Red Pill Reality Show: From the Pyramids to Primordial Health

October 26, 2025 03:00:08
Red Pill Reality Show: From the Pyramids to Primordial Health
TRIM Radio
Red Pill Reality Show: From the Pyramids to Primordial Health

Oct 26 2025 | 03:00:08

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Hosted By

Riscalla Victoria Smith Michael Bahas Stu Shear Maggie Heart Peter Kling

Show Notes

Join your host, Riscalla, as he returns from a transformative journey to his birthplace of Cairo, Egypt. He shares his firsthand experiences, from the "maniacal" traffic and bustling marketplaces to the awe-inspiring wonders of the Cairo Museum and the Great Pyramids. Riscalla recounts his amazement at the intricate engravings, questioning whether they were truly done by hand or with lost technology, and shares his insights on the Coptic Church and life in a city of 20 million.

Then, the show dives deep into the rabbit hole of health with guest Arnel Lindgren, who introduces his system: Rebooting the Internal Terrain. Arnel challenges the foundations of modern medicine, arguing that the "germ theory" is flawed and that our health is dictated by the state of our internal environment.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

Riscalla and Arnel also hold nothing back in a candid discussion about the COVID-19 narrative, questioning "the science" and the motives behind the pharmaceutical industry. If you're ready to challenge mainstream narratives and reclaim control of your health, you won't want to miss this episode.

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:07] Speaker A: In a world drowning in noise, where truth is often buried beneath layers of propaganda and misinformation, there's a need for a different kind of a network. A network of creators that cuts through the clutter, that doesn't shy away from tough topics, and that delivers the unfiltered truth. We are TRIM Radio Network. We are creators, we are innovators, we are investigators. The ones who aren't afraid to call. [00:00:33] Speaker B: A spade a spade. [00:00:35] Speaker A: If you're ready to participate in thought provoking discussions, informational topics, and of course, today's biggest headlines, subscribe to our YouTube channel. Today we're Trim Radio Network. We're cutting the bull and serving the trut. [00:01:10] Speaker C: Take the red pill, Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. You take the red pill. And I show you how deep the rabbit hole go. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill, the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill, take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill, take the red. You stay in wonderland. You stay in wonderland. I show you how deep the rabbit hole. Goats. Goats. [00:02:10] Speaker D: Now from the northeast quadrant of the United States, it's the red Pill reality show with your host, Riskala. Saturday nights from 9pm Eastern until midnight on the TRIM Radio network. You can join the conversation in any of our chat rooms. And now, without further ado, your host, Riskal. [00:02:41] Speaker E: Hello and welcome everyone to gives a virtual reality show truly an honor and a privilege to be back. Spent some time in another world, my friends. Truly another world. So those of you who have been following me on Facebook know that I. I made a trip to Cairo, Egypt, where I was born many, many moons ago. And got to visit with some of my family, got to witness what life is like. Completely different than what, oh my gosh, I don't even know where to begin. But completely different than anything we see over here. I think the thing that caught my eye the most was the marketplace. There is hundreds of just hundreds and hundreds of these little markets, these little stores everywhere selling anything from chickens, live chickens, bread to souvenirs, to clothing, to you, anything you can imagine that could be Legally for sale is out there. It was. I'm still in awe of. Of it all the. Now these couple of pictures really don't show it justice. The traffic, just the people traffic. It was so busy with people back and forth. You had to be careful where you're walking it. Just amazing. So we. I got the opportunity to visit the Cairo Museum, and this is one of the things that we saw there. I don't know how in the world they move this stuff around. It weighs a ton. But what really caught my eye was the engraving on this thing. It's. The workmanship is just. To me, it would be done with a laser. But, you know, people say, well, back then they didn't have lasers. I don't know. I can't imagine this was done by hand. Just truly amazing on the artwork. They have mummies now. This one was a. I believe this was a clay replica. But they have other places where they have mummy. They had a. This is a real mummy. It's a crocodile. They mummified a crocodile. Strange. And then, of course, everybody, I'm sure, is familiar with the Sphinx. This is a smaller version inside the museum again with these engravings on the side of this thing. It's just unbelievable. The architecture and the. How precise everything is. And then, of course, the. The Great Sphinx itself. I've always wondered why it seems to be that the noses get knocked off. I can't help but wonder if that was a. An insult by people who came in and, you know, through the wars and stuff, never really got an answer. One of the people, one of the guys that I heard speaking about it, said, well, the nose is protruding from the face and it's probably one of the weakest parts. And that's why. But I see it even in, you know, like, I go back here, the nose on this guy got whacked off. It's the thing about noses, I guess. The pyramids were unbelievable. I was 5 years old the last time I saw one. I. I just couldn't get over the. The massive amount of. Whatever you want to call it in front of me was just unbelievable. And they had guides going inside. I didn't want to go on the side. I didn't care about going inside. It really just wanted to see what it looked like from the outside. One of the capstones, again with the engraving. It's just unbelievable, this, this engraving. And they're trying to tell me that all this was done by hand. Well, I mean, if that's true, it's very sad because we've lost that Ability to do that today by hand. We rely on machines to do this would be in my opinion, a laser engraving. Laser engraving. The artwork. Oh my goodness. The artwork that we saw was spectacular, breathtaking. Can't describe this words that just unless you see it in person. It's, it's really. Pictures don't do it justice. And this is something I found weird. So first of all, there are no houses in Cairo. There are no houses in Cairo. And I think the, I think the population is like 20 million. Everything is a high rise. And if you look it, you see the buildings are almost all the same color. How anybody finds where they're going is beyond me. It's beyond. But all the buildings are almost the same color. I guess it's because of the predominant amount of sand. If you look at the, the satellite dishes there, you see that they're a brownish color. They're not supposed to be that. They're supposed to be either white or it's supposed to be clean. But there's layers of sand everywhere. And I think that that adds to the, the issue of all, everything just being almost the same colors. Very little color difference in comparison to other places. This was very unusual. Now this is a Coptic church. The Coptic church, from what I understand the Coptic church was, was the first church that Christ himself started. And there are people there called Coptic Christians and they are, their bloodlines go all the way back. My brother in law, his bloodline comes from the pharaohs, so he knows exactly where and he is a Coptic Christian as well. So it was an amazing experience. I can't thank God enough for allowing us to traveled there and back without any issues, really. Without any major issues, I should say. We got there. We had made, my brother and I and his wife, the three of us, we had made arrangements at one of the hotels there and we flew from Miami to London and from London to Cairo. So on our first trip to London, one of the hotels that we had made reservations at, we showed up and I looked at my brother said something. I write this place looks like it's abandoned and the doors were locked. Holy smokes. Then we saw somebody walking through him knocking on the door, on this glass door. And he comes to the door and we said, well, we have reservations. And he kind of looked perplexed at us. He said we've been closed for months, we're having a renovation. So nobody told him. And they said, well, they send out emails, blah, blah. That didn't happen. Fortunately we, we ended up working our way around that and ended up At a. At another hotel and then stayed there for three days and witnessed some really neat stuff there. One of the churches that we saw there, the. The artwork on that church was just, you know, mind blowing. I don't. I didn't. I thought I did, but I. I guess not. I'll see if I can upload a picture. I'll show you later. Just truly geometric forms. I thought, you know, I've seen pictures of where they take sound and they'll put sand on a platter and then they'll play sound and it creates these different forms. That's what I thought I saw at this church. It was almost like a geometric form of some sort. And then there was the. Did I upload that? I guess I didn't upload that either. The stained glass windows. Oh my goodness. Just something to take your breath away. All of it. Understanding that all of it is done by hand. So there must have been a great love for the work that they were doing because it required a lot of patience and a lot of just hand work. Oh, here's something you might like. This. This is when I tell you guys the traffic was maniacal. I'm not joking. I'm really not. So that's where you can send for taxi. Scratches on the mirrors. That's how close they get. Scratches on the mirrors at the end of this video. [00:11:08] Speaker B: Much. [00:11:11] Speaker E: It's decorative. Oh, so that's where you can stand for taxi. Oh, you can see. Oh my goodness. So my. My sister in law, she. She is extremely paranoid of traffic. She doesn't like traffic. So this was a nightmare. I felt bad for her. This was a night she had to put her head down, she had to hide. She couldn't watch what was going on. She got into a panic attack. And we would get within inches of each other. Literally within us. Like I'm telling you, mirrors, you know, they tap mirrors. This is how close they get. It's crazy. So anyway, it was a great experience. If anybody ever has the opportunity, I'd tell you go in a heartbeat. The only drawback is it is a long trip on the way back. So what happened? Originally I flew from Ohio, which is where I'm at now, to Miami to meet my brother. That's where he lives. And then we flew from Miami to. To London and Heathrow Airport and stayed in London for three days. Then we flew to Cairo, which was about a week. And then we flew back to London, stayed there three days and flew back to Miami. The last part of the trip for me was really tough because it was nine hours coming back from London to Miami. And then it was another two hours coming back from Miami to Ohio. And then of course, there was a layover. I had layover at the airport for about two or three hours. So it strung me out. By the time I got home, it was almost 23 hours I'd been awake. But I'll tell you what, even till now, and this was five days, six. Six days ago. Even until now, it seemed like it was, it was a dream. It was just so many things to see. The marketplace, I can't tell you enough about. The marketplace was such a trip. These people would come out, these men and women would come out of their little stores and come here, let me show you this, Let me see. Once they caught you in the stor, you're pretty well locked in. But. And it was just. It was amazing. It truly was. It was amazing. It was a chance for me to kind of go over my Arabic because I have nobody to speak Arabic to. And they told me that, that I for. For where I. For not being there for so long that I still. They were proud of my Arabic. That was a trip. It was a real trip. Anyway, so tonight I'm going to have Arnel Lindgren with me. Arnel has a system called rebooting the internal terrain. Your health is your greatest asset. This man has developed a system through years of investigation and research, a way to help you do that. He approaches it in a completely different manner than many of the people out there that say their health guides or health coaches. He's got a different way of explaining it, down to earth kind of thing. And I think you'll, you'll truly enjoy what he's got to say tonight. So I'm going to take a quick break. I told him I bring him on around 9:30, but we're going to go a little earlier tonight because I've got a lot I want to go over with him and I can use a couple of extra minutes here. Go get the cup filled and prepare to have your mind blown with a lot of information, a lot of useful information for your health. Your greatest asset is you can have all the money in the world if you don't have your health. I've been there where my health was breaking down. I've been there when the doctor said you've got cancer. It's like a kick in the stomach and if you don't know how to deal with it. But the best part is never have to deal with it ever. But once you get it if you don't know how to deal with it, if you don't know about your body and you can't have your body's immune system fight for you, you're in a lot of trouble because you're going to be reliant on the pharmaceutical industry. And anybody who thinks that's your friend, you got a shot coming to you. Anyway, gonna take a quick break, and when I come back, we'll have Arnell on and chat rooms are open. You guys, if you have questions while we do this, you can ask questions in the chat room. The I just got a new cell phone and it's not transferring over from our phone lines yet. It's probably something I need to do in the setup all over again because I. I transferred files from the old phone to the new phone, but it wasn't 100%. Anyway, off to the break and we'll be back in just a. Just a minute or two. Thank you. You're listening to the Red Pill reality show. We'll be right back. [00:16:18] Speaker D: I can't help but look around and feel like things are getting out of hand. We've been told to trust the science but the science just doesn't make sense. They say it isn't mandatory but they also say you jab at your job but if it doesn't stop the spread, it makes it feel like this is just a facade. What about the health care workers? What about the frontline nurses? How quickly we forget that they were working, working 18 hours a day. What about informed consent? What about due diligence? It seems a country that I used to call home is surely slipping away. I can't help but look around and feel like minds are slowly starting to change Cuz even if you're triple vaccinated know that segregation isn't the way. Freedom is a choice and it's available to all if we choose but first things first, you gotta turn off the news. [00:17:26] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:17:26] Speaker D: What about the healthcare workers? What about the frontline nurses? How quickly we forget that they were working 18 hours a day. What about informed consent? What about due diligence? Legends. It seems the country that I used to call home is surely slipping away. If you're late to the party there's plenty room with the table this side don't discriminate. I'm calling on every single man, woman, child of the able it's time to take the streets and liberate but please don't be a part of the problem staying willfully ignorant Cuz there's just way too much at Stake yo, it's okay to change your mind. You can admit you were wrong. Cuz where there's perfect love, there ain't no shame. Heavenly father, show me what I don't understand yet. I got my marching orders. I don't fully know the plan yet. Hold on to my bible before bed. No, it ain't van yet. Did you know the makers of the vaccine make the Xanax? I would never lean on corporations for morality. Cuz they put their profits over people for their salaries. No, they want to make you bend the knee for your normality. I know you're feeling all alone, but it's in reality. There's way more of us than them. There's