What was really causing the paralysis? Why don't we see it today? I had to answer all those questions and every question I answered, it was so satisfying that I just wanted to go on to the next question. And so there was never any hesitation because I just actually I was so single minded that I didn't think about the threats that could happen as a result of that. And it wasn't until after the book was out that the threats happened. And I'm still here. And look, I figure if anybody wants to do me in now, the timing is really bad because this is pretty much out there now.
A
It's been out there for a while. The Jonas Salk thing was also wild. I thought Jonas Salk was this genius that created this incredible virus that saved humanity.
B
Yeah, so did I. So many of our childhood fables turn out not to be true. But that was a big one. And it's still hard for a lot of people to believe, but I just think it's like anything, like, if you're open to different information. And I always say, look, I can make mistakes. I'm not infallible. Someone has actually found a mistake in the book. I actually went in and corrected it. That's the difference between me and these other people, is that if I made a mistake, I want to know about it. And I will go and make it right, and I will publicly admit that I made a mistake. But I will say that 99, 99.9% of what's in this book is true, factual, and provable. And because I've done the research, but it's a hard thing to do. What doctor is going to quit their job? I was lucky. I didn't have kids. I didn't have medical royalty, ancestors who would have been disappointed in me. I came from nothing. I wasn't afraid to go back to nothing. And so that's why I was willing to live in a tent until this thing was done and published in 2013.
A
So how long did it take you?
B
I started working on it. Roman had been working on it for years. He had been going to libraries because his kids got hit hard by an ex wife who jabbed them. He didn't know about it, and they got really sick. And then he started looking at old graphs and going, oh, that doesn't make sense. So he got obsessed in his own way with the numbers. He's the numbers guy. And so he had been working on it, and then the two of us together worked on it probably from 2009 to 2013, and then it was published in 2013. We couldn't find a publisher. Even the alternative publishers didn't want anything to do with it. So we self published. And then after it was successful, guess who wanted to publish our book? And I was like, nope, sorry. We're gonna carry on the way we are. Oh, but you're gonna get such more credibility. It's, like, unlikely.
A
That's funny.
B
We did okay.
A
If you give us money, you'll get credibility. Let us take a part of your successful business that you worked on for five years or four years.
B
We'll give you $1 a book.
A
That would be sweet.
B
Yeah.
A
What a great deal. And then I'll have a prestige behind my name. Yeah, yeah. I've been published by a real company. When was the last time you looked at a book and said, let me check who published this?
B
Exactly.
A
You know, maybe make sure somebody recommended this book published.
B
It's all Lies.
A
Never heard of this publisher. This is outrageous.
B
What's that there? Forbidden science.
A
Oh, Jacques Vallee, okay. Jacques Vallee is probably the most interesting UFO researcher that I've ever talked to. He's the guy that was. You remember the French scientist? You remember Close Encounters of the Third Kind? Did you see that movie?
B
Long time ago, but long time ago.
A
Do you remember there's a French scientist on the grounds coordinating with with the army and explaining to everybody what's going on. Okay, that French scientist is modeled after this guy. This guy's been following you up UFO since like the 50s or the 60s. Do you say the 50s? I mean like a long time. He's an older gentleman, but he's fascinating.
B
Okay.
A
And he's very rational. Like when he talks about it, it's like he is very objective in what's nonsense and what's true and what we can't explain. It's a fascinating subject.
B
I think similar threads would run through his experience, definitely.
A
Oh, I'm sure.
B
Science.
A
Yeah. Well, it's. For the longest time it was a ridiculed subject. Not. It didn't have the same societal impact as being a vaccine skeptic or an anti vaxxer.
B
Right.
A
Like with that pejorative, they've done an incredible job of scaring people into just falling in line. Because if you question it and someone said, oh, did you know he's an anti vaxxer?
B
Right. That's enough.
A
That, that's all you need to hear. And you're gonna get it after this podcast. And I've already gotten it.
B
You're gonna get it big time.
A
I've gotten it already.
B
They'll start picking apart my facts and they'll wanna come on and dismantle. This is what always happens. I come in first, I tell my story, and then they bring in the experts who are able to take without me being in the room, of course. Cause I can't be able to defend myself and then let the public believe that everything I said was just one big sack of lies.
A
Well, they'll definitely be the usual suspects that'll be doing that. But has anyone ever tried to sit down with you and have a conversation publicly about this and refute it?
B
Not that I can recall.
A
No one's offered.
B
Yeah, I have to say I'm not that interested in doing that because I just feel like, you know, debate is. It's an actual skill to be a debater. People study debate and people get really good at it. And I'm not a debater. Like I put if somebody wanted to debate me in writing, I would be happy, happy to do that because then I could sit there and take my time, you know, go through the references that I needed rather than having to, you know.
A
Right, that makes sense.
B
Ready, you know, at me without having a shield.
A
Right. And there's an anxiety aspect to that and like, you know, there's a lot of adrenaline and emotions and yeah, it's.
B
A skill, but I would do it only if we had a topic that was, you know, basically agreed upon beforehand that we could both upskill on and use what we know as, as that debate point. But it usually just becomes character assassination.
