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Welcome to the second episode of the Lighthouse Podcast.

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I'm your host, Kenford Bitana, and today's guest is Dr. Jack Kruse, neurosurgeon extraordinaire,

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the menace to big pharma and centralized medicine, and the leader of decentralized medicine,

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a paradigm that is able to resolve chronic health epidemics that we face globally today.

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His information has changed the lives of my friends and my family, and the least I can do to give back,

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to pay it forward, is to join the group of people that have shared his information online and further immortalized it

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so that someone out there who struggled with a chronic health condition that has been to every centralized doctor

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to no avail, they happen to come across one of these podcasts and they gain an insight.

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They find a gem, and the trajectory of their life changes.

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That is the universal purpose that all of us in the quantum biology community share, and it's an honor to be a part of that.

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So without further ado, let's get right into the episode.

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Could you give us a little background about yourself, specifically your credentials

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and how you grew up with this apparent intellectual sharpness?

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Well, people that tell me I'm intellectually sharp, I kind of chuckle because I'm a big believer in decentralization.

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Unfortunately, I became pretty sharp because of centralization, because of the museums in New York City

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when I grew up as a poor white kid in that community.

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Back in the 60s and 70s, I was able to tag along to rich kids who were being taught by the ladies in those museums

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all these different stories about different parts of science.

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It didn't include just biology, it included archaeology, it included astrology, evolution, evolutionary biology,

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biology, chemistry, physics, even cosmology, astrobiology, and the 8th Planetarium.

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So I was immersed in a soup that allowed me to imbibe many, many, many different things.

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I was fortunate to be born probably in my family the way I was.

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I was born after my mother went through a miscarriage.

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She went through a miscarriage because of decisions that she made actually around life.

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And she actually was Catholic. She prayed to one of the saints in Catholicism called Saint Jude.

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She said, if you give me a healthy child, do not allow me to miscarriage, I promise I'll do all I can to do the things I can.

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And the funny thing about my mom, obviously she didn't know anything about microbiology.

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What did she do when she was pregnant with me?

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She had a can of salmon every day. She went to Central Park. She never wore sunglasses. She took them off.

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And she would sit there and watch the pigeon right around what would become Waldenburg Park.

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Why? Because my family is from New York City. We lived there for a long time. My grandfather was a New York City policeman.

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That was true from the 1920s all the way through the 1960s and 1970s. I was born at that time.

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So when I came into the world, I was dropped into what I think was a pretty good situation where centralization really was not harmful.

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And I don't want to say it wasn't harmful. It was, but not as harmful it was to the degree it is today.

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And I was dropped into a situation where when I was born, I was very long because of what my mom and dad had gone through with the last pregnancy.

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And I happened to come out of my mother. I was a very different kid. My mom's dead, you see.

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But she used to tell me stories of when I was two and three years old, how I would flamux people in my family, the teachers, things like that.

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Because I was so curious and my family was actually really good to me. They bought me things that would stimulate my anthology.

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So my parents are very early on bought me the world book Encyclopedias. I had it almost completely memorized by the time I was four years old.

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My godmother, who's name is Bonnie Legion, she actually died of a glioblastoma when I was in residence. She was 38 years old.

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She bought me a chemistry set when I was six years old. She told my mother at Christmas, she goes, I know that I probably shouldn't buy Jactus.

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But she goes, there's something that tells me that he's going to be stimulated by this.

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And it turns out my godmother, she was, she was, I don't want to say a prophet, but she was pressing.

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But she knew there was something different about me than most other kids. And what the difference is between me and anybody else shorter than me.

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And I, this may sound bragging to a lot of people, but it's not when you can back it up. I am the most curious person you'll ever meet.

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You pose a question to me. Or if the world poses a question to me, I will not stop until I figure it out.

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Sometimes it'll take me years to figure out. Like the story that I relayed to Rick and to Hubert on Rick's podcast on Tetragrammaton.

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That was a long process. It's not something that I came to quickly. The pieces were there.

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When it happened in Eureka moment, it seemed fast, like when I talked about it on that podcast.

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But I promise you that the 40 years before that, every single one of those years were really, really important in order to figure that out.

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And it's not something that's lost. It really is. And I have this fundamental belief that one of the things that we've lost in the modern world,

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because the modern world now is sculpted by light that's not from our sun, it's actually alien, is that we've lost a little bit.

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I don't think the younger generation really is that curious. And I think they accept a lot of things that they hear on TikTok, a lot of the things they hear on Instagram,

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a lot of things they hear on Twitter. They're all about a short little message.

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Teach me quantum biology, Uncle Jack, and a couple of tweets, and let's get out of here.

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That's actually been my existence for the last 20 years on social media. And I have to tell you, I chuckle at that.

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But at the same time, it's actually done some good. Why? Because it actually allowed me to hone my skills to get the message out.

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Like if you go and look at my Twitter feed, for example, this morning, I decided to post something because of a consult that I did.

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That's tangentially related to the Uberman podcast about the cardboard diet and muscles.

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And I said, you know, I told my nurse when we were here in El Salvador, I said, I'm going to post something this morning that's going to really rock people's work.

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I'm going to do seven or eight tweets and explain to people some of the most complex science.

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And I have to tell you, 20 years ago, I don't think I was capable of doing that, Kenford, if it wasn't probably for your generation.

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Your generation has forced me to reduce the word salad and give you the truth unabashed. And what has that done?

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I think for the older crowd, it's pissed them off. You know, the boomers seem, look, I don't understand all these words.

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I don't do this and that. They're not good with Google Translate or searching things.

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And they get pissed off at me because of that. But at the same time, I tell them the same thing I would tell you.

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But if you're interested in the things and the concepts that I talked about, take your time and do what you did in third grade.

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Go to the library, copy the things down, write them, you know, rewind them.

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Like I didn't have this ability to rewind things that I heard in the Museum of Natural History about like the Archaeopteryx or what I learned about blue giants and red giants.

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But I have to tell you, I have photographic memory. My memory is spectacular. It's always been good.

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And I don't forget things that matter. The things that I do forget are the things that I view as superfluous.

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And I've been fortunate because of my teachers, the people that have impacted me.

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I didn't have in my young life a lot of bullshit put in my head. I actually had a lot of people tell me the truth.

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The people that pulled bullshit in my head probably were the religious instruction stuff that I went through because of my mom early on.

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She was a very devout Catholic. And I would say probably a lot of the other stuff that was what I call scientism or religious was the science that I learned about centralized medicine through dental school, medical school and residency.

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And in those 18 months that you heard me black-spoiletic about in the Unruh podcast, that it was very, very difficult for me to subtract that stuff.

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Why? Because that is like, was the backbone I felt of my knowledge.

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When the backbone of your knowledge is shown to have some big holes in it, you have really three choices to make.

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The first choice is to ignore it. The second choice is to bullshit your way around it.

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And I think the third choice is actually to examine it with your educated mind and then come up and find out why it was wrong.