way more of us than them. There's way more of us than them. There's way more of us than them. There's way more of a of us than them. [00:19:02] Speaker E: That's the truth. [00:19:04] Speaker D: There's way more of us than them. There's way more of us than them. There's way more of us. There's way more. [00:20:20] Speaker A: And we're back. Hope you didn't go too far because we have more interesting and thought provoking information for you. Coming up on the Red Pill reality show. [00:20:36] Speaker E: All right, we are back. I will have Arnel coming on here in just a moment. And again we have questions. If you have questions open. I'm just checking questions. Chat rooms are open. You can put your questions in the chat room and I'll forward them over to Arnel and I see a couple of comments already. We'll respond to them in a moment. All right, let me get, let me get Arnell home. Let's see if he's on with me here. Are you there? My friend told him 9:30. So he may be, he may be waiting till 9:30. All right, no worries. We'll get him back on in a minute. In the meantime, I see a couple of comments. Answer a couple of comments. So we are. Looks like we're on Rumble. We're on the website. That's the way. That's the website. We're on LinkedIn and Facebook and of course a platform. So we're out there, we're getting there. Looking for Arnold to come on here in just a minute. Anyway, let me tell you a little bit about him. He, he has a system called rebooting the internal terrain. And him and I have had several conversations. It's just extraordinary what, the way he goes about doing what he's doing. This started with him at a very early age in his life. He, he had to experience his. His father having a heart attack, which, which kind of set him off on. On the. The journey of. Of what we're going to be discussing shortly. It's. It's things that happen in people's lives that can truly make a change and cause you to change other people's lives. We all have a certain degree of. So what I'm looking for. Influence, circle of influence, if you will. We all have a certain degree of circle of influence. And when we're able to help other people with. Providing them with stuff that's going to. Positive stuff, you know, I can pump out information all day long. Sadly, much of the information that we run into nowadays is not. It's none of the greatest. You know, it's not a positive thing. This is a positive thing. This is something that you can. That you can use. You don't have to buy a program. You don't have to, you know, use some kind of a supplement of some sort. This is something that you can put into action right away. And again, it doesn't cost you anything but your time. See, somebody's trying to send me some. I don't cost you any, but your time. And when your time is invested in the right things, then you get a return. It's like if you take your money. See who's talking? You can't. He's telling me he can't seem to get his mic to work. See, okay, let's do this. Let's see if that'll work. Let's see if we can get them to sign out and then get him to sign back in. And maybe that'll. Maybe that'll straighten it out. You know, it amazes me, especially with Peter. When I have Peter on. We'll be talking on the phone. No, no problem at all. As soon as I get him on the platform. So I'm gonna. Up here on Stream Yard. It's like, no, we're not gonna let Peter talk. So he's gonna sign off and then he'll hopefully assign back in. And when he comes back in, well, we'll have mics. All right, I. I can see you. Let's see if you're on. There you are. I can hear you now. [00:25:02] Speaker B: My apologies. [00:25:03] Speaker E: No worries, no worries. What an honor to have you on and share with us your system. And, and I kind of told the listeners a little bit about rebooting the internal terrain. And so I'm going to ask you a couple of questions and try to get some background. You know, keep getting. Stop that. I keep getting oh, Lord. Anyway, so how did you get started in all this? What got you inspired in doing all of this stuff? Because I said. I read a little bit about. And I think you said in one of your bios your. Your dad had a heart attack. [00:25:41] Speaker B: Yeah, that's. That's correct. I. I was 13 and when he was 36, and that just left a really lasting impression, and especially with my mother being a nurse. And then we would go to the hospital and go through all those visits and whatever to try and correct some of that, but even the nurses and the doctors could never give me a straight answer. Just asking them, just straight up, how can all this happen? He's so young. 36. And even at 13, I knew that. And 36 or at 13, I was pretty heavy into athletics and was always very active. And in fact, most of my. My whole family was pretty active. So I just never thought that there would be anything that would occur to. To him. [00:26:48] Speaker E: Did you ever find out what was the reason behind it was. [00:26:52] Speaker B: Well, I later discovered that, you know, back then in that time, drinking too much, and he was a pack a day of Pall Mall smoker. And that was tough. That was really tough to swallow, that one, because, like I said, I was pretty heavily involved in athletics, and so having him as a smoker and being involved in that was. Was a little challenging. But I never stopped him. I swear, when we would go on these long bike rides, I. It would amaze me, the kind of endurance he still had despite his smoking. [00:27:44] Speaker E: I think it's not so much the. The tobacco itself as much as it is all the garbage that they put on top. I. Sadly, I was addicted to cigarettes. I have a place in my heart for people who have an addiction, but I had to come overcome it. It was one of the hardest things I've ever done. I was up to two and a half packs of cigarettes a day by, you know, I believe totally by the intervention of God. I had to have brain surgery in 1985. And back then, you could smoke. I was in hospital. You could smoke in the hospital. You smoke anywhere. It was just accepted, like drinking water out and, you know, it's just accepted everywhere. And I had my surgery, and I was in an ICU for seven days. And after getting out, I remember saying to the nurse, I want my cigarettes on my ashtray. I want my lighter. And she looked at me with a look that would kill. And she said, you don't need them, and walked off. And I, you know, I said a nasty word. And. But then about 15 minutes later, she come walking in with the stuff that I asked for. And she walked off. And I just kept remembering her look at me and say, you don't need them. And I started thinking, well, you know, it's been seven days without a cigarette. I'll just go another hour. And then it was a week, and then it was a month before I knew it's a year. But it was tough. It was really tough because there was always that urge to go back and smoke. And that's. Sadly, that's what ended up killing my dad, was the cigarettes. [00:29:07] Speaker B: And, you know, it's just. There's a long history around cigarettes. I mean, a lot of the technology that went into that when they were kind of the tobacco industry was caught with their essential hands in the cookie jar, they were caught with spraying intentionally over 500 different excitotoxins that essentially create addiction. And that all came from the researchers and scientists from the Nazi regime. And, yeah, I mean, it's deep, you know, and as we go along here, I really appreciate the opportunity to speak candidly about some of the things I really discovered the last 30 years. But some of your listeners, with no offense or anything, but sometimes in order to really hear something new and different, you may have to suspend some of your beliefs at the moment and really understand or listen to what someone else's lenses are looking at and how in this case, looking at biology. And biology is. Is looking at all the layers of life, meaning plant, animal and human. And we all have a common thread. And that's kind of what I want to really go through today. So, you know, I like your analogy of the. The red. You want the red pill, you want the blue pill, you can live in ignorant, so you can really live in reality. And, and for me, you know, I don't per se have any special talent or skill, but I know I have an understanding. I have a pretty strong engineering background. I'm able to put things together and understand things very quickly. And I feel that in the sense that talent was able to really help me sift through a lot of the narratives today, which are, I will just say, fundamentally flawed biology. [00:31:23] Speaker E: Much of it has been. And look at the roots, when you look at the roots, that can tell you why. And we have the Rockefellers that are responsible for much of this. And the whole reason that they introduced what they introduced was, I believe my opinion was two things. Number one, I guess the root of it all is power. But number one was control, and the other one was greed. They make all kinds of Money off of these things that they call medicine that they can patent, and then they have the right to sell it. And if someone else sells it, they can have to pay them a royalty or they get sued. So it's kind of a closed, captured market, if you will. [00:31:58] Speaker B: Yeah, and that is a big part of it, too. That started during the scientific revolutions in the mid-1800s. And Rockefeller was already embarking on the idea of his narrative was why not just take a pill for all your ailments? [00:32:19] Speaker E: Yeah. [00:32:21] Speaker B: He was already embarking on that, so he just needed a carrier of that idea. And that's enter Louis Pasteur. And Pasteur was already in cahoots with two French biologists. One was Rene Quinton, which we're going to talk about later. And then the other one was Anton Bchamp. And there are other ones like Claude Bernard and Ferdinand Kahn. And I will get into what each individual really contributed to understanding. What I look at today is really the red pill. Because when Rockefeller then essentially his money with Carnegie then decided to incorporate the ama, oddly, I'm sure you know this the same year that they incorporated the, the Federal Reserve in 1913. You know, since then, the narrative has changed. And this is the crazy part, the only thing that's changed is the narrative. But biology itself from, from its primordial beginnings hasn't changed at all. [00:33:45] Speaker E: Wow. [00:33:46] Speaker B: Our origins, and I'll get into that later, it just hasn't changed. So therefore, when you understand the shorts, and I'll give you all the, the kind of, the short story of evolution, when you understand that, hopefully that you really listen to your heart and really open yourself up to the possibility that our current science today may have just missed something. Oh, yeah. Say it's, it's just fundamentally flawed because when, when you understand real biology, organic biology, it's not based on everything that we've been sold the idea that that's how it works. [00:34:31] Speaker E: And I believe that it's been missed on purpose because it doesn't help a certain group of people. [00:34:37] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, it's absolutely been intentional. And I have compassion and I try and hold a safe space for people to speak openly about some of the challenges and, and I've seen some of the worst challenges out there than working with people. And I just said, wow, it just breaks my heart some of the, some of the things that people have to go through. And the crazy part is that you have the arrogance of the medical community who continue to this day still push that same narrative. And I don't remember who it was. I Think it was Isaac Newton that the quote was, we can automate automobiles or standardize automobiles, but we can't. We shouldn't be standard. Standardizing human beings. And when you understand that quote and you look at the medical system, everything is standardized. [00:35:49] Speaker E: Yeah. This is one of the arguments that I had. So I had to have heart surgery a while back. I had to put a stent in my heart. And. And they were saying, well, your blood pressure should be blah, blah, over blah, blah. And I said, right where you get the number? Well, that's the average. Average for who? [00:36:06] Speaker B: Yeah, exactly. [00:36:07] Speaker E: You is not good for me. That most migraine and they had this grocery list of pills that they wanted me to take. I looked at the doctor in the eye, and I see my doctors, they see me coming and go, oh, my God, here he comes. I looked at him, I said, I'm going to do this for a year. And then after that, I'm only going to take one. I'm going to take one for the. For the blood pressure. And I will not be taking that for long. I've been on it now for a couple of years. I'm getting ready to get off. I've made my mind up that part of the issue is I've been irresponsible with my eating habits. And so I put on a lot of weight, probably another 30 pounds that I shouldn't have. And once I get rid of that, I believe the heart, the blood pressure will come down. That's the only thing I need is blood pressure. All this other stuff about statins, and I would not take it. They offered to me again, just a couple of months. I said, no, I'm not taking. Oh, well, then you're going to die of a heart attack. Well, if I take it, I'm going to die of liver failure, so give me a choice. So anyway, I. I'm curious about this thing called, what we call it dark field microscope microscopy. Is that correct word? [00:37:05] Speaker B: Yes. Yes. Yeah. Dark field microscopy is. Is the. Okay, yeah. And the layman's version is just a live blood cell analysis. So when you look at, let's say, blood testing and histology, today, they'll pull a sample, and the first thing they do is they separate the plasma and the blood. And so they'll spin it, and then the blood is what they test. And. And what I always say is that the blood is not actually the most important aspect of it. It's actually what's in the plasma. But they always discard that. So, you know, why are they doing that? So there's a treatment called plasmapheresis. That's kind of an interesting one because it's kind of the same thing where they'll pull out your blood, separate the plasma and re infuse your blood. And again, I just feel that based on my findings, that's actually incorrect. If you really want to understand what Bruce Lipton talks about in, in his work out of, out of Stanford and he's, he's the one who really coined a lot of the terms of let's say DNA expression. DNA expression is based on delivering quantum fields. It's not based on the idea of calories. Were told the narrative is if, if you want energy, you have to deliver calories, you have to consume a certain amount of calories. In fact, you know, I'm, I'm, I've done a little traveling here the last few weeks myself and I was just up in the Midwest and I'm just astounded how many people are not just overweight, but how many people are just so unhealthy. And it saddens me because it doesn't have to be this way. And you know, you've heard the, the definition of, what's the definition of insanity. Keep doing things over and over again expecting different results. And the idea that we have to count calories in order to create energy and longevity. Clearly that model isn't working all yet to do for the last hundred years look at the side effects and the results of that. And when in this case, when I'm saying that is that when we approach biology, it is based on, as I said earlier, fundamentally flawed science. Simply because when you look at the history of science, you've had these past contemporaries really understanding the difference between, you know, let's say it used to be vitality versus reductionism. So we looked at the body as being very vital. But today everything is based on reductionistic science. So what does that really mean? So reductionism just simply means, is that you're looking at the hole and then you're plucking it apart when you figure out all the features and benefits of all the different isolates that make up the whole. And if there's added value in some of those isolates, they'll figure out how to recreate it synthetically and now they'll place patent on it, and now they control it. So let's just give an example of what that really looks like in real time when you look at let's say a whole orange. An orange is synonymous to the marketing. Let's say vitamin C Now the short history on vitamin C is that it was Cashmere Funko and Albert St George who discovered vitamin C. But they didn't discover it in orange. They actually discovered in paprika. And when you look at these items in, let's say the Paprika, it's about 1500 chemicals. 