A
It does. Yeah, it does. It's super unfortunate and it's really transparent when it's some about a serious subject. Like, why do you have to attack someone's. Who they are, make. Make it, ridicule them instead of just refuting the facts or, or laying out your case. It just doesn't make sense that anybody who's right would do that. That's not what you do when you're right. That's what you do when you're trying to ridicule people. And you usually trying to ridicule people because you need an edge. You know, it's like a bully. If you see fighters, like a UFC fighter in his prime, like Anderson Silva is one of the greatest of all time. If someone like got in his face and tried to intimidate him, it would be kind of hilarious because he was the best fighter in the world, so he wouldn't even have to do it back. He could just smile at you. And that's sort of the same here. When you're ridiculing someone like right off the bat, a bunch of ad hominems about that person, you're trying to diminish that person to set up your argument as being superior because you're the superior intellect. And you're doing that because you don't feel like you're on level playing field. And so you want to try to do something to push them off, make fun of them in some sort of way. Instead of just like laying out your version of what reality is, lay out your version. If you're so strong, if you're so correct, it should be super easy to do.
B
Well, just like in sports, it's the same here. It's like cheating is for losers. If you're a winner, you don't have to cheat. And that's the same with them. Like, if their product is so wonderful that everybody needs it so badly, then why is There such. What they say is that we're too stupid to understand how they're saving our lives and how they. This is one of the big arguments that we really ought to touch on is that they say that our lifespan has improved as a result of medical interventions. When what we show in here, what other scientists have shown is that about 3.5% of the contribution from medicine goes into our extended lifespan. 3.5% based on antibiotics, vaccines, et cetera. The rest of it was all about the revolution, the health revolution, the clean water, the shelter, the electricity, the child labor laws ending. So the magic of medicine is not what people think. And it really traps, it really traps a lot of people. I think there's a value to the medical field in terms of surgery and certain drugs and if you have an organ failure. Absolutely. But why not? My Hippocratic oath said that I should consult any consultant that will help my patient and keep the well being of my patient stable. Well, to me that includes using every therapy that is the most benign therapies possible for the ones that work along with the blueprint of a human body that go along with the theory of health rather than pounding down disease. You're always going to get a better result that way. Assuming you've got time and you know, you haven't waited till the last minute.
A
Well, you certainly will get a better result if you do get the disease that way. Like the idea that you could just ignore everything but a medication is so silly. And it doesn't. The only reason why you would do that is if that's the only way you made your money. And that's really especially if you're in the vaccine business and you have an enormous ad budget and you're sponsoring all the television networks.
B
Well, that's the big thing. And the other thing is people trust what they see on the television. CNN was my go to thing for the longest time. Mine too. Yeah. Now I look at it and I think, oh my goodness, you know what cracked it for me is when they publicly villainized Andy Wakefield. And I actually knew the story behind Andy Wakefield at the time.
A
What was that story?
B
The story behind him is that, you know, he was the doctor, you'll hear he was publicly shamed, his license was removed. He published an article about what he called toxic nodular enterocolitis in children with autism. He was a gastroenterologist, a very high level, very well respected, decorated gastroenterologist. And he published this paper which remained in a journal for 12 years. And all it said at the end Was further research needs to be done in order to see if there is any real connection between the MMR vaccine, autism and toxic nodular enterocolitis. These kids suffer with horrible bowel disease. It's not just brain disease. And so he was about to publish another paper showing that in this certain type of monkeys that were vaccinated against hepatitis B lost a lot of their reflexes and had problems. And it was on the eve of the publication of that paper that his original paper was revoked. And ever since then, he has been the poster child for vaccine nonsense, for anti vax crazy people. And in fact, every time I've done anything, his name. Funny that I brought his name up. I love him, he's a great guy, but his name would always come up. Well, you're a friend of Andy Wakefield or no Andy Wakefield, because autism and vaccines has been debunked because Andy Wakefield lied. And he didn't lie. All he said is, I did biopsies, I saw this and this is possibly a connection. And since then, other scientists have come in, done the same thing, biopsies. Then they looked at whether the vaccine virus was in that biopsy. And it was, it wasn't a wild virus. It was the vaccine virus in that area, not the surrounding area. So there is a relationship between gut disease, MMR vaccine retained, you know, virus that hasn't been processed properly because it didn't come into your body properly, and disease, brain disease. So that's a fact. But CNN did a hit job on Andy Wakefield. And I remember going, huh, well, what's going on here? Because I know, I know what happened with that whole situation. Now CNN is saying this and that was kind of when, you know, the windscreen cracked for me and I just had to start questioning anything. And then you've got, you know, the doctors that go on there. There are a couple doctors, I think you interviewed one of them, didn't you?
A
Sanjay Gupta?
B
Yeah, yeah. There was a guy before, for him and some of the stuff he said was pretty unbelievable. That's what the public is going to hear. You know, your best chances of dealing with this is to just get the vaccine. You don't want to get shingles, get that vaccine. Never mind the whole other truth around that, because like you say, it's the advertisers, but it's bigger than that.
A
Does the shingles vaccine work?