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And then come up with a new idea of what may fill in the blanks for what was the previous paradigm.

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And to me, the third option was always the best option because I felt that's what happened with Newton.

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It's what happened with Einstein. It's what happened with Da Vinci. It's what happened with Michelangelo.

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It's what happened with Jonas Salk. It's actually what happened with his nemesis Sabin who came up with the opposite vaccine.

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It's also what happened with the people that were involved in the Solvay Conference in 1927, you know, when quantum mechanics was being formulated.

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It farted out between Einstein, Bohr, Rosen, Heisenberg, even Madame Curie was at that meeting.

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She died soon after, but did she play a role? She did. Did Louis de Broglie play a role? He played a role.

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And all these little things were in, I would like to tell you, the soup of my mind.

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The soup of my mind 20 years ago when I faced my own dilemma, my own demons of why my own life was a problem from not only my own personal medical problems,

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but from the job that I was doing, the things that I loved because I always knew that I was really gifted to be a doctor.

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I was also gifted to be a professional athlete, but I turned that down mainly because of my mother.

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And my nurse to this day, Chantal, always gets mad at me when I say this, but the biggest regret that I truly have is that I didn't choose the option of being a professional athlete because I think it would have been an easier choice.

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I wouldn't have been controversial. I would have made a ton more money. It probably would have been easier.

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But looking at it now at 60 years old, I don't know if I would have been as passionate because I can tell you at 60 years old right now as an old man, I'm pretty passionate about what I do.

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I'm pretty passionate about getting to the truth. And I know that the truth is not axiomatic. It's an approximation, the best data that we have now.

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The problem is the best data is not what's found in centralized medicine. It's actually found in decentralized medicine.

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And I think that the public has just woken up even to this issue in the last three years because of what we've all faced through COVID.

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I think even the most ardent critic of my work would agree, you know, the line that I drew in the sand three years ago when I decided to go and do a documentary with Dr. McCullough and some of the other leaders that are out there to speak out against this.

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You put a target on your back. You put a professional target on your back that people could shoot, that they could cancel you. And, you know, I don't want to say that I wear it as a badge of honor.

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I felt that was my duty. You know, Dr. Malone, who was also in the same video, I think the thing that all three of us, I've never talked to either one of them about this,

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but I think the thing that all three of us are still pissed off about is that that movie, that documentary had it behind a paywall. It had to be hidden because if it wasn't, we would have been canceled.

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Now, here we are in 2023, you know, on the second half of the year, and you see the things that are breaking in the UK. You see the things that are breaking in Australia.

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You see the things that are now breaking in Australia, where I should say Canada, where people are talking about the complications of the vaccine.

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And people are beginning to wake up that some of us, you know, we're soothsayers telling you the truth in the beginning. It wasn't that we're looking for attribution or being lauded.

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We're trying to explain something deep to the public. Centralized science has a very big train in it, and it's not based on the truth.

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It's based on profiteers or the people that control it. When you devoid or, let's say, opt out for the experts in the centralized paradigm, you're giving a lot away, a lot.

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You have to understand that that's a trade that you're making. I understand there's going to be a lot of people that listen to your podcast that say, well, Jack, we just didn't know, you know, two, three, four years ago.

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Well, you actually did because me, McCullough, and Malone were telling you, even on Twitter, go back and fact check the Twitter and look at it.

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We're telling you, none of us, absolutely all three of us, none of us were anti-vax. RFK Jr. is running for president of the United States. Same thing. He's not anti-vax, but he was anti this vax for a very specific reason.

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Because we didn't get the answers that we really needed from the centralized profiteers. And now we're finding out that all of our so-called conspiracy theories from mainstream media, you know, from state medical boards, from professional guilds, from the critics, you know, guys like you, Kenford, that were on Twitter, that thought we were wackadoos, that we were crazy, that we didn't know where to talk about.

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Now you kind of know it's true. Why is this a good thing? Why, why do I say this failure for where we are now is a good thing? Because it's got everybody's attention.

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Now they realize they got punched in the mouth by Mike Tyson. And they're like, what else are we being lied about? What, what are the main drivers of neolithic disease and centralized medicine that centralized physicians are impotent to fix?

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And it turns out what we're good, let's start out what we're good at. We're good at acute medical conditions. You get a subdural hematoma, you're great. You break your leg, you break your arm, you fracture your neck.

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You know, you get a small bowel obstruction. We're really good at treating those things. I would tell everybody in the world listening to this podcast, do not doubt the care that you're beginning in the acute medical, you know, emergency center.

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Where you need to be a very informed consumer is when you have obesity, diabetes, hypothyroidism, autism, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, frontal typhoid dysplasia, heart disease.

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Those are just a few off the top of my head. I probably put in autoimmunity, just so we can cover the people in Europe, Australia, and Canada. You begin to see a different viewpoint.

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That's where centralized medicine fails. And you have to decide as the public, how long or how much rope you're going to give us before you begin to question the narrative.

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And I think right now, post COVID, everybody's pretty much fed up. No matter what your ideology is, whether you're right, left, or independent, in any country, globally, I think everybody now knows the aftermarket data is pretty crystal clear.

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That centralized medicine led by Dr. Fauci, who pretty much misled the world, not only the people in the United States and the politicians in the United States, but also misled the world with the help of the people at the IMF, the World Health Organization,

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really fueled by the people at the World Economic Forum. These are the people that are your enemy.

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And your goal, if you choose to accept it, is to realize that you need to embrace decentralization in your life. You need to understand what that means first and foremost.

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And you need to understand that you, your opinion of what's in your head is just as good as the experts. You don't believe me?

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The biggest medical errors in the 20th and 21st century have been made by centralized experts. Okay? That includes both politics, medicine, and economics.

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There is absolutely no way to argue that point differently. But ultimately, it's up to you, because you're the CEO of you when it comes to the biology of you, to decide what you want to do from this point forward.

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And that's kind of where I would say a person listening to this podcast needs to stop.

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I can experientially confirm that my generation is not curious. They don't dive into anything. They kind of just listen to what the normal consensus is, the normal notion is, and it doesn't get past that.

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So when a guy like me, but your generation needs to understand this, Ken, that consensus positions is inherently pseudoscientific. There is no consensus in scientific method.

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In fact, none at all. And I can wax poetic on that for a multitude of time. I'm not going to do that with you. But I want that statement out there in this podcast for people to know when everybody tells you there is consensus in science, that is a huge red flag that it's centralized and it's pseudoscientific.

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Right. So one of the problems I feel like with the notion of, well, first issue, all of these people are surrounded by blue light right off the bat. It kind of caps your ability to see the truth right in front of your face.

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As you said in the 2017 Vermont talk, right.

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And also another thing is the notion of light being a main driver of your biology is so far removed from current notions is no one even bats an eye to it.

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It sounds ridiculous, crazy, et cetera, to people like us.