1500 chemicals that make up paprika. So why is one far more superior than the other? 1499. Now, the narrative in science today is that we have this vitamin C and you need to take 250 to 500 milligrams in order for it to be effective. So that statement to the unknown eye, an ear can be, oh, wow, okay, this is what I should be taking. This is what Rockefeller was talking about. I wanted to just take a pill for all the amounts to go away, right? But this is what actually happens in biology when you actually take a synthetic form, when you take 500mg ascorbic acid, vitamin C. The problem is, is that your body is enforced to recreate what nature had intended. And nature is always intended for you to take nutrients in via, through a whole food, meaning all the other original proteins and compounds and enzymes originally attached to it in its original state. Now, this isn't just me or Nell saying this. This has been very well documented. And actually, I believe I told you this was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1999 by a scientist named Gunter Blobel, and he was head of Rockefeller research, oddly. But he won the Nobel Prize for proving essentially the whole is far better than the part. So simply means that when you take 500mg ascorbic acid, vitamin C, you're forcing your body to recreate nature. So therefore it's making. You're forcing your body to produce what is known as protein chaperones. He called it protein chaperones. BO Bell. And when you do that to an already deficient mineral body, then what you're doing is you're actually placing a larger burden on your system. So therefore, you will only utilize one and a half to 3%, maybe less of that 500 milligrams. The rest is either going to be stored as an endotoxin or your body has the ability to eliminate it. It all depends on the individual's constitution. Like I said earlier, there's, there's no cookie cutter. Everybody's different because everybody's, everybody's upbringing, everybody's upbringing in foods, everybody's exposure to different environments is different, etc. Etc. That's what makes us unique, right? And so there is no Standard quote unquote in my opinion of human health. You know, when I work with someone I take time to really tap in and understand who they are, where they come from, some of their history and etc. Etc. So when you take, going back to this, when you take a whole food vitamin C, let's just say your body will utilize the entire vitamin C. So in other words, in nature everything comes together as a whole. That's what actually holistic health simply means you're delivering the whole versus the part. And, and I'm going to spell that out even in, in more detail down as we continue to talk. But this is a really important part because when Blowbell won that Nobel Prize, the entire industry of the natural product industry environments should have shifted. But it didn't because it's based on money. [00:45:50] Speaker E: Based on money from what you described. If I were to take, if I were to take 500 milligrams, somehow take 500 milligrams from oranges or from paprika versus 500 milligrams in a pill, the 500 milligrams I would be getting from the paprika or from the orange would be much more absorbable to my body. Far more absorbable than the synthetic. Did I understand that correctly? [00:46:20] Speaker B: That's correct. So in other words, in an organic orange there's typically between 30, naturally occurring between 30, 30 and 60 milligrams in the organic orange. Right now if you ate that whole organic orange you would be able to utilize until let's say 60 milligrams versus if you just took 500, you're going to utilize less than one and a half to 3% of that 500. Yeah, that's been very well documented and awarded Nobel prizes. And that's part of the problem with, with kind of the Rockefeller Carnegie system is you know, this was back in 1912 and what's his name, Abraham Flexner, he, he released the report. Of course it was all paid for by the Carnegie's and the Rockefellers. But what people don't realize is that he was hired to write an entire assay paper to convince the world that the new medical system that they were about to usher in is the truth. And anything outside of that is pseudoscience. Which is why you have so much of the alternative industry that has been demonized that doesn't conform to the ideals of the Rockefeller system. [00:47:50] Speaker E: They're very powerful group. Very, very powerful. [00:47:53] Speaker B: They are indeed. Yeah, they are indeed. And it's challenging. And the thing is, it's this Carl. I Don't really consider myself to have any real special talent in all this. But what I'm bringing to the table is that early on in my studies, I decided not to go the conventional route because there was one author who really changed everything for me. Name is Fritzjof Capra. And Capra got me to understand that when you see something in front of you as a living, living entity, what you're not looking at is all the systems below it to support that entity. So he has gotten me to. He got me to really understand that there are multiple systems that support what you see as the finished product. So when you look at the human body, it's not just the human body. It's not just a bunch of protein and cells. I mean, when you look at cells and I think more than 20. 20 proteins, right? 20amino acids and. But what really drives those amino acids is really the question. What, what really drives a cell to actually carry out its duties? And when you really look at cells, there's nothing more than physical structures. And those structures look for, are looking for their p's and Q's within the internal terrain. And that's where I want to focus my kind of conversation with you. What, what does the internal terrain really look like? And why is that so significant, especially today more than ever? Because as we said earlier, and now you know the definition of insanity, you can't keep going based on this reductionistic model and try and fix all these problems based on reductionism and then come up with another reductionistic solution to fix a problem that was based on reductionistic science in the first place. I believe that was Newton who actually said that. And, and that's the problem is that you have, you have scientists and doctors who think they're going to take something and they're going to keep distilling it down, distilling it down. They're going to keep, it's like looking down the dark hole and going, you know, I know God's in there somewhere. We're going to find that God particle and it's, it's going to also appear out of somewhere. [00:50:48] Speaker E: And why, why is it they want to find it? See that, that's where I have the issue. They don't want to find it so much as the priority is about making money. Okay, if people get better, that's fine. But as long as we can make money and have control, that's why they're looking for these, these things where I, when I've dealt with, I have several friends of mine who deal with their health Holistically, I'm. I'm not one who cares much for doctors. I know they have their place in this world. I'm thankful for them. Because I've had to have brain surgery. Without that, I probably would not be around today. I had to have heart surgery, you know, without that, I would not have, you know. But all the other stuff I don't go for. When I had cancer, I. My doctor, he just puts his hand over his, you know, his forehead. He goes, oh, my God, here he comes. He's not gonna listen. Anything I gotta say, and I don't, you know, I let them give me the spiel and then I say, thank you, but I'll take care of it on my own. And which I've done two different occasions. So understanding where these. They believe totally 1, 100% they believe because they've been trained to believe what they have to offer is the best. And if you. Then there's something wrong with you to question them. This thing about when. When the big Covid thing was going. Don't you. Was it. Don't question the science or something. Something along that line. Well, that's what science is. It's meant to be questioned. When somebody comes up with a theory of some sort and says, well, you know, this is the way that this works, then other people say, okay, well, let me see if I can duplicate what they did. They're questioning what that. So anytime that I run across this where you can't question it, right off the bat, the light goes off in my head. And that's one of the things that I saw in speaking with you, that you are the questioner. You know, why is this the way that it is? Not accepting. Okay, well, you know, like we said earlier, one pill for everybody. That's not necessarily the way that it should be. And I appreciate that. And that's one of the reasons I wanted to have you share tonight your experience and what you found out with all the years and of research that you've done and the life experience that you've had in hopes that it will open other people's eyes and help them. [00:53:02] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean, I, you know, I appreciate that. And I think one of the. The stories I really want to start off with by really getting people to understand is I'm. It's going to be a short tangent, I promise you that. But I'm not going to get into the components, complexity of all of it, but I'll get into enough to hopefully paint a picture in people's eyes and. And their mind and going huh? And, and what I call it is the short story of evolution. So you look at the planet, it's about 4.6 billion years old, right? And anybody questions that, you can look at the fossil records. They have it. And, and during the beginnings of that it was very heated, so it was a lot of hot molten lava. So many of the different forms of bacteria couldn't innovate and continue evolving at that time. So what scientists believe what they refer to as the late heavy Grape bombardment and this is when asteroids and meteorites and comets and delivered ice and water to the planet planet which then cooled the planet. It gave the other both anaerobic and aerobic type microbes to, to then be innovative and create. And over a period of time, and I'm saying millions of years, they did, they created, they started creating their first form of life forms underwater, which is of spongy forms and coral reefs and etc. Etc. And at some point the first terrestrial based organism jumped from the ocean and onto the landmass. And that first organism was actually called the plant kingdom. Then that evolved for millions of years which then created the basis of for the next species to show up. And then that was the animal kingdom which showed up and then developed for millions of years. And then guess what? We finally showed up. So we're at the top of that, of that evolution. So I asked you, Rizkala, what's the common thread between all the levels of biology? [00:55:30] Speaker E: I'm all ears. Tell me. [00:55:32] Speaker B: So all DNA is coded for trace elements. All DNA is coded for trace elements. [00:55:47] Speaker E: For trace elements. [00:55:48] Speaker B: Trace elements meaning minerals. [00:55:51] Speaker E: Yeah. [00:55:52] Speaker B: Ocean water. Most of you have never heard this. Ocean water is the only liquid on the planet that is an aqueous solution of the entire periodic table of elements that includes all the primary elements and all the secondary elements. And current science tells us, and there's a number of very popular podcasters who they range anywhere from, you know, your body only utilizes 43 trace elements and up to 53 trace elements. Some, some of them are saying, and, and I'm telling you, if we are from the planet itself and we have part of this within us and that our evolution, and of course religious people are going to hate me for saying this is their origins are from the ocean. It'd be silly for us to imagine we did not bring part of the ocean with us us. So that means again, all DNA, whether you're plant, an animal or human, is coded for trace elements. That is your foundation, right? [00:57:03] Speaker E: I'm curious when you say animals and such the human body is what, like 70 or 80% water? [00:57:13] Speaker B: So I mean, yeah, but a little over 70, about 73. [00:57:16] Speaker E: And so what about animals? What do you have any idea what percentage are they similar to humans where they have a lot of. A high percentage of water in their body? [00:57:26] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean all the, I mean all animals are animals and all different forms of biology are going to have different percentages of water. But let's just say for humans, out of 100%, there's a little less than 4% that is, that is made up of completely trace elements, meaning your body. There's, there's a little less than 4% of your body that's made up of all trace elements. But guess what? That 4% controls every chemical reaction that occurs in your body. And let me just give you the gravity of that. The average person has 50 trillion cells. Now I'm gonna ask you to tell me this number after I give this to you. 50 trillion cells. Every cell is producing 100,000 chemical reactions every second. [00:58:22] Speaker E: Holy smokes. [00:58:23] Speaker B: So give me that number. I can't say 50 trillion cells. [00:58:28] Speaker E: How many per cell is. Say that. [00:58:31] Speaker B: So, yeah, so there's 50 trillion cells that make up the average person. Each cell produces 100,000 chemical reactions every second. [00:58:44] Speaker E: Holy smokes. Wow. [00:58:46] Speaker B: Think about that. [00:58:48] Speaker E: Wow. [00:58:49] Speaker B: And I'm not just saying that. I mean this has been very well documented with multiple. I mean, I'll source Bruce Lipton, he's, he'll say the same thing. It's just the, the level of complexity, complexity that goes on in biology is far more complex than what that, than what modern day science is telling you. Modern day science is, as you said and alluded to earlier, is all about control. It's not about liberation in science. A true scientist will sit on the sidelines and be an observer. First, modern day science, they say they want this outcome. So what they do is they come up with these randomized clinical studies and. But what people don't realize that all this, all the tests are set up to do and design to create the outcome they desire so they can pass. That's not how biology works. [00:59:51] Speaker E: Reminds me of the PCR test that they had during the COVID Designed to fail. [00:59:56] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:59:56] Speaker E: And the more, more revolutions you gave it, the fast, the more stuff, more Covid you had. They were testing things like pig hairs. And we're coming up positive with COVID Yeah, like you're saying it's designed, it's in the design and it's designed for a specific outcome. And as long as they can get that outcome, then they continue with the. The greed and the power. [01:00:17] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. So I, you know, going back to the story of evolution, I wanted to start there so that people really understand part of the basis of what we're really going to get into, and that is talking about terrain. And I mentioned a name earlier. Her name is St. Georgie. And Georgie was the one who discovered, again, vitamin C in paprika. But one of the individuals that I got to work, I got to meet and study his work. And he's also from Hungary. His name is Andy Saleh, and we called him Andy, but his name is Andrew Soleil. And when he transplanted from Hungary after working with St Georgi to the US, he continued his studies. And this is actually a really cool story that I really love telling because it gets people to understand a little bit more about the natural product industry and that it's actually not so natural as everybody thinks. So Andy's story is that he understood what St. Georgie was doing, and that means that he was plucking apart the whole hole, and he was placing patents on something that was synthetic, that was identified in the hole, but the whole thing was crystallized vitamin C. There was