B
Well? What do you think about giving yourself a vaccine for something you already have? Like, you think about it like chicken pox is a disease that we all got as kids. You Got it as a kid, probably. You're kind of superhuman though. You didn't even get Covid. I got it eventually. You did? Yeah. So I got it eventually. You got it eventually. They broke you down. But I got chickenpox really bad.
A
And then I got chickenpox when I was a kid.
B
There you go. So back in the old days, we would all get chickenpox and then we'd be exposed to other kids that had chickenpox.
A
We'd go over kids houses if they had chickenpox.
B
Yeah, people do. They still do that? I didn't have to. I got it somehow. I don't know how I got it. Probably from my brother. And so you have this dormant. This virus lays dormant in your body until your immune system breaks down. But part of it is not just your immune system breakdown. It's the fact that all these kids are now vaccinated and the circulation of the disease. See, some vaccines work in terms of they stop the circulation of the disease, but at a detriment to us. So it's been a detriment for measles and it's been a detriment for chickenpox. So chickenpox we used to get continuously. Adults didn't get shingles. It was very rare for adults to get shingles before the chickenpox vaccine came out. Extremely rare. But since then, the rate of shingles in adults and children has skyrocketed because we're no longer getting our boosters being exposed to the circulating microbes. So now the solution to that is to give adults like four times the dose of the childhood chickenpox in an injectable vaccine against something that they already have. And so the theory is that you're going to ramp up your antibodies and then you're going to be able to do battle if your viruses come out again. The only problem with that is that the problem is the immune system. If you get AIDS or you're on chemotherapy, your chances of that happening are really high. And. Yeah. Does the vaccine work or not? I don't know. But I just don't think it's just, to me, just a completely strange concept to inject myself with something that I already have along with all the other excipients and compounds that go in a vaccine that nobody wants to talk about either.
A
So can you explain how a vaccine is manufactured? How could they not know, know all the different stuff that's in it? Like let's, let's, let's talk about like how the SV40 got in there. So you need something alive. You need some sort of tissue from a living creature in order to grow these things.
B
Well, in terms of the COVID vaccine, you just needed to pile crap actually, because it's made on E. Coli cells and that's where you find E. Coli. So. So with a lot of the other vaccines, you do need living. Like for tetanus, you need rotten meat. Okay? That's how the tetanus vaccine's made, with rotten meat.
A
You were talking about tetanus earlier and you kind of glossed over it, but you didn't finish up. You were saying that tetanus itself, you started googling and reading about tetanus itself.
B
Yeah, yeah, big wake up call with tetanus. So you know what we see if anyone's worried about tetanus, what we're shown is a picture of a soldier from like the 1800s, hundreds with his. He's naked and his back is arched. If you just Google tetanus right now and you look for images, you'll get this image. And so that's what we're told will happen if we get tetanus, it's a sure thing. You're just going to get tetanus and you're going to die. Well, the fact of the matter is that when I started doing my deep dive In World War I look, it was fought in the trenches with horses. That's where you get tetanus from. Ruminant animals, lives in their gut, then it goes in the soil and it's just a spore. Doesn't do anything until it gets into an area that doesn't have oxygen. So you get a cut, you get a surgeon to close you up real nice without cleaning it out properly. And you're set up for tetanus, which will transform from a spore to a different kind of a microbe and start releasing a toxin that can. It first starts as numb, numbness, usually in that limb. The extreme case is in that soldier who would have been malnourished, stressed out, probably vaccinated for smallpox before he hit the female fields and exposed to enormous amounts of tetanus, possibly gunshot wound or a slice somewhere and then sewn up. So yeah, his nervous system could have had a real big dose of toxin and nobody did anything about it. That's the worst case scenario. You don't want that to happen. But in today's. I've treated tetanus, let's just put it that way. I've treated several cases of tetanus. One of the cases was a neurologically diagnosed Tetanus. So tetanus is treatable. You can get on it or early rabbit studies have shown that if you give vitamin C, if you have a good high vitamin C level before you put glass with tetanus spores on it inside the skin of a rabbit, that you can prevent the tetanus from happening. Even if you give the vitamin C at the time of the injury, you can prevent it from happening. If you give it after the event, the death rate goes down to, you know, very, very low, if not zero. So vitamin C is a main factor, but the biggest factor is cleaning a wound wound and keeping the wound open. If you think it's a dirty wound, not to close it straight up. Which is why nails, you say stepping on a nail is the classic because rust can kind of hold the old spores inside of it. You step on the nail, you get inoculated and then you wait for it to heal over. You have to open that wound if that's going to happen. But, you know, but tetanus has been. There's a whole series of reports on instances where the cotton that was made for menstrual pads for women postpartum was impregnated with tetanus. And they got horrible cases of tetanus just from using those menstrual pads. So the hospital systems have also been, you know, responsible. The biggest thing is that being vaccinated for tetanus is not necessarily security against not getting tetanus. Now, am I telling people not to go get vaccinated or not? No, I'm not. I'm just saying there's so much, every vaccine, there's so much more to the story that should be considered, considered. You can have different strains of tetanus and if you're living on a field that has ruminant animals, you will be. Whether you like it or not, you're going to be eating whatever's down in that field and you're going to be inoculated and have antibody and probably cell mediated immunity against it. So you'll already have some immunity to that. So worst case scenarios, you have no immunity. You go get a dirty wound and you don't get any real competent medical care for it. Yeah, you can end up having a problem with tetanus whether you're not going to have lock jaw and an arched back and die. Unlikely today for that to happen. But most tetanus that happens is delayed onset. So the earlier your symptoms come on, the worse the tetanus is going to be. If it comes on later, generally the better you're going to do treated with high doses of magnesium, high doses of vitamin C, local wound care. That's the best thing that you can do. Up to you if you want to go get jabbed for tetanus after you learn everything about it. Everything's on my Odyssey channel, by the way. That's where all that. Because I got canceled out of YouTube for talking about vitamin C for of all things. So everything's now on Odyssey. All my videos are on Odyssey and I do one that's just on tetanus. And again medical reference after medical reference. I don't make this stuff up. I just report what I read. Yeah.