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And so one thing I want to unpack is, could you set the context for why light isn't just a harmless visual optical medium that is separate from your biology?

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It's just out there. Your biology is in here.

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That's that's a faulty notion. In fact, light is a main driver of your biology through light, water, magnetism, the three legged stool. Could you unpack how physics drives biology?

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Yeah, I would tell you that there's this is a multi-pronged argument. The first prong that I would give you, I think it's the prong that's the least inarguable for even the critics is that all food webs on planet Earth relate back to photosynthesis.

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So photosynthesis is derived from the sun. Most people are in third grade that it's sunlight, carbon dioxide and water, form sugar.

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Nobody argues with that. But the problem is when you flip the switch and then look at the people that tell you it's all about diet and exercise, they fail to realize that diets, all diets fundamentally lean back to light.

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And then they forget to realize that many of the things that are in your local supermarket are not grown under photosynthetic qualitative analysis programs.

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They're they're grown in a lab somewhere by ConAgra or Nestle and they're franken foods and they're franken foods. What does this mean?

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It means fundamentally that the deuterium to H plus content is fundamentally flawed.

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And that opens up a huge can of worms about what that means for the black swan mitochondria. It means that you have to understand about how the TCA cycle, urea cycle works. That was actually tied to the Twitter storm that I put out today.

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Today's August 7th or 8th. It ties directly to that. And I would tell you that that's the first problem. The second problem is a problem you brought up.

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We were optimized for 3.8 billion years of evolutionary history through the first two domains of life, bacteria and archaea.

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We came on to the scene. When I say we, I want to be very clear here. We mean eukaryotes.

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650 million years ago, when the third domain of life showed up on this planet, that domain of life forms all complex life. All 32.5 of complex life come from eukaryotes.

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No complex life comes from bacteria or archaea. But the most interesting part of the eukaryote story is that we hijacked a bacteria slash archaea to become a mitochondria.

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And a mitochondria is a big part of that eukaryote story. So what does that mean? It means that you fundamentally have to understand what the thermodynamics of that stowaway package is, what we did to it, why it happened.

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And when you parse it down, you'll find out that it fundamentally is tied to the light change in the environment that occurred at that time.

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So here we are, part one of the story. We talk about photosynthesis being a light story. Now, here we are explaining the third kingdom of life that we come from is also a light story.

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Well, guess what? We're two for two here. Now we come to the real question that you asked. In 1873, when the light bulb was innovated by Edison and the people in Europe,

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it meant it was refined and then utilized in an AC power grid that was born by Westinghouse and Tussle in 1893 at a World's Fair. And we introduced light at night. That completely broke the paradigm for 3.8 billion years on this planet that you only have light during the daytime.

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You didn't have light at night. Now I will caveat that and say humans did break the rule, and I would say our ancestors, the Neanderthals, 65 billion years ago when they innovated light in the cave.

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But we also put fire in the cave, and fire is a form of non-A to B amount, contrary to what people want to think about today.

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It's absolutely not congruent with what the sun produces. But the bottom line is, for the last 70,000 years, humans have been screwing with nature's laws.

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The nature's laws are axiomatic about, like, all of our programs, and us, every bit of the programs in eukaryotic life for 650 million years is operational with sunlight. It's not operational with fire. It's not operational with candles.

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And it's certainly not operational with Tesla's power grid, Thomas Alva Edison's light bulb, or any of the iterations that have come from General Electric, Phillips, or any other centralized entity that you want to mention in this podcast.

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And the implications of that, which is really what you asked me in your question, are vast. Why? Because the part of human biology that has gone really almost unstudied and is not well known is part of the equation that I brought up to Rick and you were on the podcast.

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I said, tell me what you know about the non-visual photoreceptor system. Tell me what you know about OPN 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6.

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And it turns out, for those of you who did listen to that podcast, and if you haven't, hopefully after this one you will, you begin to realize that the guys who control centralized science don't know a goddamn thing about any of it. And that is the basis of why modern clinicians are impotent to fix neolithic diseases.

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And I want to discuss what's the big change that occurred since 1873. The light that we're forced to live under now is modern man-made light. And that light has some huge implication changes for cell and molecular biology because of the physics of cells.

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And this has gone almost undetected in biology up until recent times. The time that this is beginning to change was in 2016. Remember, Kenford, when I brought this to the world stage in 2005, people thought I was bat shit crazy.

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So here we are 11 years later, and the Nobel Prize is given for circadian biology. And it turns out you have to have bright days from the sun, dark nights all the time. That's really the story of that Nobel Prize.

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It's probably the one centralized Nobel Prize that's been given that is pure as the snow is white. And you need to know what the implications that it is. And the problem is, modern humans for the last 130 years do not live in that world.

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They haven't lived in that world. We are bathed in non-native EMF. Some of the people listening to this podcast are going to think this is just a story about the light we see. Actually, it turns out the story since 1995, it's about the non-native EMF we don't see.

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That's tied to our communication. Kenford is in a foreign country, and I'm in a foreign country, but we're still able to communicate over this medium. There's a positive connotation there because we can share information this way.

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But the negative connotation is that we're doing damage to ourselves. And of course, Kenford can't see me on this video, but in the pitch of black, it's 7.04 p.m. in El Salvador. I have red light on me. I also have a UVA flashlight on me as well.

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And that's the kind of, I guess, detail that people need to understand. Why is Jack going to that enthebreed and do it? And it turns out that the reason for that has to do with my understanding of the non-visual photoreceptors in man.

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They are the things that are the key. For those of you who don't know, OPN 1 and 2, what does OPN stand for? Opsons. OPN 1 and 2 are the cones and rods. Everybody knows about them.

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In your eyes. OPN 3 is encephalopsin. Most people who listen to this podcast won't even know what the hell encephalopsin is. And I'm going to tell you that encephalopsin, which is something I haven't even talked about that much to my tribe, is probably the single most important opsin as it relates to neonatal diseases.

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I've spent a great deal of time since 2017 telling people about OPN 5, which is melanopsin, which is the blue light detector.

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The reason that I've talked on the blue light detector so much is because the blue light detector is the one that we're breaking the law most.

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That's why most of the bulbs modern humans use, both on their computer screens, through their cell phones, and also through LED lights, because the governments throughout the world have now made incandescent lights impossible to find, and in some cases illegal to have.

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This is a huge problem. A huge problem. And these lights are now not present for you to use, even though they did provide some marginal benefit in the early part of the 20th century.

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Now we live in a world where we have transgenerational epigenetic changes, where children are being changed before they're even hatched from their mothers because of the light their grandmothers and mothers abuse before the child is born.

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Then when the child is born into that environment, the changes are hardwired into their neurologic system. That's not what we are adapted to. And it's incumbent upon the public to understand this story is not easy to get.

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I'll be the first one to tell you. It's not an easy one to get, but it's one that you critically have to make the leap to understand why your centralized physicians are impotent to fix some of the diseases that we talked about earlier.