nothing natural about it. So when Andy understood this, it's like, basically you're plucking apart nature, but how do we actually re. Infuse nature or re nature something, in this case, so that we can mimic nature. And so what Andy figured out based on that is that how do I deliver re natured nutrients in a pill? And what he was able to really understand is fermentation. Everything could go through a fermentation process. So he figured out how to essentially feed microbes USP nutrients, and their byproduct would end up being a whole food, vitamin C. So what was known as protein chaperones, I guess I was referring to earlier with Gunter Blobel's work, the Nobel Prize in 99. And that is, you know, you have the vitamin C, but you also have all the protein chaperones that were originally connected, connected to it, as in nature. So your body doesn't have the burden of having to create protein shot bones. Everything is there, just like nature had intended. And that was one of the things that Andy really, really understood. And that's like he took away from his studies with Georgie. We're going to make something and place a patent on it so we can make money, which is wonderful. All more power to you. But we want to be able to also tell the truth. And the truth is, is that there's nothing natural about ascorbic acid, vitamin C. [01:03:43] Speaker E: They want you to think it's natural. [01:03:45] Speaker B: Yeah. They want you to think it's not. [01:03:47] Speaker E: They throw that vitamin C, it's vitamin C. Well, where's it from? [01:03:51] Speaker B: Right, right, right. So, you know, in the natural product industry, what a lot of practitioners, and no offense to anyone specific, but a lot of practitioners, they push this, but it's science and I'm sure you've heard that, but it's science. It's like. Yeah, but it's manipulated science. It's fundamentally flawed science. And, and this is actually a great kind of takeaway right now. And that is what Andy really understood is that, and anybody who's interested in reading it, there are intrinsic nutrients or energy fields that are connected to vitamin C that are essential to delivering it to the property ports at every cell within the body. And if those intrinsic nutrients aren't connected to the original vitamin C, then the likelihood of you being able to utilize the vitamin C is little to none. And that's how nature intended it. Nature did not intend to deliver a chemical isolate. Nature always was delivering it through food. That is really, really important to understand. And it's, and I, you know, I don't want to just pick on vitamin C. It's everything across the board, whether it's vitamin D, whether it's vitamin E and most of the B vitamins out there, it's the same across the board. So Andy then, through his research and understanding how to do these fermentation, he started a company in New Jersey called Grow Company. Grow Company ended up being a manufacturer of raw material that was all whole food based. And he was one of the few companies out there that was actually doing something like that. Everybody was based on quantity, vitamin C, like, you know, the kind of that Texas thing, it's like, oh, it's a thousand milligrams grams. It's even better for you. And in fact it's actually worse for you. [01:06:15] Speaker E: It's full of fillers. Yeah, you're taking one of those hard pills. Because I've seen it in capsules, I've seen it in pills. You take one of those hard pills, it's full of fillers. I don't know. [01:06:26] Speaker B: Yeah, fillers, binders, you name it. And you know, and that's the thing, that's one of the things that Andy really wanted to, to avoid. And he was born in I believe in 1920, not that long ago, disincarnated in 2016. And I tell you, it's just too bad. And even in his lifetime, the contribution he had to human biology, that it just didn't get out there enough. Because again, as you mentioned earlier, the Rockefeller money is just so powerful and again, going forward. Yeah, yeah. And it's. People just keep hiding behind the science. I mean, I can't even tell you how many times I've had multiple conversations, very technical conversations, and ones that have been indoctrinated into the idea of they've been told the truth in their schooling with PhDs and whatever, but yet they can't understand this basic biology. And this is why when you look at reductionistic model of science, which is what I call the Newtonian philosophy, okay, he was acquiring achievement of Galileo and Dick Cartes and all these guys who, contemporaries prior to him started doing all this work. But Newton's idea was a crowning achievement. And this was the thing is that they distilled it down to essentially looking at the physical characteristics of the protein. And when you look at it through that lens, all you're looking at is the physical part of the cell. But you're not addressing what really drives the cell. This is what I refer to, the unforeseen forces. And what are those unforeseen forces? Well, it's the presence of God, it's the presence of soul and spirit and unforeseen forces. And that is ultimately what drives a DNA. So this is when you hear me saying DNA expression, this is what drives DNA. It's not a calorie. Calories have nothing to do with anything. In fact, when we were having our first kind of short conversation, I brought up the word calories and you brought something up that most people have no idea. And do you remember what that was? [01:09:16] Speaker E: The Ptolemy's. [01:09:18] Speaker B: The the what? [01:09:19] Speaker E: The Ptolemy. I don't recall. [01:09:21] Speaker B: No, no, no. About the calories. Remember what calories was originally used for? The word calories was born from the measure of steam in a locomotive. [01:09:38] Speaker E: Yeah. [01:09:40] Speaker B: Has nothing to do with DNA expression. [01:09:43] Speaker E: Expression of heat. [01:09:45] Speaker B: Yes. So to this day you still look it up and it's basically taking one liter of water and raising it by one Fahrenheit or one Celsius. And that's your definition of calories. So tell me, really, ultimately, by raising the temperature of water has anything to do with DNA expression? And again, going back on the definition of insanity, this is what people are still doing because they've been so convinced that calories, counting calories is really the key to health and longevity, when all you have to do is look around you for past hundred years. And again See the results of that. See, people just have this thing where they don't want to step outside of that comfort zone. And I'm, you know, I. You could say all sorts of things, but people have their own ideas about it and they think they know. And then, you know, a lot of. God bless some of the. Some of the people I got to study with and, and many of the things I got to learn from them, and including Gunter Boabel, who won a Nobel Prize, and including Andy and some of these luminaries that. It was always very fascinating to me as I was coming up through all this, that the one question I always ask is, how can someone know so much information but can't represent that information? That understanding that knowledge, just the basic kind of like, kind of being a role model, all of that information. And it always really fascinated me. And when I was really starting to understand here more and more about biology and more about clinical nutrition. So I made it. I made it a big mission. You know, it's. In fact, it's one of my favorite quotes by Bruce Lee. I said, it's not enough to know. You must apply. And that was the thing is a lot of these people I studied with that they, they knew intellectually, but they rarely applied. [01:12:26] Speaker E: When, when you mentioned Bruce Lee. I don't know if it was Bruce or his son. This one particular. One thing that he said that, that really stuck out in my mind. He said you have to be like coffee, because when coffee mixes with anything, it turns whatever, anything is into coffee. You turn even coffee with water. [01:12:46] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:12:46] Speaker E: You know, your copy and then whatever you put the copy in, whether it's in a cup, whether it's in a glass, whether it's in a bottle. [01:12:53] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:12:54] Speaker E: Informs to whatever, you know, whatever situation that is put into. So you have to be like coffee movie or something. But I thought it just stuck out in my mind so. Well, now, in evidence of what you're saying regarding the whole. Treating the thing of the whole. I'll see if I can look it up while we're on. There's a lady that lives in Miami. She is about 80 some odd years old. She looks like she's 40 when she's out with her husband. Her husband gets dirty looks because her husband looks like he's 80 and she looks like she's 40. And they're giving the husband the dirty looks, thinking, now what are you doing with this young lady? And they don't realize they're both the same age. What she did is she ate Whole Foods all of her life. Her friends made fun of her early on because she wouldn't do what they were doing. She was eating, growing her own food and eating whole foods. And as a result of that, her aging process has been greatly diminished. [01:13:54] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean, I mean, think about it this way. I mean, and this is going to be kind of like a think. Many of your listeners are going to go, what? And, and that is we, we are literally, when I say this, I always love to watch people's reaction. We are literally the only species on the planet that counts calories. We are literally the only species on the planet that has this idea that we need to create a sterile world. We're literally the only species on the planet that thinks that we need to cook our food all the time in order to eat. [01:14:41] Speaker E: That removes a lot of the nutrients in the cooking. [01:14:44] Speaker B: It does. And by no means am I saying that you need to be a vegan or raw foodist. I mean, if you follow the story of evolution, that means in evolution we have, within our DNA makeup we have the plant kingdom and we have the animal kingdom within us. So it's not about, in my personal opinion, professional experience. It's not about being extremism of vegetarian or being a carnivore. It's about really creating a balance between the two of them and understanding what food is really delivering. Food is a physical form of delivering a quantum field. The quantum field is what ultimately gives DNA express expression. So it's really based on quality rather than quantity, because our entire system is based on quantity. And we can just see where ultimately where that has led. So when you understand it from that point of view, that means that your focus then is on. Okay, if we understand that the quantum field is what delivers, or we can refer to them as I referred earlier, is those unforeseen forces. If that is truly what creates DNA expression. So then what does that really look like for kind of the modern day? Either because not everybody has the luxury of having their own garden or has access all the best things besides going to Costco and eating that food. I won't even talk about most of that food there. But to create proper DNA expression is based on not only the quantum field. But where is the quantum field being delivered from? It's from the internal terrain. I said that earlier. And the internal terrain is kind of the governing agency of every cell within the body. Remember what I was saying earlier? How many chemical reactions occur in the human body will. The human internal terrain is the governing agency of all of those chemical reactions. [01:17:10] Speaker E: So would that be kind of like, like a roadway? The cleaner the roadway is, the faster you can go. [01:17:17] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. So let me, let me give you an example, kind of a modern day example that people can wrap their head around. When you don't get the results of certain things, whether it's recovery, let's say distill it down to an athlete, they say recovery. And you know, when, when I was coming up in the ranks and throughout the, and I wasn't always able to gain the muscle, my coaches would always say, well, you're not eating enough protein. You got to eat more protein. You got to eat more protein. And that intuitively never made sense to me. So I kept on digging and digging and asking that question, what is really the answer? Well now here, you fast forward here today and they're still saying the same thing. It's always about protein. So the carnivores will tell you it's all about protein. Right. Whether it's a chemical isolate, again the isolate, whether it's, let's say soy protein isolate, whey protein isolate or vegan rice protein isolate, there's still chemical isolates. That's the key is to understand there's nothing whole about any of that protein. But the issue isn't you want to look at from this point. The, the issue is that we are as a culture are not deficient in consuming protein. Right. Think about that. There's a lot. Yeah, I mean there's a lot whether you're eating eggs, whether you're eating meat or fish or chicken. We're not a culture that's deficient in eating protein. We are a culture that is deficient in having the ability to create chemical reactions to utilize the protein. It's not a protein deficiency. It's a protein insufficiency of being able to utilize the protein. In order for your body to utilize protein, it needs to make thousands of chemical reactions. And remember what I said earlier, Every cell has to produce a hundred thousand chemical reactions every second. Where does that come from? The terrain as the governing agency of all of that. It's not about the amount of protein. I mean, give you a little insight. For myself, I have maybe 6, 8 ounces of some form of protein. That's it. And I only eat once a day. That's it. You don't need that much. [01:20:02] Speaker E: You know, we've been conditioned to believe that, oh, we have to have breakfast. That's the most important. You have to have breakfast. Of course you can't skip lunch. You have to have lunch and then There's a snack in between that and don't forget dinner. [01:20:15] Speaker B: Right, right. I mean, you know, I always like to tease about that one because that was the cunning eye of what was his name? The Edward Bernays, the nephew of Sigmund Freud. And in 1928 he was hired by a bacon and sausage company to sell more bacon and sausage. And so he was the one, get this, he was the one who coined the idea that breakfast was the most important meal of the day to sell more bacon and more sausage. Wow, imagine that. And so we have again this idea that we need to get up and we need to eat breakfast and we need still have lunch and we need to have dinner. But you know, ever since he started that and the rest of the food companies went on and adopted, you know. [01:21:15] Speaker E: Heck yeah, more food, more money. [01:21:17] Speaker B: Exactly, exactly. When you, when you really have, when you develop a well balanced internal terrain and we'll get to that more on rebooting the system, you don't really need actually a lot of food. Most people don't realize that, but they're so conditioned that to think that they still need that three square meals a day when, when in fact you don't. [01:21:43] Speaker E: Have you ever heard of, what were they called, sun eating? Have you ever heard that term, sun eating? [01:21:53] Speaker B: Well, yeah, I mean, you know, the most important part of the day to absorb sun is from 7am to about 9am and that is that the sun, you know, despite what ophthalmologists and dermatologists convince everybody, is not toxic for you. It's actually, it's extremely important to get that through your eyes on a daily basis. [01:22:23] Speaker E: The reason I say the sun eating there are people and they've done research on these pigs, two of them that I know of, that I've seen on video. One of them is a gentleman with dark skin, the other one was a lady. And they look at the sun, I don't know, for 10 or 15 minutes when it first comes up, something like that. They don't eat food, they haven't eaten food in years. Their energy comes from the energy of the sun. So that came to mind when you said you don't need to eat that much. So these people don't eat