A
It's crazy that they just kick you off YouTube for reporting studies.
B
Yep. Yet you can have like pornography and murder and all kinds of other stuff on there. It's pretty horrifying. Some of the things that flash across like I wish I can't unsee that now.
A
Have you ever posted your stuff on X?
B
Yes, lots of stuff on X.
A
You have. So most of this stuff is available there.
B
Well, I got canceled out of Twitter when it was Twitter and I could not make another account. It's like they knew where I was. They were able. Even when I was using different phone numbers and different emails, I could not restore an account or you got your ip. Yeah, maybe that's what I used. I used VPN as well. Couldn't do it really. Then I would get an account set up and then they would say you went against standards and cancel it. So anyway, they must have put a.
A
Cookie on your phone or something. Maybe to try a new phone.
B
Try to computer too.
A
Wow.
B
But I did finally get. Get an account. I was able to open an account and get a blue check mark. But I've only got like don't have that many followers. I mean I went from having over 95,000 to having nothing and now rebuild. That's. They love that. They love to let us build ourselves up and chop us down and make us rebuild.
A
Your account will help you out.
B
It's Dr. It's Doctorsusanne. H7D R S U Z A N N E H7 yeah. And I only look, I don't post my opinions about different things in the world or dog and cat pictures. Like I post stuff about vaccines. You know, I like. I stay in lane as best as I can.
A
So for you was the COVID pandemic, was that like a big wake up call for people to start reading. Reading your book?
B
We've had pretty good sales like Roman keeps because he does all the accounting. And he says, we just have a good amount of steady sales and once in a while we'll see. Like, every time you mentioned the book, we had a little blip on it during COVID Every time Bill Gates comes out and says something stupid, we have a big surge in our sales. So they actually help us when they. With their, you know, we're gonna. If we vaccinate enough people, we can help depopulate. It's like, okay. And for whatever reason, our book sales go up.
A
When he starts talking about vaccine deniers and vaccine skeptics. Whenever they started doing that. And the way the language that they would use was like when the president was saying, our patience is wearing thin. We've been patient with you, but our patience is wearing thin. And the White House prints this thing that if you're vaccinated, you did your job. But for those unvaccinated, you're looking forward to a. What did they say? A winter of. A dark winter of death and disease. Like what?
B
You know, Dark winter was a tabletop exercise. Do you know about tabletop exercises?
A
I do. But what is dark winter?
B
So dark winter was one.
A
You can explain tabletop exercises that involved smallpox?
B
Well, there are lots of them, but Johns Hopkins does. I have a whole PowerPoint on this too, but Johns Hopkins conducts a lot of them. They involve fictional scenarios where, you know, there could be pandemics and terrorists characteristic depositions of toxins and chemicals and microbes that were manipulated in a lab. And then who in our society is going to respond and how they're going to respond? Like the CDC and DARPA and the news outlets are always utmost importance is the news outlets and the messaging that goes to the news outlets and these tabletop exercises. But Dark winter was one that was a tabletop exercise. After the World Trade center thing went and we were pointing our fingers at Iraq and weapons of mass destruction and a Russian scientist that had weaponized smallpox and brought it to Iraq, which they never found, by the way. But because of that, that's why I was asked to get vaccinated for smallpox in 2003. Was that dark winter hole, that dark winter thing that was going on. Thank God there were a few people in the CDC and consultants, old guys, the old guys with integrity that knew the deal from the old days who were saying, wait a minute, smallpox is not easily transport. So that's a no. No. So even if there is a terroristic smallpox drop, it's not going to be easily transmitted. It's treatable, not high, and the vaccine doesn't necessarily prevent it. And so that was kind of one of the things that stalled it all out. But then they did the study on the Marines because part of the exercises are we must do tests for the new vaccine. They use the old vaccine, the dry vax. And there were lots of problems with those military people. And then I was asked to sign a 63 page informed consent, basically saying that I understood all the problems that could happen to me, that I didn't have little kids in my life, that I wasn't going to be able to spread it. I would isolate after I got the vaccine. So they were ultra careful about this one because they knew they were dealing with something that could be get a very bad reputation. The reason they ultimately canceled it is because any doubts whether or not well funded must not be allowed to exist. Because if we were saying, oh my gosh, we have this terrible smallpox vaccine, how did they do it back then? We had the same vaccine. And people are getting really sick and dying and having cardiomyopathies. That's a problem. And so that's why the truth gets locked down over Covid. We know. Look, you've seen the athletes dropping dead. You know about the cardiomyopathies and the pulmonary emboli and all that kind of thing. Nobody's talking about the stem cells that the newborn babies are born without. Nobody's talking about the fact that there are now death doulas to deliver dead babies. Like that wasn't even a thing before. But I've got a friend that's a midwife who tells me that they are now creating a new field which are midwives that only deliver dead babies. They do nothing else. They didn't need that before. COVID was an absolute nightmare in terms of obstetrics, gynecology, labor and delivery. A lot of midwives that got done because they didn't get vaccinated. They don't even want to go back now that they can go back because they don't want to have their good reputations of 100% of normal births being, dealing with what's being dealt with today in terms of the birth problems that are happening because of the actual vaccine itself. Look, if it causes problems and blood clots in our circulation, what do you think it's going to do to a placenta that is pretty much all blood vessel? That's all it is. It's like a big blood vessel sandwich is what it is.