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So the main thing I extracted was opsin 5-melanopsin. That changes the game because it turns the eye into a clock, right? And that clock reads our light and dark cycles, which is why the ball of biology is based on the coupled light and dark cycles.

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That's the circadian mechanism, but it's way more complicated than that. I mean, realize that melanopsin is the number one opsin found in the human brain.

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Now we know since 2017, it's also the number one opsin in our skin and our blood vessels. So that should actually stop you at hello and go, is this the reason why neurodegeneration and peripheral artery disease have such a strong link?

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The answer is yes. You know, when you listen to centralized experts that write New York Times bestsellers like Peter Adia, who remarks multiple times in his book that link is present, but he has no understanding why.

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And yet by training before his MD degree, he's an engineer. He understands thermodynamics. Why am I pointing this out to you, Kendra? Even a smart guy who has training as an engineer can still shit the bed.

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Yet he can publish a book that people laud and say it's great when I can come on your podcast and tell you that it's not worth the toilet paper you wipe your ass with. That's the truth.

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And the thing is, that's a hyperbolic statement to me. But I have to tell you, Peter Adia is just like I was 20 years ago when I thought that everything I learned in my centralized training was gospel.

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Turns out it's not. The thing is, to really take the next step to understand, you know, the physics of organisms, truly how we work, you have to have a beginner's mindset. You have to go back to where I was when I told you when I was a young boy,

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walking around Museum of Natural History on 81st and 7th Avenue and learning all these disparate facts and saying, how do all these pieces fit? Why is it that these things are true in nature?

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And somehow we can't resolve why they're important in medicine. Like I've said in a couple of podcasts I've done recently, having been released, because somebody asked me, what's the edge of my science? What's the biggest conundrum that I see out there that I think will shock people in the future that we'll find out?

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And this is, it's really funny because something happened since I've said this on another podcast. I said, don't you find it amazing that our sun, the number one particle that it makes is a neutrino that happens to be the number one particle we don't know anything about?

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Or, I shouldn't say anything, you know very little about it. I said, do you think that biology doesn't use a neutrino in some way that we're not aware of yet? Wouldn't it make sense that the number one particle made by the sun would have an effect?

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And don't you think three days after I mentioned that on the podcast, somebody posted a link that scientists have now found that there's other frequencies in sunlight that they didn't expect that are now present.

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And they found very high energy gamma waves. And people are like, wait a minute, this doesn't fit our paradigm to what's in our textbooks in centralized paradigm. And see, the centralized paradigm will bury this new information because it doesn't fit the

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the scientism or the religious dogma that we treat or teach medical students or PhD scientists. What I'm trying to tell people is you need that information on sensor, come directly from the scientists, and then we need the great thinkers to think about

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what's nature really doing? What's the game that's being played? What recipes is she hiding from us that may explain some of the things that we don't understand in the physiology of eukaryotes?

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Goodness, explain why eukaryotes are different than bacteria, why they're different than archaea? Goodness, explain why the physical chemistry that's present in cells are different.

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And you'll find, Kenford, when you look into these things deeply, into the details. Remember I told you about being a curious mammal? These are the things that fueled my passion as an old man.

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I can promise you, I can already see forward to my deathbed. I'm going to be pissed off that I'm dying, not because I'm dying, but because I want more time to figure this out. Why? Because I've done the hard work of subtracting the superfluous in my education to be very open for what might be possible with Mother Nature's law.

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I've heard you say in a couple of other podcasts that you don't want this information to die. And as a 22 year old man picking it up this early, I'm going to make sure it doesn't die.

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That makes me happy, I'm going to tell you. That really makes me happy. It actually makes me happy that I decided to do your podcast with you because I said this to somebody not that long ago, I think it was Mike Barra on a podcast that we just released recently.

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I feel like when we have really good thinkers out there and they die, it's almost like the Library of Alexandria being burned down. I think what people forget about in history is when the Library of Alexandria was burned down, that's actually what facilitated the Dark Ages for humanity.

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For five to seven hundred years, we really remained in our rudimentary form, especially when it came to the scientific method. And the people that really brought us forward from the Dark Ages, this is the irony to me. It wasn't the scientists.

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Kenford was the artist. He was the artist of the Renaissance. That's the reason why I have a reference for Da Vinci, Michelangelo, and then later on, several decades, I should say millennia later, the Renaissance.

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Because what did they do? They painted with light. They actually, from 1850 through 1901, these were the guys that painted with light that were precognitive of what Einstein was going to say to the world of physics in 1905.

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And, you know, a lot of people think that this message somehow is hyperbolic or it's not well thought out by me. But I don't think people really understand my position and why I hold this artist in reverence.

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It's because Einstein never did an experiment. This was a thought experiment in his head. If you think about artwork, what is art? Art is exactly the same thing.

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It's a thought experiment in the head of Henri Matisse. It's a thought experiment in the head of Rembrandt. It was a thought experiment in the mind of Monet.

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It was actually a thought experiment in the mind of Picasso when he started out. And Picasso was the one who decided to radically change from 1895 through 1905, never understanding anything that was going on in the world of physics.

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But he presupposed what was getting ready to happen in particle physics. That's where cube is and comes from. Where size and shape changes really matter.

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And you begin to see how Picasso went from his blue and rose period to actually cubism. You see this radical change.

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And people don't realize that that radical change in him actually mimics what happened between the three domains of life. When we went from simple life, which was bacteria and archaea, and then all of a sudden eutera.

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It's almost the same transition. I don't think people appreciate it. I think the reason they don't appreciate it, Ken, is because I don't think they were dropped in the Museum of Natural History and the Museum of Modern Art like I was when I was five, six,

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seven, eight years old. And I heard what people said about these artists' work and what made them different. And then what did I do as a little kid?

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I started to think about when these people live and when the science evolved, when it changed. And I realized that the artist presupposed the changes in physics that were going on.

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And that wasn't a happy accident. That actually is quantum entangled. That's exactly what it is. And what I'm telling you is the same story was recapitulated at the Cambrian explosion.

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What happened between archaea and bacteria? Endosymbiosis was not a happy accident, you know, as Lin-Marc Oles laid it out. It actually was the next logical step that one should expect when you understand the physics of the environment and cells on the planet.

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And these ideas that we're sharing today, they're really fundamental in becoming a black swan. And you understanding why it is that blue light from your screen or RF and microwaves from your Apple iPhone or your iPad,

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it's horribly toxic, you know, to your family members, to you, to your mom, to your dad, how it causes hypoxia, how it steals oxygen from your mitochondria.

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And this leads to a different free radical signal. And that light scopes the morphology of particles, things in your mitochondria, but also the lipoproteins like that Peter Adya talks in his book.

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He always talks about ApoB and large L, little P, little A. He doesn't seem to realize that sunlight actually is what scopes those things.