anything. [01:22:53] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:22:54] Speaker E: And they rarely drink water. And this the one man with the dark skin, they put him under observation for two weeks. He didn't drink or eat anything and had one minor movement of urine and that was it. [01:23:09] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:23:10] Speaker E: So they're getting the energy from the sun and they're able to utilize that energy in Their body and, and, and have their body assimilate to that energy. That just came to mind when you said you don't need that much. These people don't need nothing. You know, so that's, that's a, you know, when you say you don't need that much, that's a fact that people are living on literally nothing. Nothing. Nothing. But. [01:23:36] Speaker B: Yeah, well, that's the thing with what I refer to is, is magnetism. And magnetism is, is that there's, you know, there's a, there's a lot of talk. And in fact, where you just came from, from Egypt there, how the pyramids were built, was actually based on technology that used the natural fabric of the planet. And the natural fabric of the planet is really about magnetism, meaning cosmic energy. Cosmic energy coming from dark matter and also the sun. But then what. That's a projector. But what's the receiver? Well, the planet is gravitational pull. So that means the planet is the receiver. And in between there, there is a fabric, what they call this free energy. And this is what Tesla, Victor Schomberger all talked about. And you know, the common theme is, and this is what I really want your listeners to really understand is that the common theme is that it's about energy. It's not about what we've been told. Like we've already defined what calories is. Calories has nothing to do with DNA expression because it's not energy. There's nothing energy. There's like if you eat a Dorito or some kind of a highly processed food that's a bunch of chemicals put together and then they put a calorie count on it, they think that that's actually going to deliver energy, when in fact it's actually not. It's actually depleting your body. Yeah, you see, because. [01:25:20] Speaker E: Let me ask you something, because you said this several times now, DNA expression. Use that term several times. So for anybody out there who doesn't really understand what importance is there or what does the DNA expression do? Is that everything in your body. [01:25:38] Speaker B: That'S every cell in your body, meaning how. So how cells actually express themselves. So cells are essentially nothing more than structures, protein structures, but they're actually looking for their p's and Q's based on quantum fields that are delivered via through the internal terrain. Okay, and what, what, what does that really look like? Meaning, remember what we said earlier, the story of evolution. Story of evolution is about all DNA is coded for trace elements. So what do trace elements do? Trace elements provide each one of them. If we Know that again, our origins are from the ocean, and ocean water is the only liquid on the planet that's an aqueous solution of the entire periodic table of elements. It's important to really understand that because scientists have convinced us we're only utilizing 43, or some people are only saying 50 something, when in fact you're actually utilizing the entire periodic table of elements and only God knows how to use them. There's no one that I've ever met, Based on almost 40 years in this industry, that has been able to track the complexity of how your body utilizes trace elements. No one, not even a supercomputer, has been able to really understand and track that. Because this is the thing, when you take, let's just say it's just no different than when we were talking about whole foods. And that is when you take, let's say, calcium. Calcium commingles with 11 other trace elements. In order for your body to even utilize calcium properly, you can't just take calcium by itself. You can't just take magnesium by itself. Every trace element is designed to co mingle with other trace elements. Why? Because what it's actually doing is in the terrain, is creating a quantum field. And so that means trace elements are bouncing off each other. And in between all that, you are developing or delivering this quantum field. In fact, I encourage you, if you're in front of your computer right now, let's call it, go on to Google and then just punch in mineral wheel. [01:28:17] Speaker E: Mineral wheel. Okay. [01:28:19] Speaker B: Yes. And that will give you a perfect example of what I just said. [01:28:31] Speaker E: Wow. [01:28:32] Speaker B: Do you see that crisscrossing back and forth? [01:28:35] Speaker E: Good gravy. Yeah. [01:28:37] Speaker B: That is the quantum field I am referring to, that is suspended in your internal terrain. What is your internal terrain made of? Mainly water, right? Exactly. The one, the image on the right, that is a perfect picture of what the mineral wheel and what the quantum field looks like. [01:28:59] Speaker E: Wow. [01:29:01] Speaker B: See, so when you understand that that is what your cells are drawn from that quantum field. So when you look at it in individual foods, that's what you're delivering. Each food, each DNA in food is different. So they require different nutrients and varying degrees and varying levels. But ultimately they're all still commingling, meaning they're interdependent and interconnected. And that's what's really important to understand nutrition. It's not about quantity, it's about quality. What kind of quality? Nutrients. You know, I keep going, referring back to the human species. We're the only ones that convinced that everything in food consumption is Based on quantity rather than quality. We're the only ones that consume three meals a day. We're literally the only species that does that. Every other species on the planet eats once a day. They're lucky. And sometimes they don't get to eat for a week and they're still thriving. Right. [01:30:21] Speaker E: So there is a. There is an advantage to doing that. People may not realize that, but it's been shown that when you go into a fasting mode, your body begins to rid itself of all the bad cells. I can't remember the autophagy or something like that. Yeah, I can't remember the name of the term, but your body begins to get rid of the bad stuff. So maybe you were designed to do that. Maybe we're not designed to have three meals a day where we're constantly keeping our body in a state of inflammation and wondering why we're sick all the time. [01:30:54] Speaker B: Yeah, well, you know, it's. It's. I think one of the. One of. One of the goals I really wanted coming on here is really to get people to understand the very thing that we're talking about. Eat based on quality versus quantity. And that means looking at nutrition from a different set of lenses. And that is just looking at. From a quantum field point of view, rather than a counting calorie kind of thing. And, you know, there's. Along the way, I got to study again. I go back to some of these people I really got to study with and either study with them or definitely study the work. But some of the ones of the past, of course, Argento Bobel was a really key guy that I got to study and his work and his Nobel Prize in 1999. But, you know, one of the. One of the. Another one who came out of. Out of Europe, her name is Annie McLaren, and I think she was born in 1927. And she. She really was able to demonstrate and actually back up what Blobel was actually talking about. And this is where it gets complex. Again, delivering. This is probably the first time I've said this in this conversation, but delivering a single field versus a whole field. So again, going back to the analogy of the vitamin C. So you're delivering a simple chemical isolate called vitamin C, ascorbic acid, vitamin C, or you're going to deliver the whole orange and deliver a complete field. See? So her work was in developmental biology, meaning how she was one of the first to really understand how to do artificial insemination. And through all the work she did with fetuses and fertilizing females and etc. She went on to really understand that. And one of her key, what I really understood from some of her work is cells express themselves best when they are delivering a full field again rather than a single field. And that's just like most people just have no idea what that really means and understand that when it comes to overall cellular expression, I'll just refer to and. And then when you go on you further in some of the work, some of the guys that started, Victor Schomberger is another one, Schomburger out of Austria, he was one that really supported the ideas of living system. Which again goes back to what I was talking to about Fritzschef Capra. And Capra was really be was able to understand or get people to really understand that, that what you see in front of you is a finished product. But what you don't really see is what's actually below all of it. And that's really important to understand what's below all of it. In biology, what we don't see is all of those unforeseen forces that I keep referring to. And that's again going back to the internal terrain. So the internal terrain is a complex subject, let's call it. You know, not a lot of people heard about it and have heard anything about it, but it really started back with a French biologist. His name is Anton Beauchamp. Beachamp was the one who really got to understand that there's something happening in life that most biologists are not getting. He coined the term called microzyma. And microzyma is essentially the start point. And this is again, I keep referring to this and saying this, but this is where it gets complex. And I'm going to really try and distill it down as simple as I can and as quickly as I can. But what Bachonp was able to understand is that there is a start point in life, meaning what he referred to as the bacterial life cycle. And this is the start point is what he referred to is a microzyma, meaning a tiny enzyme. But what was interesting is that this tiny microzyma has no DNA and no nucleus. Now, when you look at contemporary biology, maybe like, well, that's impossible, how is it moving? [01:36:20] Speaker E: Right? [01:36:22] Speaker B: Wouldn't you say that? Mm, yeah. So if that is the start point, what is it exactly? Well, remember we were talking about magnetism. Magnetism meaning there's a projector. The sun is one of those projectors. Then we have the receiver, which is then the planet. These are the two domains that come together that make up a Microzygoma, this tiny enzyme. Think about that. That shows up in your blood. Conventional wisdom says, oh, that's just waste matter. What are you talking about? That's nothing. Right, but this is the primordial start of the entire bacterial life cycle, right? So if that's the start point, then how do we get to where we are today? So in my training with Darkfield, one of the things that I always asked is my teachers are very good, very adamant about being able to identify all the different levels of opportunistic bacteria in the blood, right? But my simple question was, always was, how'd they get there in the first place? How did that blood fluke, which is just a parasite, or how did that fungus. How did that get in there? Is it as simple as we've been told? Oh, well, you ate it. So therefore all of a sudden, it's swimming around in you. You know, that. That. That's one of the biggest misnomers that's in like. Let's take a little sidebar here about parasites. You know, how many times have you been told. It's like, oh, you eat sushi? Yeah, you have parasites. Really? Let's break that down. Okay, so if you eat a piece of sushi and it has a larvae in there or has a parasite, you're gonna tell me that once it gets through the stomach acid, that it's literally just gonna start swimming around in you. [01:38:36] Speaker E: So one of the pictures I've seen of parasites that look like worms. [01:38:40] Speaker B: Yeah. Well, how did that develop? This is again where it gets complex because there's nothing in biology that could survive that's in biological form, meaning a plant or an animal that can get past your stomach acid. [01:39:00] Speaker E: I've always wondered, so how the heck did people. So I'm not. I'm not clear about what you're saying. Are parasites real? [01:39:08] Speaker B: Parasites are real, but the parasites are developed internally through a toxic terrain. [01:39:19] Speaker E: Oh, I see. Okay. [01:39:20] Speaker B: And this is where, again, going back to the start point of. Of a microzyma, or what we refer to is the bacterial life cycle. So in a bacterial life cycle, there's the start point, which is called the primitive state. And then the next stage is the bacterial state, and then the next phase is the fungal state. And then there's the viral state. Four stages, and each of those stage has four stages within them that is all governed by the internal terrain. So if your internal terrain becomes highly acidic, no oxygen, no minerals, no sunlight, too much stress, too much alcohol, too much smoking, too much whatever it is, then that internal Terrain and all of the energy that you just went through starts to become toxic. This then starts to develop your natural primitive form of bacteria to evolve into more opportunistic states. Okay, so it goes from primitive and then all of a sudden it evolves or what we call morphs into the second stage, which is bacterial. And as you continue down that unhealthy road, then it goes from bacterial, then to fungal. And as you continue even further down that road and it'll go from fungal to viral. [01:41:05] Speaker E: Fungal is cancer isn't is what they call cancer anyway. [01:41:10] Speaker B: Yeah, it's a start of cancer. Parasites and fungus are synonymous. They, they to anybody, anybody who's dealing with cancer. I mean it's, it's just something that modern day science is not addressing. [01:41:25] Speaker E: So it's interesting you're, from what you're saying, the way that I understand it is your body's internal terrain is providing, I'm trying to figure out the best way to put it is providing the opportunity for parasites. Is that a make sense? [01:41:41] Speaker B: It's not necessarily providing it. It's more that the unconscious unhealthy lifestyle creates the terrain which then develops any kind of opportunistic bacteria. [01:42:00] Speaker E: Okay. [01:42:02] Speaker B: We've been told that everything invades from the outside. This is, was the biggest medical scientific revolution in the 50s and 1850s, 1860s, 1870s until Rockefeller came in. Rockefeller saw the opportunity when he sat down and really understand what Louis Pasteur was pushing. And he realized that that was the precipice that he could use the basis of pushing his pills and creating the pharmaceutical industry. Because you look at Pasteur's idea, his idea is based on what is referred to as monomorphism. And that just simply means is this is that a germ invades from the outside. And that germ, quote unquote, has no ability to evolve or devolve into any other form besides that one. One form which is not true. This is, you know, I'm going to present compelling evidence to prove my statement about that. And these guys were swept underneath the rug because of Rockefeller's money and of course of the Flexner Report that anything outside the medical curriculum that we created is just all pseudoscience, you see. So this is again, please stop me anytime that you don't understand something because I, my, I really want people to walk away from this and go, wow, I just learned something different and possibly a different way to really approach health. That that's my aim tonight. [01:43:58] Speaker E: And the evidence of you mentioned earlier of how men will take something and then break it down so that only a part of that is what they utilize versus the whole. [01:44:11] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:44:11] Speaker E: So I, I found this video. This woman. I think you might find this interesting. This is a woman who's eaten whole foods and this is the result. Let's see if I can bring it up. This is the result of that. It's pretty, pretty astonishing. Get if I can find it. Is it this one? That one we're going to go to. Come on now. [01:44:40] Speaker A: I have had several people ask me, how old is she? She is a grandmother