A
And there was no studies that showed that it was safe to give to pregnant women, but yet they were Saying that.
B
Well, there's. Look, every influenza vaccine package insert says it's never been tested for carcinogenicity or mutagenicity in pregnant women, yet it's recommended every year for every pregnant woman and every time they get pregnant or not, it's recommended. Same with the pertussis vaccine. Give it to pregnant women. Never mind that it changes the immune reactivity of the infant. Nobody talks about these things. This is what I say when, you know, it's like the truth is so much more complicated than the sound bite lie. The sound bite lie is what gets around the world world three times.
A
Science is settled.
B
Science is settled. There's no debate needed because the likes of me are so crazy and, you know, whacked out and you know, I'm trying to just destroy the. The good. The good order of the. The general public.
A
Blood is on your hands.
B
Oh, that's a good one. I always love that one.
A
Yeah, it's a fun one. I like that one.
B
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Put. See if you can pull up Rational Wiki and Humphreys, you'll enjoy this.
A
I want to see the image of the guy with tetanus. Did you find that? Can I just see one? I want to see what it looks like when you're locked.
B
It's an old painting.
A
Well, the one I saw was like AI one. So can I ask you, when you've treated people that have tetanus and didn't have the tetanus shot or did they get tetanus and they had the tetanus shot?
B
Well, the one that had the worst tetanus had lockjaw and had the tetanus shot. Put in painting. Put in artwork or painting.
A
Look at that dead guy. But go up to that dead guy. Yeah, right there. That's not real. I mean, it looks real. It looks fake as shit. Does it? Not to me, bro.
B
It could be. It could be. But look at. He's clearly been in the hospital for a really long. He probably got hospital acquired tetanus. Okay. You know, right.
A
That image right there, what makes you think that that's fake? It's very blurry.
B
Yeah, that is weird. That part there looks. It definitely.
A
It does look fake. Oh yeah. It's probably a bunch of Nazi tattoos.
B
But if you put in paint painting soldier tetanus, then it will come up.
A
Is that it right there?
B
There it is. First one right there. It's very famous. That's what's on the Wikipedia page as well.
A
So this is.
B
So you don't want that to happen here.
A
If you do get tetanus and there is no antibiotics.
B
This is surely what will happen to you.
A
Now, today, how would you treat someone who got tetanus?
B
There are antibiotics, you know that you. But mostly it's supportive care until you know, you're therapy starts to work. So some people end up, if it's not dealt to in time, you can end up ventilated. But again that's, it's a theoretical problem. But if you get on it in time, that's certainly not been my experience. And so the ones that I've treated that haven't been vaccinated have had the easiest, mildest cases.
A
But. So your point is.
B
I don't know. I've not done a large randomized, controlled study.
A
But what's really important here is what you're saying is that even if you get the tetanus shot, if you step on a nail, you could still get tetanus.
B
Look, in order to make tetanus immune globulin, which is another option when say you have a cut and your magic tetanus shot doesn't work right away, then you can get an immunoglobulin injection that came from somebody who has had tetanus. Usually these are people who have actually had tetanus, not who have been vaccinated. And one of the donors that's in the literature that I use is somebody who has had natural tetanus despite having several vaccines. So no, the tetanus vaccine is not a guarantee against.
A
It's like a severe tetanus. Yeah, that's right before you die. They call it severe.
B
Yeah.
A
But instead it could also be caused by many.
B
So this is the, this is the kind of the dead baby equivalent of, you know, that they use for tetanus. So this was a soldier, I believe during a very long time ago and he was. Don't even show you his wound. He's probably stepped on something. It can happen. Not saying it can't, but again, our parents given well rounded information. No, they're not, they're not told that there are actually things you can do to prevent tetanus. Shouldn't they at least be told how to clean out a wound and not to let anybody sew it up? And secondary healing is a thing like some people get open heart surgery and because they get infections, I've seen this happen, they just leave everything open and let it fill in on its own. You end up with a big scar, but they're still alive because the infection was able to heal from the inside out or Rather, the wound was able to heal from the inside out. What you don't want to happen as a wound to heal from the outside, because then you're locking in dead tissue, which is a perfect setup. Tetanus loves dead tissue, which is why they use dead, rotten meat to grow the vaccine. Toxoid.