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And it turns out that modern non-native EMF actually leads to changes in those things that lead to heart disease and decreased longevity.

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If anybody listens to this, I want them to know that exercising in a blue-lit gym with a bunch of idiots with earphones in their ear and listening through Apple, you know, what do you call those, ear pods, air pods, whatever you call them, whatever you call them, that these things are horribly toxic, you know, for you.

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And to me, that's the legacy, that's the seed I want to plant in the ground. And I want you, a guy like you at 22 years old, to be, I don't want to say the conductor, but I want you to be the shepherd tending to that flock when I'm dead.

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And say, look guys, we were warned about this shit in the 90s, the 2000s, the 2020s. You have to keep this going because the purveyors of centralized science, the purveyors of centralized profiteering, they want to bury this fucking story.

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They want you to keep being obedient idiots so that they can keep harvesting you just like, you know, a farmer harvests a water mill.

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One of the things that come to my mind is smoking used to be debated, but there was, you know, gradually increasing evidence, and then it reached an inflection point, a critical mass where the truth was the truth.

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There was no debate anymore.

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Smoking had negative effects, but there was...

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Well, I'm going to, you're going to be shocked when I tell you this. I'm going to disagree with you. I'm going to tell you why.

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This will probably shock a lot of people.

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Let's do it.

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The science that led to tobacco litigation for Philip Morris, actually it was convincing, but it wasn't proof positive, but it was compelling enough for them to settle the tobacco litigation. Why?

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Because the fact that Philip Morris realized suited US, I forget the name of the company, I think it was not US tobacco or something, something global tobacco company. Both of them realized that it was much more beneficial to settle this lawsuit, move on, pay the fine, and go on with it.

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Now, I'm going to tell you that science was never well delineated why cigarette smoke is really a problem. I'm going to tell you the decentralized reason why cigarette smoking is really bad.

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Number one is obvious. It causes hypoxia that reduces NAD positive in your mitochondria, that reduces your, your electron chain transport, and it raises heteroplasm rates.

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The second reason is in tobacco, when you smoke it, especially inhalational, you're absorbing a tremendous amount of transition metals into your alveolar macrophages. What does that do?

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It ruins the circadian biology in those areas, so that makes it much more likely that you develop cancer. Here's the interesting part of the cancer story.

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If you ever get a chance to come to New Orleans, you can fact check me on this. I have a good friend who's an artist who used to paint outside and smoke.

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And I told him, Danny, if you continue to smoke, just continue to do it outside in the sun. If you do that, you'll never get cancer.

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As soon as you buy a studio and you begin to paint inside, you're going to get cancer. Since Danny's got a studio, he's been sick, unending, no doubt about it.

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And the wisdom in my response to him, this is over 10 years ago, but I know he never put it together because he's not a scientist, he's an artist.

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He had no idea actually how the sun works to improve melanation so that he could get rid of the transition metals, which is exactly what melanin does, so that he wouldn't get the cancer.

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And the thing is, when he goes inside, he loses that ability. That's the reason why cigarette smoking can be looked at really bad.

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When you flip that story, Kenford, to the Swedish study that I always reference, it's actually referenced as a pin tweet on my Twitter feed, the Swedish study shows in 2016 that lack of sunlight is as bad as cigarette smoke.

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That's the reason why I'm telling you this story right now. The link to both of these stories is actually melanin.

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And that links directly to what I said to Rick, what I said to you, Roman. And the problem is, as improbable as this story may be to you or your listeners, the links are there for you to examine.

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And I've expanded those links in my blogs. The people that remain very curious about my work, when they read my blogs, they come away stunned because I take it to the nth degree.

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I want you to understand why these links exist. There are no paradoxes in life. It's all quantum mechanical. There is no cause and effect. Everything is based on probabilities.

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And it's more probable than not that Philip Morris, US tobacco, definitely caused cancer in a lot of people. But if they would have told people to smoke their products outside, I got an issue. The amount of carcinoma in the lung probably would have been significantly reduced.

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They probably would still have got emphysema, but I think carcinoma would have been reduced. What I'm telling people right now is the more technology you use, the more neolithic diseases you will get.

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And the type of neolithic diseases you get is functionally tied to how you use the technology. And this story is actually recapitulated with Steve Jobs' story. I tell Bitcoiners this all the time.

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He's the biggest epic fail in anybody in technology. Why? Because he amassed billions of dollars of wealth, but his health failed him at 56 years old because of the technology he built. And don't think that he was a dumbass.

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He actually knew exactly what he was doing because he wouldn't even let his kids use his own technology. And I always famously tell people, if you parse the words in his autobiography, he tells you the truth in there if you listen.

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In the iPad 2, he put an infrared sensor device in there. Why? Because he knew that when the iPad touched a children's leg, it would turn off the RF and microwave. He would think such an innovative device would have been something that Steve Jobs, the ultimate marketer, would have talked to the world about.

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Why didn't he talk about it? Because if he did, you would have began to question, why is this such an innovation? Why? Is there a downside? Is there a negative connotation to using his device to communicate?

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And the issue for a guy like you and a guy like me is I need to pass that information to you. I don't know, Kenford, when you read Steve Jobs' book, did you pick up that little nuance? Because guess what? That was the nuance between the words.

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It was there. He's telling you the truth. But guess what? You had to decipher the code. And it should be no shock that he died from a retro-perineal cancer. Why? Because he's the person in the world that coined the term laptop.

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That means he put the RF and microwave device that emitted blue light through the screen in his lap. And then what else did he do famously in every Apple talk that he ever did? His Levi jeans always had the outline of his iPod or his iPhone in his back pocket.

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And he died of a retro-perineal cancer that metastasized to his liver. And guess what? Anybody who's a biophysicist will tell you that the target zone of that radiation was his retro-perineal space.

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Okay? And like when I do gamma knife surgeries for brain tumors, we actually have physicists that target the tumors. These guys are experts in knowing how to target the tumors. And guess what? When I show them Steve Jobs' chapter in his book, and I have this discussion like I'm having with you, all of them look at me like even I didn't see this. It's blatantly obvious.

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It's right there. So my goal for a guy like you at 22 years old, I never want you to go do another podcast with me with earphones in your ears. I want to make sure they're air tubes. I can tell you I'm sitting in El Salvador right now with you, but my nurse and one of my members sitting in front of me in red light.

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I got no earphones on. I got the Pacific Ocean on my ear. I don't care if the video quality is bad. I don't care about any of that. Why? Because the quality information I give you is high fidelity. This is as good as good gets in 2023.

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I don't know if you're going to be able to get this from anybody else, but I want to make sure you're recording it and get it loud and clear. Technology has a negative connotation.

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And it's about time everybody start to look at everybody seems to get the message that messenger RNA vaccines, which were also a technology had a negative connotation. It's time that you realize your phone, your computer, your I, your fucking Garmin device, those stupid AirPods that you put in your ear to listen to podcasts like this.