and she is eligible for a single senior citizen discount. Her quest started because she wanted to feel healthy and have lots of energy. But she has reaped more benefits than she anticipated. And here we have some ginger. Annette Larkins shows off her garden in her Miami Dade county backyard. It's full of fruits and vegetables. Every corner of her garden has something that is edible and I've been eating them and they're so good. She also collects rainwater to drink and water her plants. Annette says the food in her garden is her fountain of youth. [01:45:15] Speaker E: I'm very vibrant. [01:45:16] Speaker A: I have lots of energy. As I told you before, I'm up at no later than 5:30 in the morning as a rule, and I'm ready to go. Annette's husband owned a meat store in the 1960s. That's when she became a vegetarian. But as the years went by, she became a raw vegan. She does not eat any animal products. Her food is on processed and uncooked. My diet consists of fruits, nuts, vegetables and seeds. I do a lot of sprouting of seeds. And as you can see from my garden, of course, these are the raw foods that I eat. Annette also juices, fruits and veggies. [01:45:51] Speaker E: You get an idea. [01:45:54] Speaker B: That's great. [01:45:58] Speaker E: So she's in her 70s, by the way. She looks like she's in her 30s or 40s. [01:46:02] Speaker B: Wow. [01:46:02] Speaker E: She's in her 70s. But I thought it was nice to bring that on because you mentioned the. The whole. She's eating of the whole. She's not. [01:46:09] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:46:10] Speaker E: Eating a part of something. She's doing exactly what you're saying. Feeding her body and getting her terrain in order to allow her body to function correctly. [01:46:21] Speaker B: That's correct. And. And that's the result. [01:46:24] Speaker E: This is the benefit of doing what you're saying. That's why I wanted to play that. It is so astonishing to see this lady. When I first saw this video years back, I went, that cannot be real. And then I actually read the article about her and I think now she's probably close to her 80s, late 70s. 80s because this was years back. [01:46:43] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean that's great. And more partur if she wants to just stay as a, a vegan or a raw foodist. And you know, I, there are many people just have challenges with that. But one of the things that I always say, it's like if you're gonna, it's not to say that you, you can't eat cooked food and any of that, but I always just say that if you're gonna eat cooked food, just eat something raw with it so that it gets, it gets digested properly. There's natural microbes and natural aerobic meaning probiotics that are naturally occurring in all fruits and vegetable. You don't have to take a probiotic supplement in order to receive natural probiotics. [01:47:32] Speaker E: I think one of the things that she said, I think, I'm pretty sure she said this in one of the interviews that she did. She said, I'm eating life. I'm not eating something that's dead, I'm eating something that's alive. [01:47:43] Speaker B: That's correct. That's actually correct. One of the names I wanted to bring up is Ferdinand Kahn and he was born in the early 1800s and he was one of, and this keeps going to what I was saying earlier in that he was one of really the founders of modern day bacteriology and microbiology. But he was the one who really understood and observed for the first time a primitive form or just a simple yeast form that evolved from an aerobic state to an anaerobic state. So meaning it actually evolved or morphed, I'll use the word morph and sometimes I'll just say morphology. So he was the one who really actually saw it in real time where something actually evolved into something different. And but this is, this is the thing, what he understood is that there are species of bacteria that thrive and let's say a high chlorophyll or high oxygenated environment. Right. And then there are species, meaning bacteria that then evolve and they aren't dependent upon oxygen. Right. And they like the, let's say the dark, dense, no matter type of environment. So they thrive in that, you see. So again, it can, like I was saying earlier, is that it can evolve into an opportunistic state or it can devolve and stay within the primitive state. And I want to give it in the end here, I want to give people a kind of a wow kind of thing in the end of all that. But I want to explain this a little bit More in detail, where Ferdinand Kahn was the one who really got to understand this back to life cycle. So some of the, like the ones that we see here today that we have heard in food, let's just say salmonella or listeria or fungi of some sort, right? If these are present in foods, that means the food is already at a degenerative state. Why? Well, those bacteria, bacterias all show up because they're designed that way to eat at the flesh of whatever it is integrated, break it down and integrate it back into the soil, into the planet, so that it can give rise to something else. That is how everything is designed in biology. See? So if we start at a primitive state, how do we stay at that primitive state? And that's the answer I want to give a little later here. One of the most important works and studies I did was with George lukowski, born in mid-1800s. And he was the one who really got me to understand. He was the one for you, the new agers that are on listening, he's the one who created the wave oscillator. Have you heard of that? Yeah, yeah. So the wave oscillator is basically creating magnetism. So it's basically a combination of cosmic radiation and, and gravitational pull. [01:51:43] Speaker E: Right. [01:51:45] Speaker B: And so which creates a natural oscillation in cells. But remember, oscillation or energy fields, the basis of all within our system is water is the carrier and trace elements is the provider of the oscillation. Magnetism is what creates the oscillation. Right. And so when Murkowski was really one, got me to really understand that every cell has an oscillation internally and then there's one externally, meaning outside of the cell. That's called your terrain. So there's always fluid exchange that occurs between the two of them. But in order for fluid exchange to happen, there has to be an oscillation. Again, where does that energy field come from? It comes from the presence of trace elements. Remember, again, we go back to how did we. The start of all of our origin is from the ocean. So it would be silly for us to imagine we didn't bring part of the ocean with us. And part of that big ocean is of course, the trace elements. And it's really important to understand that little tidbit of oscillation, because oscillation is one of the keys to vibrant, healthy cells. And the only way you get that is through the presence of trace elements consistently in your terrain. [01:53:29] Speaker E: What are the trace elements? While I'm thinking about it? [01:53:33] Speaker B: Well, I mean, there's all your primary ones and all your secondary ones. But I will just say this, without getting into every one of them, is that one of the easiest ways to get this doesn't always have to come from a mineral supplement. You can actually just get it through full spectrum salt. [01:53:52] Speaker E: Oh. [01:53:52] Speaker B: And yeah, I mean, it's as simple as that. [01:53:56] Speaker E: Like sea salt. Sea salt. Sea salt. [01:54:00] Speaker B: Sea salt, yeah. I mean, I'm a bit of a salt aficionado because the salts that are out there, there's a lot of them. I get the Maldon salt and there's the Balinese and salt, and there's an Icelandic salt. And. And of course, there's. The most popular one is the. The Himalayan salt, which is typically mined and mined out of Pakistan, which is not necessarily bad. But there's a big difference between the ones that are really processed through the full. The full. The full moon. The full moon, and based on the tide. So when you have these companies that harvest water in certain vats and then go through the precipitation process where the water then starts to evaporate and they keep passing it on the vats to that, and eventually the salt actually separates from the water. But what people don't realize that in that process is that when water separate, when the salt separates from the water, guess what? It actually forms. You just came from there. [01:55:13] Speaker E: Wow. [01:55:14] Speaker B: The crystals that forms the fall to the bottom are the shape of pyramids. [01:55:21] Speaker E: Wow. [01:55:22] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:55:23] Speaker E: Wow. [01:55:23] Speaker B: Imagine that. And what is a pyramid? Everybody knows in sacred geometry, pyramids are one of the strongest, most powerful shapes. Yep, that's correct. So the Maldives, all that. The Icelandic salt has that. So that the Balinese salt, because it's still all handcrafted, in a sense, all hand harvested based on the moon tides. [01:55:51] Speaker E: Wow. [01:55:52] Speaker B: Yeah, imagine that. I never knew that, that. That you could literally just get a full spectrum of salt from the ocean just through salt, despite consuming salt. [01:56:06] Speaker E: Wow. [01:56:08] Speaker B: Yeah. It doesn't take a lot to really be healthy. And that's also one of my aims, is to give people just simple remedies and simple tools to walk away from, like, oh, yeah, salt. That's easy. Well, of course it's easy. All you have to do is add it to your food. You know, you don't even have to take it like a mineral supplement. You can just literally add it to your food and just eat it. [01:56:41] Speaker E: In fact, I'm glad I use sea salt now. After you've said what you've said. [01:56:47] Speaker B: Yeah, you know, I saw. I didn't mention this, but earlier I started off in a probiotic business in this Business. And I worked for a company. And one of the things. And long story short, but one of the things that was always deleted from the research is that you can't just take probiotic and expect it to just propagate within your digestive system or your intestines, specifically in the duodenum area. Because if you already have a highly acidic, toxic internal terrain or a toxic internal colon that is not conducive for probiotics to thrive in. So probiotics thrive when there's a clean, healthy environment, but also they thrive because of the presence of salt, because of the trace elements, and the trace elements provide the frequencies that the probiotics thrive off of. [01:57:49] Speaker E: Wow. [01:57:50] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:57:51] Speaker E: So if I understand what you're telling me, taking probiotics by itself is not necessarily going to increase the good bacteria in your gut. [01:57:59] Speaker B: Not at all. [01:58:00] Speaker E: Wow. Wow. [01:58:03] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:58:04] Speaker E: But doing the same thing with salt that increases the. The availability of. Is that right? By. By taking the probiotic with salt, that increases the availability of the probiotic? [01:58:19] Speaker B: Well, it increases. Increases the ability to propagate within your. Yeah, yeah. To really colonize. Because that's what you want it to do, is you want it to colonize. [01:58:30] Speaker E: Wow. I never knew that. [01:58:32] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:58:32] Speaker E: What a waste of money. How many times. I'm telling you. And some of the probiotics I've taken in the past are quite expensive. [01:58:40] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, I know, I know. It's crazy, right? You know, like, that's what I'm saying is you just don't. [01:58:48] Speaker E: Without the aid of salt behind it, you might as well just go spit in the wind. [01:58:54] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean, also, also. And this is also another thing. This is the. The deficiency of salt minerals in your internal terrain, I believe is one of the biggest contributors to diabetes. [01:59:13] Speaker E: Wow. [01:59:15] Speaker B: Yeah. Why? Because you need the presence of salt in order for glucose to really even be utilized in the first place. [01:59:27] Speaker E: See, now, coming from my background as being an electronics technician, I know that the body is basically a battery. It's a living battery. And the salt acts as a. [01:59:42] Speaker C: I. [01:59:42] Speaker E: Can'T think of the right word. What's the word I'm looking for? Electrolyte. The salt acts as an electrolyte in that battery. So if you don't have salt in your body, then your body's ability to store energy because it requires. Because you're a battery, basically. Do you agree that a body, the human body in a very, very basic sense, is a battery? Would you agree with that statement? [02:00:07] Speaker B: I would absolutely agree with that. Because even Robert O' Becker in the 60s already proved that. You know, our system is an electrical, electrically charged system. So the thing is, is that what you're saying there? The presence of electrolytes, it's not just like the energy field. It's. We are energy. The solution starting point, the primordial starting point, is energy. The key is. And this is, this is just gonna kind of blow people's minds. Like, the key is, how do you maintain that primordial energy? And it all comes through the internal. [02:00:51] Speaker E: Terrain, which is based on or depends upon the elements, the trace elements, the. [02:00:59] Speaker B: Presence of trace elements. So in other words, if we know the start point of the primordial solution is these primitive forms of bacteria called microzymas, and they're a non DNA, non nucleus. So basically it's light, it's energy. You know. You know, in religion they tell you it's about the light. The new ages will always tell you about the light, but they never tell you how to actually get the light. Right. I'm trying to tell you we all have the ability to receive that. And, and it's not as easy or it's not as difficult as science has made it to be. Science today just presents everything in black and white. And if you don't have it now, you're a victim to yourself circumstances. Therefore we can't do anything. Well, Lipton's work of epigenetics disproves that. So I want to go back to the really like that statement I just said. So if we know that's a start point, the most primitive form of bacteria, that's your start point. How do you then maintain that? Because what the analogy I gave you earlier, that is when you look at the bacterial life cycle, everything, all bacteria evolve into an either an opportune state, opportunistic state, meaning an anaerobic state, or devolve back down to. In an aerobic state. Okay? Meaning devolve back down into its most primitive form. It can go either way. But remember, the governing agency of that is your internal terrain. So if your internal terrain is hardly charged with what you refer to as electrolytes and trace elements, then most likely you will stay more into your aerobic state type bacteria versus if you heat a highly processed food, have a toxic life, and are dealing with multiple. Whatever, okay, Then most likely you'll be hovering in the anaerobic states where you have multiple different strains of opportunistic bacteria. [02:03:22] Speaker E: And that's where cancer thrives as well. [02:03:24] Speaker B: And that's where cancer also thrives. So we've been told that if you have this bacteria and that bacteria, you just need to take an antibiotic. Well, when you deliver a single field called an antibiotic, you're actually making the entire quantum field weaker and you're forcing your body to work even harder. You see? So how, how is the key then to bring it all the way back to primitive state the key? This is, this is the million dollar answer right here. Here. The key to health and longevity is if we know the start point is a primitive bacteria and we know that it stays there with the presence of trace elements in good water and good healthy choices, then the key is to keep it in that state so it never evolves into an opportunistic state. Right. Now, this was echoed later by other people that I really want to bring up. One of them is Renee Quinton. Renee Quinton was involved in the medical, I'll just say battle that went on between Pasteur, Bashamp and, and back in the 1860s, 1870s. Rene Quinton was the one who