A
What is it like to have your entire view of medical history do a 180? Like, what is it like to be a practicing doctor and so someone who never would have imagined this until you faced these forces?
B
It's kind of exciting, actually, because during my medical residency, like, towards the end of it, I was like, I just thought, one day, I'm not a healer. I don't know how to heal anything. I'm just prolonging people's lives, treating their diseases with drugs. Like, I'm a glorified pharmaceutical technician. I realized that one day, and I was like, I'm not a surgeon. I can't do surgery. So I write prescriptions, I do diagnoses, and I write prescriptions, prescriptions. So I decided to go into a field where people really needed prescriptions. Like, if you don't have kidney function, you're on dialysis. Like, that's one of the glories of medicine. Like, you could prolong people's lives. I really enjoyed that. But then after I left completely and started studying real physiology beyond what I learned in medicine. Look, I'm learning a lot of the stuff you're learning, too. You know, the nootropics and all that stuff that you talk about. Well, I'm learning about that. We're. I love it, actually. It's exciting. I've been liberated from it. Prison, essentially, from a stupid prison where my brain was locked down and I was told what to do and how to do it. And then watching the results. It would be one thing if the results were good, okay, but the results aren't good. We treat symptoms. We treat hypertension. Hypertension is a symptom. It's not a disease. Hypertension can come from lots of different things. That's just one case in point. So I really love being able to now have the freedom to look at the full human being and their physiology and look at them as an electromagnetic entity that has some chemicals and vitamins and help them direct their body back towards the blueprint that it was designed upon. And that's, to me, what real healing and real medicine is about. It's not about being anti, antibiotic, anti this, anti that. It's like, how about pro life? How about we get your you know, you're going out working every day. That's great, because you know why? You're getting your blood and your lymph flowing and you're sweating sweat. You know that aluminum comes out in your sweat, Toxic metals come out in your sweat. You create salt levels in your blood that stimulates your skin immune system, which is a separate entity. Like, I didn't know any of this when I was a conventionally practicing doctor to even say, like, I wanted to detoxify mercury out of my patients in order to lower their blood pressure. And I was told that that was not allowed. We're not like, well, then I don't want to do this anymore. Because I know from a hair mineral analysis and from a chelation test that that person is burdened, hardened with aluminum and mercury. And I know that both of those things can raise blood pressure. So why wouldn't we want to remove that? The same reason we're not allowed to say vaccines. But you know what a multi billion dollar industry blood pressure treatment is and cholesterol treatment is. Oh, no, forget about it. Yeah, I mean, I saw malignant hypertension happen after a tetanus shot in an adult patient of mine. And so that was another one thing that woke me up and, and I was like, well, gosh, that's weird. And then you look up, you see there's other case reports. And then you're told, well, case reports don't mean anything. You need randomized controlled studies. Yeah. So it's like there's frustration at every corner. But I love doing what I do now. And I love the fact, look, it's all great. I wouldn't change anything in my life, just put it that way. And I'm really glad I have the background of conventional medicine. But that, that's like, background of conventional medicine is like year one and really learning about healing and life. It's just, it's the very basics. And doctors still need to keep learning, but most conventional doctors are mandated to keep learning, but they're told where they can read to get their credits. Every year, you can only get your credits from reading this and answering the questions like a good little doggie. Every year, which I still have to do. But beyond that, when I have my own spare time, like, I've learned ozone therapy, I've learned how to use vitamin C. I've learned how to look at the body electromagnetically and use bioresonance. And there's just so much stuff you can do that really helps people and keeps them out of a whole bunch of trouble that they would have gotten into if they went and took allergy medicines and got their tonsils out or kept on their blood pressure medications and let the inflammation go wild in their body and didn't know anything about how to dampen. Look, most disease comes from inflammation. Inflammation. You know, cholesterol is trying to save you. It's not trying to kill you. The cholesterol is a response to inflammation. It's like your fever is trying to save your life. It's like everything in medicine is about dampening down the symptoms that are trying to save your life, you know? So it's like, I look at it and I think, I can't believe I ever actually agreed upon that.
A
Well, it took a lot of courage to step out of line and speak your mind. And I'm really glad you did because I hope more will realize that this is what a doctor is supposed to do. And you're not supposed to be a spokesperson for an industry that's pretty sociopathic, which makes some great strides. Look, there's a lot of amazing orthopedic surgeons and eye surgeons and neurosurgeons. There's a lot of amazing work being done by medicine. But then there's also the pharmaceutical drug company, which, when attached to that and to the money people, they want to make more money every time they can. Every quarter, they want to have a bigger quarter, they want a bigger house, they want a bigger jet, and they just keep going. And the way to get money is to get you to take their stuff. It's not to heal you. The way they really make money is to convince you that you're sick.
B
And if that wasn't the case, we would have more medical freedom that we have. Right?
A
Right.
B
Because we would have choices, we would have options. We wouldn't be told what we have to do to protect the public.
A
You shouldn't be shamed for getting better from some other way. That wouldn't be a thing. I know that wouldn't be a thing.
B
Pretty crazy, isn't it?