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They're killing. They are a problem. In fact, the light bulbs that your mother has on in your sister's room, the Fitbit devices, the Apple eye watch. I have a member's daughter right to my right right now 15 feet from me.

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Who's argued with me for 10 days. Why she has this little lesion below her iPhone watch and on the back of her wrist and magically she has not been wearing it. She's putting her wrist up right now.

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And it's been getting better in the strong sun here, but make no mistakes can fit. If she goes back and wears that watch, it will come back. I promise you will come back.

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The same effect is true for people who smoke and have these transition metals in their lungs when they use this device. They're more toxic. People who vape who use these devices, it'll be more toxic. People that have tattoos over their body and use these devices.

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They will be more toxic. I don't fucking care what they think. It's the truth. And guess what? My mouth is not a bakery. My my mouth is here to do a podcast with you to tell you that there's negative connotations to all these things. It's your job as the CEO of you to make a determination.

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Is Jack Kruse a wackadoodle crazy neurosurgeon or might he be wiser than any centralized doctor you ever heard because he understands the connection quantum mechanical between how atoms work and electromagnetic fields.

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That's that's the determination Kenford of your listeners. I'm making the assumption that you thought it was wise to talk to me because you thought maybe some of the ideas that I have would be beneficial to your audience.

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100% there. The people around me are completely oblivious to the effects of non native EMF and it passes by them every single day that I'm around them.

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So let's bridge that gap right. How does the non native EMF provide a detrimental mechanism a harmful mechanism to the body because if people hear that your technology is bad for you they're just going to wave it off because they're attached to it.

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They're addicted to it. But let's give them a smoking. Let's let's say the right word. They are addicted to addicted to it.

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They're addicted to it because guess what Steve Jobs Bill Gates Paul Allen the people at Google both founders knew that it lowers your dopamine level and every time you use technology you get dopamine hit.

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But you have to realize the question you're asking me right now is a spectacular.

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But each part of the electromagnetic spectrum that technology uses has a different example. Let's talk about the most common one that I talk about on podcast.

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The light most screens admit blue light. They have two different types of blue light have one is Noel the other one is like a fusion key that you need to know is the R.O.S. that causes it in the blue light distribution is 435 to about 470.

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And that's not a meter light that's formally are really firmly in the blue light range. That's what Bell and option is attuned to it. And that's one of the reasons it's a huge problem.

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What ultimately happens when blue light is present to the nth degree in that range that often OPM 5 as vitamin a bounce with vitamin a gets liberated and the vitamin a that's liberated destroys all photoreceptors that are non visual and visual.

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That means O.P. one all the way to O.P. six that means Rod's the cones. Sopholopsin, Neuroxin, Melanopsin and Rodopsin.

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And it also destroys all theme based photoreceptors. What are some of those? That's the P450 system. That's the side of crumbs in your mitochondria.

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That's catalyst in your red blood cells. That's B12 in your body. This is the reason why people who are non native EMF get anemia.

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They don't realize it. It's come from a lack of sunlight and too much technology.

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Does it also destroy the biggies which are melatonin and DHA that are critical in restoring regeneration. Now remember what we just said here Kenford is just the blue light story.

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Let's talk about RF. RF is a completely different medicine. What does RF do? RF tends to change the procession of protons in our body. So let's get to that story.

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What does Jack Kruse do every day when he's in his clinic to destroy the procession of protons in his patients body? I order an MRI scan. MRI scan has a T1 and T2 relaxing phase.

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We pulse RF radiation from an MRI that changes the procession and we measure when it bounces back and that distance between the pulse of RF and the measure bouncing back gives us something called a relaxation phase.

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That reflection of that response in your tissues creates an image that we call an MRI. That's what we look for in a T1 and T2 image.

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There's other things that we can do to manipulate that signal to get more information from it. But that's the basis of it.

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What you need to know is that when you listen to FM or AM radio, which is exactly what Marconi did when he stole most of Tesla and Edison's work before he won his Nobel Prize, radio was the first thing that used and changed procession for people.

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So they're clear on this. Are there natural changes that affect procession of protons on Earth? True. When it rains and there's electrical storms, processions of electrons, I should say procession of protons, change.

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When it snows, the same thing happens. Those things are natural decentralized things that your body is optimized for paying attention to. But when you get an unnatural procession, say when you have a circumpolar flight, you get more RF radiation in it.

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Or say you happen to live in Southern California where there's a ton of UHF and VHF radiation, which is loaded with RF radiation, the procession of your protons is off.

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When the procession of your protons are off, can they function in your Rhea and TCA cycle normally? The answer is no, they cannot.

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Okay, so now we just covered two parts of the problem. Let's cover the third part. Third part is the microwave. So most people, I think by this time in 2023, know that microwaves are emitted from pretty much every tech device that is used to communicate over long distances.

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For example, you and I tonight are using, I don't know, something you asked me to use, some kind of app with iris. I guarantee I'm being fucking radiated through the max by using this, but I'm doing things to offset it.

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And I'm sure you are as well. We both are protecting ourselves from the blue light, but we're really not protecting ourselves from the RF on the microwave.

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I know that. You may not. But what do microwaves do? Well, let's go to things that people understand about microwaves.

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When you have leftover steak, you put it in the microwave, you learn very acute in life that if you put the microwave or the meat in the microwave, don't wrap it in paper towel that's wet, that the meat turns out to taste very leathery and dehydrated.

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Why? Because that's what microwaves do. They oscillate protons in matter to the nth degree of what does that do? It dehydrates and evaporates water around it.

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So let's scale this to something that we all have experienced. When we fly from say the UK to New York City, we have a circumpolar flight.

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You have 250 idiots in the plane all using Wi-Fi. You are the piece of steak in the plane while they're all doing that and all their Wi-Fi is bouncing off the inside of the plane and you don't have a paper towel wrapped around you.

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So do you think that your mitochondria can create as much water as it normally would? The answer is it can't.

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But see everybody seems to know that when they have leftover steak from a night of going and getting hammered and getting drunk, that you got to wrap it in a paper towel that's loaded with water because then the steak isn't dehydrated.

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Then you should begin to ask yourself the question, what is it about water that allows you to offset this whole microwave situation? That opens up a huge can of worms for the black swan mitochondria because then you begin to realize, hey, wait a minute, Jack has told us that mitochondria normally make water.

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Non-native EMF of all types outside the visible spectrum dehydrate us. So anytime we're dehydrated, what does that mean? We're hypoxic, meaning we have low oxygen content. What else does it mean? It means NAD positive drops in the cell.

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It means that you cannot use the TCA cycle and you become less efficient at using the urea cycle that's important for protein. So I want you to think about all these meatheads that are using the carnivore diet.

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When I give this discussion, if you're working on a blue light gym, you think eating a big old fucking steak that you post on Instagram every day is a big panacea for your problem? It's not because you can't use the nutrients in that steak properly because your TCA and urea cycle don't work.