really tracked the matrix of life and what we refer to as the primordial soup of life. And Quinton really supported the ideals and philosophy of Anton Beauchamp, who was a, who was a, basically a master pharmacist. But he definitely opposed Louis Pasteur's idea of the germ theory. So Rene Quinton really understood the entire kind of the story of evolution, I was telling you. Now let's really focus in on what Quinton is. Quinton is during a full moon cycle, and only during a full moon, plankton gets released from the bottom of the ocean. When that plankton gets released, it triggers the largest feeding cycle on the planet. Somewhere between six to eight different locations without the planet and the first within the feeding, that plankton being released. And remind you, the plankton itself is the size of a pinhead. Tiny. You barely can even see it. Right. But the first to get to consume that is tiny microscopic organism called the Zulu plankton, one of the most important natural planktons and natural bacterias in the ocean. Why? Because when it consumes that plankton, it creates an immediate chemical reaction in its body and then oozes out this plasma. Guess what? That plasma is the only thing in nature that's identical to your blood plasma. [02:06:56] Speaker E: Wow. [02:06:58] Speaker B: Wow, that's correct. That's crazy. There's nothing else like it on the planet. Nothing. And guess what? [02:07:07] Speaker E: Go back a minute or no, you're saying that the plankton that comes up. [02:07:13] Speaker B: Is eaten by this, this Zulu plankton. [02:07:18] Speaker E: And then from that it produces a plasma that's identical to the plasma of our body. [02:07:25] Speaker B: It is. This is why we understand the origins of life. This is the primordial soup. And don't forget what it's suspended in. What is seawater. We've been telling you. I've been telling you what? Seawater, it's the only liquid on the planet that's an aqueous solution of the entire periodic table of elements. So what happens when that plasma gets released? It osmosisly travels up to this towards the surface of water, and it hovers at about 90ft below the water line. That's where the feeding cycle on the planet, the largest feeding cycle on the planet occurs from all the different levels of predatory fish right there. And they're all eating one thing. They're eating the plankton. [02:08:17] Speaker E: Wow. [02:08:18] Speaker B: They're eating the plankton through, you know, let's just say sardines and other things that eat the plankton, but then the, the predatory fish eat the sardine, but they're still getting the plankton. Right. You see? [02:08:30] Speaker E: Wow. [02:08:31] Speaker B: So, so. And this is the other cool thing. So when it gets to. Closer to the surface of the water, Osmosis Lee. In nature, everything is spun in a vortex and creates these ginormous vortex that can be 25, 50 miles in diameter. And what it's doing, it's integrating the plasma with the trace elements. And to this day, the Quintone family is the only family that can go into specific areas during a plankton bloom and harvest that plasma. And that, my friends, is the basis of how we started out, this conversation of me helping people to reboot the internal terrain is receiving that plasma. [02:09:37] Speaker E: So we have to eat plankton? [02:09:41] Speaker B: Not necessarily, but the, the, the. I mean, it definitely won't hurt you. You're all right. You could eat the sardines and, you know, anything that's rich in plankton, you know, but, yeah, I mean, it's. I, I would say plankton is probably, you know, up there in the top three most perfect foods that you could consume because it, it has all the elements that your body needs, every aspect of it. Yeah, he, Rene Quinton, it was kind of interesting, you know, he, he introduced the, the plasma to, I believe, was. I believe it was in 1897 at the World's Fair. And where was that? I think it was in Belgium. And. But what he did is he took a dog, a sick dog, and he. And he emptied it almost of all of its blood, and he replaced all of it with just keen tone. And the dog lived happily. [02:10:55] Speaker E: Holy smokes. Yeah, that's supposed to be impossible. [02:10:59] Speaker B: It's supposed to be impossible. It is. I mean, and so, so, and this is, this is gonna be controversial, what I'm about to say, the entire idea that. Let's just say I don't know what blood type you are, but let's just say you're type A. That the only form of blood that you can take in is type A. When it's completely untrue, you literally would only need to take Quintonin because that is the basis of all blood. It doesn't matter what type of blood type you are. [02:11:33] Speaker E: Wow. [02:11:34] Speaker B: Yeah. That's how manufactured the medical industry is driven, not, not driven not to liberate people, but to make sure they make profit on you, off of you. [02:11:53] Speaker E: Yeah. Wow. [02:11:55] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:11:56] Speaker E: So if you're able to keep your body in a state of the internal terrain in a good state, then the odds of you being sick are a few to none. [02:12:07] Speaker B: Few to none. It absolutely is completely true because, you know, they've done enough studies. You know, that's, that's, that is, that's a problem with. I was saying earlier is our system is based on what they call double placebo studies and triple this and triple that. And you know that their science is the almighty. Well, you know, to me, my measuring stick is nature. And when you look at nature and 4.6 billion billion years of evolution. Billion, not million. 4.6 billion years of evolution. Gotta ask yourself one question. Did the nature make any mistakes to God make any mistakes during that evolution? Probably not. [02:13:02] Speaker E: Certainly had enough time to straighten it out if he did. Right. [02:13:06] Speaker B: Right. And so again, that's why I keep bringing up earlier statements that, you know, we, we're literally the only species that are doing certain things. But yeah, we're the sickest on the. [02:13:21] Speaker E: Planet and we're supposed to be the. [02:13:23] Speaker B: Smartest and we're supposed to be at the top of that evolutionary biology and, and yes, we're supposed to be the smartest. And, and I just don't understand it. [02:13:38] Speaker E: Oh, well, I can give you a little bit of a clue. It's called, it's called greed. [02:13:43] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean, that's definitely a big part of it. And, and that's a big part of health care today. When you look at health care today, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's not helping you, but it, the driver, the driver isn't there to liberate you, it's there to make money off you. [02:14:04] Speaker E: Exactly. [02:14:05] Speaker B: While you're sick and while you're, while you're about to disinc incarnate. [02:14:09] Speaker E: You know, that's the sad part. And I can't help but wonder how many of the corporations go, oh, well, you know what? This food has got all this toxic stuff in it and the pharmaceuticals are going, yeah, yeah, yeah, keep putting it in there. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's good. Good. [02:14:22] Speaker B: Oh, I mean, I mean. Oh, they absolutely are. I mean, all you have to do is look at the major shareholders of food and the major shareholders of the pharmaceutical companies. These, there are other corporations, but they're, they're, they're, they're basically patting each other on the back. Yep. And, and, and the, the average person is just caught in the middle of it. And then, and unfortunately. And this is the thing. And, and I don't. Listen, I'm by no means a scholar saying that the medical industry has no place in our world. You know, when it comes to like, you know, I take a lot of risk on my own body and if I fell off a cliff or something, you know, patch me back up. But then as you said earlier, I'll take it from there. Yeah. And, and, and that's what the medical industry is really good for. It's really set up for emergency and trauma. It's not set up for longevity. [02:15:20] Speaker E: Yeah. [02:15:20] Speaker B: It just isn't. And people have to understand that. [02:15:23] Speaker E: A couple of doctors have made videos about how they would never go to a hospital if they were sick. That's the last place in the world. Now, if I broke an arm, if I needed surgery, that's a different story. But I'm not going to go there because I got the flu or I don't feel well, I got a stomachache. I'm not going there for that. I'm staying away from. Because, well, this is not healthcare. [02:15:44] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean, this is the thing. And, and, and this statement I'm about to say is going to kind of like, what? And, and that is this. No matter how much your cells or your bacteria evolve into in the most opportunistic state, it has the ability to devolve back down into its most primitive state. Okay. So what it's looking for ultimately is its P's and Q. So no matter how much it evolves into an oxygen opportunistic state, no matter where it is, guess what? The original underlying genome is always present. It's just looking for the proper quantum fields to actually express itself. [02:16:35] Speaker E: Wow. [02:16:37] Speaker B: Yeah. And the only way you deliver the proper quantum fields is delivering it in its whole form, not its single form. [02:16:47] Speaker E: Yeah. [02:16:48] Speaker B: Okay. And that goes across the board with all vitamins and especially, of course, pharmaceuticals. I mean, when you look at pharmaceuticals, I mean, you know, let's take a common substance, salicylic acid, which was from white willow. So white Willow has about 1200 compounds in it that make up the white willow. But, you know, they decided salicylic acid, and it just made common acid aspirin. Well, who owns that? Bear? Aspirin owns that. It's. It's the patent on it. So. But every time you deliver that, what McLaren always said, every time you deliver a single field, you're actually creating more havoc than good. [02:17:27] Speaker E: That's. [02:17:28] Speaker B: Your body doesn't work in single fields. It works as a whole unit. [02:17:32] Speaker E: Something. Someone who had to have heart surgery, they told me I had to take aspirin. Come to find out that taking aspirin will eat up your stomach. [02:17:41] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:17:42] Speaker E: You know, and it goes back to what you're saying, because it's been singular, that one component has been taken out, and it's not a whole. It actually is. Is detrimental. Instead of, you know, instead of helping, it's just tearing your body down. [02:18:01] Speaker B: Yeah. You know, science, there's. There's. Again, it doesn't mean that the current science doesn't have validity. What. But I will go as far as to saying when it comes to biology, the platform or reductionism doesn't work in biology. It works in Silicon Valley, and it works in other materialistic type industries, but it doesn't work in biology. That's just not how the system works. [02:18:28] Speaker E: Yeah. [02:18:28] Speaker B: You know, and. And they, they definitely have created standards, like, just to say, how did, how did they come up? And you even questioned it yourself earlier in the conversation, and that was like, how did you come up with the numbers of a standard number based on labs that. My blood test is supposed to be this, and, you know, my level is supposed to be this. Who came up with that? [02:18:49] Speaker E: I have. [02:18:51] Speaker B: Because if it was the fda, I don't want anything to do with it. [02:18:55] Speaker E: Yeah. One of my ongoing arguments is I mentioned earlier I had to have brain surgery many years back. The surgery was on my pituitary gland. Pituitary gland is the master gland, rest of the body. So I've been going through the hormonal war for quite some time. So when I have my blood taken and they tell me, oh, well, you're. Everything's within normal range, I go, what is normal? Why do you say it's normal? Because what's. What might be normal for a hundred other men may not be normal. For me, and this is my argument with them, because there are times when I can tell my hormones are going out of whack. You know, they go up and down, up and down because of what's happened in the past. Now, it hasn't been as bad as I've gotten older. It's kind of smooth itself out. But there are times I can tell things aren't, you know, they're not the way they should be. And then I go get a blood test. Oh, everything's within normal range, right? [02:19:44] Speaker B: Yeah. Well, I mean, you know, I've heard this many times. People come in and they say, you know, I just got a blood test. The doctor tells me that everything looks normal. And I look at them and I said, well, how do you feel? And they say, I still feel like shit. They didn't give me an answer. [02:20:04] Speaker E: The answer is, it's all normal or, oh, you need. Here's a pill. This will help you feel better. [02:20:11] Speaker B: Oh, that's right. That's right. It's. Let's call it. It's normal to be sick all the time. Yeah, that's it. [02:20:17] Speaker E: It's horrible. What a shame that people have to go through that and live their life like that. [02:20:24] Speaker B: Yeah. So one of the other. Other scientists I really. I want to bring up because his quote. When I read this quote, isn't it just like. Just like. His name is Alexis Carroll, won a Nobel Prize in 1912. And the quote is this. The cell is immortal. It is merely the fluid that degenerates. Renew this fluid at intervals, give the cells what they require for nutrition, and as far as we go on, the pulsation of life will go on forever. [02:21:05] Speaker E: Wow. Yeah. [02:21:08] Speaker B: And I've lived off that and have tailored my. And not. Not just my own personal life, but. But helping others as well, based on that. [02:21:21] Speaker E: Wow. Yeah. [02:21:23] Speaker B: Another quote I love is Isaac Newton, and it's a simple quote. The field, meaning the quantum field. The field is a sole governing agency of the particle. The particle, meaning matter, is the carrier of the field. The field is meaning the energy field, or what Lakowski called the oscillation of a cell is what cells are looking for, meaning the quantum field. So when I go. You go back to our story at the very beginning. It's like we miss reductionistic science, missed the part of the presence of God, the presence of spirit, and unforeseen forces. You know, and today, I think more than ever, you know, I think the human soul needs a little soul. [02:22:21] Speaker E: Especially with everything we're going through. I can't Help it. Believe that we're going through a tremendous spiritual war right now as all of this is going down. Oh, I need all the help we can get. And so the. The better that you feel physically. I'm sure that. The better that. I'm trying to make it make sense in my mind before I say it. The better that you feel physically, the better that. The more I can't think of the right word. The better that. The better chances that you have of being spiritually healthy as well. Because if you're sick physically, you don't have. You don't think about that part. [02:23:00] Speaker B: No, no. If you're. If you're that sick. And I've worked with many people over the years, and their biggest concern is trying to get out of sickness and if they're really committed to it. You know, there are some people. I mean, God bless them, but there are some people that just honestly. And I'm sure you just accept them. They just accept her or they just don't care? [02:23:25] Speaker E: Yeah, they accept it. Oh, well, A friend of mine's mom had developed cancer. Smoker. She'd smoke quite some for quite a few years and developed cancer. And they had convinced her to stop smoking. So she stopped smoking for maybe a couple of months, and then she started smoking again. And I said. I said to them, does she understand what's going on, that she's literally killing herself? And they said, she doesn't care anymore. She just wants to keep smoking. So there are people that fall into that category. And it's sad because when you have the knowledge that there's a better way, a much better way, but they don't want to. For whatever reason, they don't want to see it, Cognitive dissonance, whatever you want to call it, they just