A
Yeah, it's pretty weird. Well, thank you very much for doing what you do and for writing that book, because it was a real eye opener for me. I had no idea. I had no idea the history of these things. I had no idea idea the correlations between, like, when the vaccine was induced and what, when the death rates had already dropped down. I didn't know all that stuff until I read your book.
B
Who gave you the book?
A
I do not remember. I don't remember. Somebody recommended it.
B
Okay.
A
And.
B
And you Read it.
A
Yeah.
B
Cheers to you.
A
Well, it's a page turner, you know, it's. I listen to it in my car, too, and I listen to it in the sauna. It's one of the those books that you kind of have to go over it a couple of times just to sort of digest it and go, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait, hold on. Apple cider vinegar they were using to stop people from getting smallpox. Like, what the fuck is that? How is that real? Like, doctors were saying that they were treating people with smallpox and they didn't worry about getting it because they were consuming apple cider vinegar multiple times a day. And it actually worked.
B
But the reports showed even today, apple cider vinegar, it's had a big resurgence in terms of keeping your gut ph nice and low so that you can digest your food better, which has downstream effects to everything. But it's also a fermented product. It's got a lot of benefits. Not just that, but even on the skin, it's really great to put on chicken pox and probably smallpox as well. But if I may just direct people to dissolvingillusions.com because if you just go to Amazon, you're not going to. There's two different versions of the book. There's the original one that you read, and then there's the 10th anniversary version that has 200 extra pages. And we delineate early on what the new pages, what the new chapters are so you don't have to go read the old stuff if you don't want to.
A
What do the new 200 pages cover?
B
It covers tuberculosis. It covers this. One of the chapters I really love. It's Toxic Medicine of the Past, all the different crazy treatments that I was telling you about. And then I added a whole bunch of the. Because more information came out after 2013. So we added that in and then we published a second book which is all full of doctor quotes from 200 years. Because people say, why are you the only one? It's like, well, I'm actually not the only one. It's like back then this was what was recorded from doctors and public health officials, which is probably 1% of what actually was said. And then we have hard to find vaccination tragedies, Royal Commission on Vaccination Time line. And then we have rare documents at the back that has, like the Encyclopedia Britannica, where they hired a very highly decorated, well known, highly respected doctor to write a chapter on smallpox. And at the end when he did what I did and basically looked at all the facts, he decimated the vaccine completely so that you can't really find that very easily anymore. So this one is called the companion book to Dissolving Illusions. And then. But if you can see all the versions and all, we've been translated into eight languages. We're about to be translated into Chinese. But the best resource is dissolvingillusions.com and it will show you what your options for purchase and where you can purchase the different books if you want to, you know, an alternative press. We have an alternative press for those people that don't want to do Amazon. So. Yeah. And all the different languages and the different versions are on there.
A
All right.
B
Yeah.
A
Thank you again. Thank you very much.
B
Really appreciate you.
A
My pleasure. All right, Bye, everybody.
Podcast Summary: The Joe Rogan Experience #2294 - Dr. Suzanne Humphries
Release Date: March 26, 2025
In episode #2294 of The Joe Rogan Experience, host Joe Rogan engages in a profound and contentious discussion with Dr. Suzanne Humphries, a nephrologist and author of Dissolving Illusions. The conversation delves deep into the realms of vaccine skepticism, historical vaccine practices, natural remedies, and the intricate interplay between conventional medicine and alternative health approaches. This summary encapsulates the key points, debates, and insights shared during the episode.
Joe Rogan ([00:06]):
"You just said something that's very important. Can't be dogmatic when you're talking about vaccines or about anything."
Dr. Suzanne Humphries ([00:21]):
"Yes, it is good to keep an open mind, isn't it? And be flexible and look at a 360-degree view of things rather than your tunnel vision and what you're indoctrinated into, isn't it?"
Rogan and Dr. Humphries begin by emphasizing the importance of maintaining an open and non-dogmatic approach when discussing vaccines. Dr. Humphries introduces her perspective, highlighting the need to examine medical practices critically.
Rogan ([01:01]):
"I dismissed all that stuff as total nonsense. I was like, oh, that's hippie nonsense. Like echinacea, like get out of here. Garlic, come on, get out of here."
Dr. Humphries ([01:45]):
"And it doesn't develop drug resistance like a lot of the drugs that are engineered for it. Yeah, the hippies seem to have got it right, I think."
The discussion shifts to natural remedies, with Dr. Humphries advocating for the efficacy of herbs like cinnamon and garlic, which are often dismissed by conventional medicine. She argues that these natural solutions offer benefits without the drawbacks of synthetic drugs, such as drug resistance.
Dr. Humphries ([03:42]):
"We saw an explosion of their creativity since 1986. The National Child Vaccine Injury Act was passed, setting a precedent for indemnifying vaccine companies. This allowed them to introduce adjuvants and technologies like messenger RNA vaccines, which wouldn't have been possible without legal protections."
Dr. Humphries provides a critical overview of the history surrounding polio vaccines, particularly focusing on the legal protections introduced in 1986 that shielded vaccine manufacturers from lawsuits. She contends that these protections enabled the rapid evolution of vaccine technologies, including the development of mRNA vaccines.