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And it's due to the choices that you made of your lighting fund. That gets back Kenford to the August 8th Twitter, eight tweets to teach you about the details of why Uncle Jack's right about this.

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See, any of the meatheads that listen to this, listen to this podcast, they're not going to like this. This won't be popular, but it's as fucking true as any confession you're going to hear from some kind of criminal on their deathbed.

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And the bottom line is, I don't give a shit what you think about me and I don't give a shit about what you think about the message, but what I'm telling you, it's 100% decentralized truth.

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And when you realize it, you'll begin to understand why I always say that diet and exercise can't fix a quantum problem.

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And therein lies a big statement. So I just gave you three examples, three different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.

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Now, well, Henry, now I promise you, there's a lot more and there's a lot more science that I didn't go into.

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But I don't think it's important to split your listeners or your readers heads wide open. I just want you to know there is one octave of the electromagnetic spectrum that you're optimized to.

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It turns out that's the visible spectrum that goes between 250, 760. And what do you do in that spectrum?

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Your cells, they're designed to make CO2 and water and a lot of melatonin. If you live in that spectrum more than any other, you will never need to have Uncle Jack's wisdom or advice.

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Because effectively you will be the hippo or lion that lives in nature. See, I don't have to teach hippos and lions the stuff that I'm teaching you in this podcast.

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But I have to teach humans this because they have frontal lobes that allow them to break nature's laws. Therein lies the difference.

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And those frontal lobes think, hey, I exercise, I eat a good diet, this non-NATIVE-BMF stuff, I can just equalize it.

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And what you laid out is the physics of organisms set the context through which chemistry, such as diet, exercise, operates in.

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So that's why we can't just rely on the chemical stuff.

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Well, biochemistry, biology, I'm even going to tell you regular chemistry, even organic chemistry, is really a physics when you get right down to it. Physics is the only foundational science.

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But when you say that to a bunch of biochemists, you say it to a bunch of biologists, you say it to a bunch of chemists, they get offended. Why? Because that's what their experts are.

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But they don't realize that fundamentally, when you get down to it, it's all physics at the core.

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And it turns out the physics of organisms is quantum mechanical. It's not parsimonious. It doesn't follow Occam's razor.

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There is nothing parsimonious about equals FC squared. And there's certainly nothing parsimonious about the photoelectric effect.

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And there's nothing parsimonious about general and special relativity. But guess what? As fine elements, nature is queer, nature is absurd. And it's time most of you fucking idiots out there understand.

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I work on my lunch breaks, tents, sunbathe, you know, get that POMC regulation up, the UVA light, UVB light.

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And I've been approached so many times like, hey, man, you're gonna get skin cancer. They're, they're like genuinely concerned for me. And I'm like, you don't know what you're talking about.

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I try to lay it out, parse it out. And they kind of, you know, I met with eye rolls. He doesn't know he should get that sunscreen, whatever, all the all the bullshit.

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Could you like, decimate that notion?

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Well, I mean, it's actually, let's go back to like plants and trees. Why is it that they're 100% connected to the Earth?

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Their canopies are 100% connected to the sun, but they never get cancer. Well, cut to the chase. The reason is they make a chemical in them called ox and oxen for touch.

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What is oxen for a plant and oxen is called melanin. And if you make enough melanin, there's no chance you're ever going to get cancer. And the proof in the pudding is found in every dermatology paper ever printed in PubMed.

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What does it say? It says people who get basal cell, squamous cell and melanoma always have low vitamin D levels. Well, if the dermatologist and ophthalmologist are correct, that bad cancers are formed from sunlight that everybody who gets those cancers, you know, vitamin D levels through the roof.

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What does it turn out? Turns out that it's exactly the opposite. It's the people who stay inside under blue light that gets the cancers. And they tend to get the cancers in places that are not solar exposed.

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Well, that makes you ask the question, how is this possible? Explain to me centralized dermatologists and ophthalmologists. And you know what the answer is? Bidi, bidi, bidi. That's all, folks. It's like a cartoon.

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You know why? They don't have an answer. And the reason they don't have an answer is because they have no earthly idea about the quantum mechanical principles of how cells truly work. But they've been sold the idea from L'Oreal, from Chanel, through people who want to sell tyrosinase blockers, like sunscreen.

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Why this is a good idea? Because it turns out if you block the sun, like Bill Gates wants to do, you get more centralized neolithic diseases so that you can be walled by, by centralized medicine.

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That's good business for the profiteers of medicine. And it turns out, ophthalmologists and dermatologists are the gatekeepers for centralized medicine. This is the reason why in the United States, they lock up opiates in the pharmacies, but they always make sure that the sunscreen and the skin cancer causing chemicals that are in them are always never locked up.

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So that way they steal them and sell them to people for a dollar or two, because then they can sell them more of the opiates, more of the diabetes medicine, more of the hypertension medicines that those companies make trillions of dollars on.

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That's how the game is played. And until people understand how centralized and decentralized medicine really works, they're never going to get to the point that they're even going to understand this podcast.

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And the issue is right now, I think 20% of the people that listen to your podcast will get this decentralized medicine. And they'll get it because of what they just faced with COVID.

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It turns out the government and centralized experts, Kenford, told everybody in the world to stay inside, stay out of the sun, right? Don't talk to other people.

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Okay. Eat shitty, fake food grown in laboratories. Don't worry about going to visit your relatives in the hospital or go to the farmer's markets. Do not go to the beach. If you live in Canada or Australia, it will actually strangle you to hypoxia.

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On videos, we'll make babies just born wear masks. You understand the whole process here? Every single thing the centralized paradigm told us to do was fucking dead wrong.

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And you know why it was wrong? Because they were funneling you to rolling up your sleeve to take the jab. Now here we are three years later. How has that worked out for let's say, Damar Hamill of the Buffalo Billings?

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How that worked out for LeBron James Sun? How that worked out for JJ Watt of the Arizona Carl's in Houston, Texas? How that worked out for about 250 soccer players in Europe?

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How that worked out for people who collapsed on screen on TV who are forced to take the jab? See, let me just tell you something. When you don't question the centralized experts and you comply with their wants, needs, and desires, you reap what you sow.

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What you get is what you get. The bottom line, you are the CEO of your health. Do not let anyone tell you without informed consent what you should do.

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Informed consent is between you and your doctor, not between you and your employer, not between you and your government.

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I'm not a religious person, but one of Jesus' quotes that stood out to me is, a good tree can't bear bad fruit. And what I see in centralized medicine is chronic disease.

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A lot of bad fruits.

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Fuck yeah.

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Yeah.

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I agree with you.

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It's obvious, right?

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I think it is, but Ken Furt, it doesn't matter if it's obvious to me or you. You know who it has to be obvious to? The people you're going to release this podcast to. Because guess what? If they remain compliant and they're obedient idiots, here's the flip side that you're probably not going to like what I'm going to say.

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Those people deserve what they get.

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I really don't feel bad about the people that have gotten the problems they've gotten. Why? Because they said, well, I didn't know. Well, how the hell did I know not to do the things that the government was asking us to do? How did I lead my tribe not to do those things?

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How did you not get that message?

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You know why? Because you were compliant.

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You signed up for the government story. You signed up for centralized medicine story.

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Will you make the mistake the next time? Will you sign up for the climate scam hoax? Will you sign up for the hoax that's going on with money?

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Will you never buy Bitcoin?

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Will you make other mistakes? You absolutely will. Why?

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Because you haven't improved the most important thing about you, which is the ability to critically think properly.

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That's the key. It's no longer about survival of the fittest. It's about survival of the wisest.

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And remember, you're the mammal on this planet that's got a lot of loaves in your brain. You're supposed to be able to think better than most.

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And 80% of the people listening to this podcast, you have failed that test.

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I want to get back to something you said in the beginning where you cannot let consensus drive your truth.

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That's been a theme in my life. I've always felt crazy because I've always taken the contrary, the contrary position.

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People would look at me strange for even questioning COVID, like the thought of it, you know.

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Could you parse out for the listeners, you know, moving forward to wrap this up?

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Why you can't just look to the masses, the big groups, the 99%.

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You must pave your own way and really discern for yourself what the truth is.

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Well, let me tell you, let me tell you where the where we went off to be.

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I'm going to tell you that evolution has actually created in us.

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We are designed to follow the leader, OK? Following the leader worked when the leader was fully decentralized.

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So when you had a smart American Indian or you had a smart wilder beast or you had a smart buffalo or smart elephant,

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they generally led their tribe to help. Where did we go off the rails?

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It was around 1911 when we allowed a guy named John D. Rockefeller obscure what was true in biology.

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There was something called the flexionary pool.

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And he collaborated with some of the other people of his time, specifically J.P. Morric.

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And these two things happened at the same time as the United States gave control over their monetary system to the central bank.

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So in 1911, everything changed. And it turns out that the United States has been the dominant thought leader in Western,

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both politics, economics and medicine. And what people don't know outside the United States.

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And I would even tell you, I almost hesitate to give Americans credit.

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The guy that understood this better than anybody else, this guy named Benjamin Rush,

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he was a founding father of the United States before the Constitution and Declaration of Independence was written.

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And he petitioned Thomas Jefferson to put medical tyranny into our Constitution.

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And he was rejected by Jefferson because Jefferson could not fathom a time with people that be that stupid to allow the government to make decisions over their health care.

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But it turned out it only took 250 years to prove Benjamin Rush a prophet or prescient. He was correct.

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COVID was that test case that proved Rush right. We have a medical school right now in Chicago called Rush Medical School.

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Most people in the United States don't even know who Benjamin Rush was.

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I know most people in Europe have absolutely no clue who he is.

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But he was a decentralized patriot who actually signed our founding documents. Why do I tell you this story?

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Because it turns out in 1911, which is roughly 150 years after the founding documents,

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John D. Rockefeller was taken out by Teddy Roosevelt with standard oil. We eliminated him as an oil and kerosene monopoly.

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John D. Rockefeller told Congress at that time in testimony that's still in the archives that you can go read,

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that he would take it out of the hides of Congress and see to it that he would bankrupt the United States over the decision to break up standard oil.

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Most people to this very day outside the United States and even inside do not know that John D. Rockefeller formed Big Pharma as it exists today.

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The people that raped and pillaged through the messenger RNA vaccines, they have an ancestry that goes back from 1911 and the breakup of standard war.

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And you need to realize that the people that are against you and decentralization, these are the people that are anti-Benjamin Rush.

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They now exist in the government of the United States. They exist in the government of the UK. They exist in Canada.

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They exist in Australia. They exist in the World Health Organization. They exist in the IMF.

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They exist in every single place where unelected people are. The King of England is the biggest offender of this.

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But remember, he is not the ruler. He's a figurehead, but he's highly influential.

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You need to understand these people are a cancer to decentralized processes.

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What do I teach people? My decontamination medicine is fully decentralized. Why? Because it's based on the laws of nature.

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Once you understand that process, you'll begin to understand why you need to decentralize every single thing in your life,

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whether it's your ideology, your politics, your finances and your medicine. You do that effectively.

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You're the CEO of you and you are part of my tribe. Why? I follow Mother Nature.

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Mother Nature dictates what I tell my tribe. Nothing, in my opinion, is my opinion alone.

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If I haven't learned it from Mother Nature, I do not espouse it on a podcast. I do not write a blog post about it.

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I do not sell you any supplements or any drugs or any surgeries. I am teaching you advice.

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I'm teaching you the wisdom of nature, the physics of organisms.

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I want you to understand this library of Alexandria that's buried right in front of your own eyes that you keep ignoring

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because people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Paul Allen, the leaders of Pfizer, Moderna, are blinding you to their centralized bullshit.

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What I love about this is you are a neurosurgeon. You know, people would think it's just science, but you bring in everything,

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history, art, medicine, politics, etc. And what I want to emphasize to the listener is all these things connect.

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What you got to do as the CEO of yourself is connect the dots, really see how everything fits together,

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take the whole picture in and use that in your own decision making processes such as decentralizing every area of your life.

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Totally agree. Get to it. Turn the podcast off. Buy some Bitcoin. Hire decentralized doctors.

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Get in the sun. See the sunrise every day. Ground at the ocean's edge.

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Become like the Sphinx. Eat like a great white shark. Live like a polar bear. Kick ass. Take names.

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And the only thing I ask of you is tell one of your neighbors who's in the dark, who's sick, who's got type 1 diabetes,

428
01:23:17,000 --> 01:23:25,000
doesn't realize that it's related to the latitude. Somebody who's 360 pounds, who doesn't understand what leptin resistance is,

429
01:23:25,000 --> 01:23:32,000
doesn't understand what melanin is, share with them. Sit them down and listen to this podcast.

430
01:23:32,000 --> 01:23:41,000
Something in this podcast resonates with one person that it was worth for me to stay up for an hour and a half later in El Salvador

431
01:23:41,000 --> 01:23:45,000
while it's pitch black to have this discussion with Jeffrey.

432
01:23:45,000 --> 01:23:51,000
Amazing. That's what the podcast is called, the Lighthouse Podcast to light those who are in the dark.

433
01:23:51,000 --> 01:23:58,000
So, Dr. Kruse, I thank you very much. I'm very grateful for you coming on.

434
01:23:58,000 --> 01:24:04,000
And I'm sure we lit even one person with this discussion.

435
01:24:04,000 --> 01:24:16,000
So with that being said, thank you guys for listening to this episode of the podcast and stay tuned for the next one. Cheers.

436
01:24:16,000 --> 01:24:23,000
Take care, Kenford. Just send me the link. Take care, Dr. Kruse. Yes, sir. I will. Thank you.