Dr. Humphries ([76:34]):
"Simian Virus 40 (SV40) was introduced into polio vaccines through contaminated monkey kidney cells. SV40 is carcinogenic in humans, enhancing cancer-promoting genes and inhibiting tumor suppressors. This contamination has been linked to a rise in kidney cancers and other diseases."
A significant portion of the conversation addresses the contamination of vaccines with SV40, a virus introduced inadvertently during the production of polio vaccines. Dr. Humphries argues that SV40 has had long-term carcinogenic effects, contributing to the rise in certain cancers and other health issues.
Dr. Humphries ([11:27]):
"People were telling doctors to vaccinate children using contaminated vaccines. The smallpox vaccine contained more bacteria and fungi than the virus itself, leading to widespread illness and mortality."
The discussion extends to the smallpox vaccine, where Dr. Humphries claims that the vaccine was contaminated with harmful microbes, causing more harm than good. She highlights historical instances where medical authorities suppressed negative outcomes associated with vaccination.
Dr. Humphries ([26:26]):
"Breast milk contains vital components like HAMLET, stem cells, and activated T cells that train the infant's immune system. Vaccines skew the immune response towards the TH2 arm, promoting allergies and autoimmunity, whereas breastfeeding supports a balanced immune development."
Dr. Humphries emphasizes the critical role of breastfeeding in developing a robust and balanced immune system in infants. She contrasts this natural process with the impact of vaccines, which she argues disrupt immune balance and contribute to increased allergies and autoimmune conditions.
Dr. Humphries ([46:21]):
"The COVID-19 vaccines contained snake toxin proteins that target nicotinic receptors, leading to adverse effects like long COVID and placental damage. These components were designed to prolong the vaccine’s presence in the body, causing more harm than protection."
The conversation takes a sharp turn towards the COVID-19 vaccines, where Dr. Humphries criticizes the inclusion of certain proteins intended to enhance immune response but instead causing detrimental effects. She links these components to conditions such as long COVID and reproductive issues, arguing that the vaccines' design prioritizes profit over health.
Dr. Humphries ([143:00]):
"The tetanus vaccine does not guarantee immunity. Cases of tetanus still occur even in vaccinated individuals due to various factors like wound management and underlying health conditions. Natural immunity from exposure remains more reliable."
Discussing the tetanus vaccine, Dr. Humphries contends that vaccination does not provide absolute protection and that natural immunity through controlled exposure and proper wound care is more effective. She argues that the medical community overlooks natural prevention methods in favor of pharmaceutical interventions.
Dr. Humphries ([50:41]):
"There has been 226 years of propaganda to enforce vaccine acceptance. Government and media have repeatedly suppressed dissenting voices, labeling skeptics as quacks and isolating them socially and professionally."
A critical analysis of media and governmental roles in shaping public opinion on vaccines is presented. Dr. Humphries asserts that a long history of propaganda has marginalized vaccine skeptics, preventing open discourse and the dissemination of alternative viewpoints grounded in historical data.
Dr. Humphries ([125:01]):
"I co-authored Dissolving Illusions after extensive research revealed numerous inconsistencies and harmful practices in vaccine development and administration. The book faced initial rejection from publishers, leading us to self-publish to ensure the truth was shared."
Dr. Humphries shares her motivation and the challenges faced while writing her book, Dissolving Illusions. She highlights the resistance from mainstream publishers and the commitment required to bring her findings to the public, underscoring the importance of disseminating alternative medical narratives.
Dr. Humphries ([152:18]):
"For those seeking comprehensive information, visit dissolvingillusions.com. The book has been translated into eight languages, providing accessible insights into the hidden truths of vaccination history and practices."
In conclusion, Dr. Humphries urges listeners to engage with her work for a deeper understanding of vaccine history and its implications on public health. She emphasizes the need for informed decision-making and the rejection of dogmatic adherence to mainstream medical practices.
Dr. Suzanne Humphries ([00:31]):
"Especially if you know that that indoctrination has been on purpose and profitable."
Dr. Humphries ([09:28]):
"America's coffee in nature don't become more problematic as they go through the human system, they become less problematic."
Dr. Humphries ([18:35]):
"Polio is still alive and well. Polio is called different things today."
Dr. Humphries ([26:51]):
"It's not just food. It's got so many different purposes."
Dr. Humphries ([46:21]):
"Any doubts whether or not well funded about the vaccination must not be allowed to exist."
Dr. Humphries ([143:03]):
"I have seen malignant hypertension happen after a tetanus shot in an adult patient of mine."
Dr. Humphries ([152:18]):
"The book covers tuberculosis, toxic medicine of the past, and rare vaccination tragedies."
Episode #2294 of The Joe Rogan Experience with Dr. Suzanne Humphries is a compelling exploration of vaccine history, skepticism, and the tensions between alternative and conventional medical practices. Dr. Humphries provides a critical lens through which to view vaccine development and administration, urging listeners to question established narratives and seek comprehensive understandings of medical interventions. Whether one agrees or disagrees with her viewpoints, the conversation undeniably adds a provocative layer to the ongoing discourse surrounding vaccines and public health.
For those interested in delving deeper into these topics, Dr. Humphries recommends visiting dissolvingillusions.com to explore her work and access her books in multiple languages.