want to continue in what they're doing. Yeah. Yeah. [02:24:18] Speaker B: There's a. In a saying, and I. I'm not exactly sure who said this. I said that. That the saying is mathematics is a universal language, while music, God's mood. So translation, what that simply means is that physical structures are something that can be calculated. A solid DNA, a DNA strands. It's all been very well mapped out already. But what ties all that together is vibration, energy. That's where the music comes in. Yeah. Yeah. So what. What. One of the things I really want your listeners to get out of this is that the key to longevity is the type of quantum field that you are delivering in your internal terrain, to your internal terrain, via through your liquid choices, via through your food choices, via through your emotional habits. Via, through addressing both physical and emotional trauma. Because trauma is the most damaging to the internal terrain. And what does that look like? So if you had a trauma, remember Mitsu Moto was able to prove that water holds memory. So if we know that water holds memory and you get a physical trauma or emotional trauma, that means that quantum field or that energy resides in you. Then because of that trauma, then we create beliefs around that trauma. So that what it does, it just keeps repetuating itself, recirculating itself within the system cycle. [02:26:05] Speaker E: Like a vicious cycle. [02:26:06] Speaker B: Yep, exactly. And, and, and, and this is the crazy part. Even if you didn't want to really do that, be go through the work of trauma, because I have a whole another spin on psychology. But even if you didn't want to do that, but you actually went through a primordial solution reboot. Guess what? You don't get to hide all that anymore because it will address it and it will come up. Why? Because I've already seen it in multiple people. Conventional wisdom will completely dismiss that statement. I just told you. [02:26:52] Speaker E: The physical body can. Who? I don't remember. Who was I? Greg Braden, maybe. They, they did a documentary about the physical. They. People think that your memory is in your brain. Your memory is not just in your brain. Your memory's in your body. And the way they proved that was when somebody gets. Somebody loses an arm or something and they sew somebody else's heart or something like that. And they also get a lot of the different habits that that person had. So if somebody had heart replacement and the replacement heart, that person like lemonade or something. All of a sudden this person likes lemonade, you know? [02:27:30] Speaker B: Right. [02:27:32] Speaker E: Yeah, it's, it's in, it's in the physical part. You're right. [02:27:35] Speaker B: Yeah, it is. It's a cellular memory. It's not just the brain. The brain is really the one that helps you to solve the problem. The real answer to how you move forward and advance forward is really comes from the heart. And that's part of biology. [02:28:00] Speaker E: I agree. [02:28:01] Speaker B: It's not just an intellectual thing, but our entire system is based on disconnecting you from your heart and into over intellectualizing everything. I mean, if you look at the school system, it's pretty damn simple. At public schools, they just teach you how to memorize things. That's it. You're not really learning anything. You know. [02:28:23] Speaker E: I've watched it change since the time that I went to school. And it's so different, so completely different at this point. And it's about inserting belief Systems as well. It's not about trying to teach people, children, how to, how to think. It's. It's teaching them what to think. And that's the sad part. [02:28:47] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean, from day one, that's really the sad part too. They get you to believe that it's this way and there's nothing in between. I mean, anytime you like, even for myself to this day, anytime I challenge conventional wisdom or conventional science, I'm immediately dismissed. Immediately. [02:29:10] Speaker E: You're a conspiracy theorist. [02:29:12] Speaker B: I love that I'm a conspiracy theorist. At least I know I'm not a conformist. [02:29:17] Speaker E: Yeah, yeah. Well that, you know, that whole term came in from, started with the JFK thing because people questioned what they saw and all those are conspiracy theorists. It was actually to discredit people so that whatever they said would sound like, oh, and he says a wacko. Let him say whatever he wants. It doesn't matter. Yeah. There's no credible, credible evidence there. It's all conspiracy. Yeah. And, and having experienced 911 is what really woke me up. Prior to 911 I didn't want to talk about politics, I don't want to talk about any of this stuff. I just wanted to live my life quietly in peace. But 911 started a fire in me. I, I believe it was God given fire would not go out. And, and the more questions I asked, the more instead of getting answers, the more questions. So I knew something was wrong early on. And then throughout reading and researching and some of the stuff I ran across, it truly, truly are evil people in this world far beyond any of the horror flicks that you can watch. Far beyond that. Oh yeah, the horror flicks are just that, that's just a flick and it's all fake. These people are real and what they present and the evil that they have is truly evil is really real. And it's just one of those things where you wake up to it and you go, holy smokes. And it's not just here or there, it's. It's like we're surrounded by this, the sickness. These people want greed, they want power, they want to be able to do these things. And in the process, we're the ones who, if we're, if we're not knowledgeable and we're not paying attention, we're the ones who end up paying the price for it all. [02:31:01] Speaker B: There was a, during that time there's a quote I ran across during the 911 and it's, it's actually pretty applicable to, to the event and it's, and it's. Quote by Mark Twain, and the quote is, it's easier to fool people than to convince them they've been fool. [02:31:25] Speaker E: And that's true. That's true. I. I remember when I first started asking questions and people were telling me, you're just wasting your time. You know, this is. The government's got it all covered. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I knew that wasn't right, because the more that I asked questions, instead of getting answers, I just got more questions. How did the buildings come down so quickly? [02:31:50] Speaker B: Well, more importantly, how did they come down in their own footprint? [02:31:54] Speaker E: Let's talk about how did the aircraft disappear into the building like that? What was it? I believe there were no aircraft. If anybody saw anything, probably saw holograms. But, you know, I've done several shows about it. It was just to give you an example. What? Evil. Really? Just an example of evil. So if I'm right, what was happening that day is that the media was in coercion with the government and they were showing a live picture with CGI implemented through them for the. Probably the first time I'd ever tried it, but with CGI implemented through a live picture so that you're seeing a live picture of the building and then it blows up as an aircraft. What seems to be an aircraft approach to building, when in fact what I believe it was is cgi. And if anything was seen, that had to be a hologram. The way the aircraft disappeared in the building is physically impossible. There's no way in the world that the aircraft could fit it. The aircraft was almost like a hot knife and the building was like softened butter. It's just impossible. It was reinforced concrete with reinforced steel, and the aircraft is made out of aluminum. Nothing came back out. Out. Everything went in and nothing. That's physically impossible. Something had to come back out, but nothing. Then there's more questions and more questions. But, you know. [02:33:17] Speaker B: Well, yeah, but I mean, even added all that. Like, they didn't find one airplane part. [02:33:24] Speaker E: Yeah. [02:33:25] Speaker B: But they managed to find the passport of one of the hijackers. I don't know how they did that. [02:33:30] Speaker E: To read it too. Isn't that amazing? Here we have two buildings, 110 floor. Floors 100. The other completely disappear. But, hey, we got the passport, you guys. [02:33:38] Speaker B: Yeah, right, right. [02:33:40] Speaker E: And then you have Building seven for. A lot of people don't realize that three buildings came down in the New York Trade center that day. Yeah. Building the two. The two main buildings. And then Building seven and Building six, which someone. Hardly anybody talks about. Building six. Looks like somebody took a drill bit, a giant drill bit, and drilled a hole in the middle of the building. [02:33:59] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, there's. There is a lot of things at play that day. And I was. [02:34:08] Speaker E: That's what started my journey down this research. [02:34:11] Speaker B: Good for you. Good for you. [02:34:13] Speaker E: Because it just. It was a fire that would not. I kept saying, God, something's not right. I don't know. I don't like this feeling. I want it to go away. And it wouldn't go away. I kept being driven more and more. And it was in February. I don't remember the date, but it was in February. And I know it's around midnight because my son had come home from bowling. It was a Saturday night. He found me at my computer crying uncontrollably. And he tried to console me. He thought maybe one of the siblings died or mom died or, you know, something really bad. What I had just found out is the war that I served in was all based on a lie. We killed people for lying. There's a thousands of people we killed for. Like, I. I had the hardest time coming to terms with that. Yeah. [02:34:56] Speaker B: Yeah. Tell me what your thought was. As our nation went through this whole thing with COVID. [02:35:08] Speaker E: From the very beginning, I didn't believe any of it. I. I thought it was a litmus test to see if they could get people to cooperate. I remember reading many, many years before, long before the 911 thing. I remember reading a documentary somewhere around the end, or during one of the world wars or something, and they told people they had to turn in their gold. You have to turn your gold in. And they paid him pennies on the dollar of the value of the gold. And I remember thinking to myself, well, that'll never happen again. You can forget that. We're a lot smarter today. And then Covid came along. You just proved me wrong. So many people fell for that nonsense. It was. It was. It was. It was an attack on the people. There's no other way to describe it. [02:35:52] Speaker B: So you're. You're. You're of the belief it was essentially a coordinate. [02:35:59] Speaker E: Worldwide. Worldwide. Not just here in the United States. Worldwide. Yeah. And. And the. The vaccine, as they called it, on top of that, that was a bioweapon. They had to change the definition of vaccine in order for this to be called a vaccine. Prior to that, if you took a vaccine, it was to prevent you from getting whatever it was, and it was to prevent you from spreading whatever it was. Now, you take this thing, whatever they call it now, and it doesn't stop you from getting. It doesn't stop you from spreading it. What it does is it is. Has created, I don't remember how many hundred percent increase in myocarditis, which is an inflammation of the heart due to these things they call spike proteins that are in, in the shoes. Yeah. [02:36:46] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:36:47] Speaker E: I mean, and that's tearing up the internal terrain. That's totally tearing up the internal terrain. [02:36:55] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean, many people are still so kind of want to keep their head in the sand and. But I've taken the time to listen to a lot of the congressional hearings about all of this and what they really uncovered and, and unfortunately, many people in the state that I reside in still want to believe the lie. [02:37:21] Speaker E: Isn't it amazing? Put on a white coat, have a set of stethoscopes around your neck. You know, maybe some kind of something on your head, make you look like a doctor and stand before people and say this is good for you, even though it's poison and we know that's going to kill people. Over a million people have already died from, from, directly from the shot. And I'm probably getting all kinds of trouble because we're on YouTube. But yes, million. You go to, what's it called, the reporting agency that they have. You go to the reporting. I can't remember the name of it right now, but there's a reporting agency where people can go and list adverse events. [02:38:00] Speaker B: The cdc. [02:38:01] Speaker E: No, no, this is. Oh shoot. It's something called adverse events. I'll look it up in a second. But yeah, and, and people by giving a sworn testimony that they were damaged somehow. And it's over a million now that have died directly from this, the shot. And hundreds of thousands have been damaged. Hundreds of thousands. This, this thing should have never gone out, period. They should have never been introduced. They knew doggone, they stopped the tests. When all the animals they were testing died, they figured, oh well, that's enough of that. Let's just go to humans. What's it called? Bears? I think it's called. V A E R S, I think is what I'm talking about. Yeah, it's called vaers Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. If you go there and you know where to look, you can find all kinds of information regarding adverse events that were caused by different, what they call, vaccines. [02:39:17] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean that, that's, you know, that's a whole different conversation. But that's, but it falls in line. [02:39:26] Speaker E: With what you're saying with regard to the internal terrain. You're, you're disturbing and destroying your internal terrain. And in the process of that, you're allowing all kinds of other opportunistic things to happen. And one of the most common is the swelling of the heart, which they call myocarditis. [02:39:46] Speaker B: Yeah. You know, I. I recently had a conversation with one of the gals, a nurse where I work with, and she was really candid with. She was in the thick of all of it, and she was pretty candid about telling me what she really saw during that time. And I'll tell you, what I heard was. Was a complete horror story. [02:40:15] Speaker E: It is. Hospitals were being paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to kill people. [02:40:22] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean, she would say people would line up to. To get in. And the protocol was essentially those ventilators. You stick the ventilator in and within an hour or so the people would be dead. Yeah, the ventilator wasn't. Wasn't the issue. And people's inability to breathe, you can't just shove people. You can't just shove oxygen and expect the body to start breathing. [02:40:46] Speaker E: They were given a remdesivol protocol. Many of the hospitals were told to introduce this remdesivol, which is a very highly toxic medication, if you want to call it that, in the tests for this, this drug, over 50% of the. The trial they had deaths, and yet they were introducing this remdesivol. What was happening is the remdesivol was causing the lungs to accumulate with mucus, and then they're putting them on a respirator and just forcing mucus into whatever areas that you could still breathe through the lungs could handle. Now you're forcing. Just basically drowning the person. Yeah, it's horrible, it's evil. But this is what we have to be aware of. This is one of the things that people are not. You know, they keep us busy with worrying about how are we going to make enough money this month. You know, growing up, when I was growing up, if you were married, you had the opportunity to. If one of you wanted to work outside the house, you could. The other one could work inside the home and make it a home. And my parents decided along that line. One of them worked in the home, one of them worked out. We had a nice home, we had a car. We go on vacation. You can't. It takes two people now, and you're lucky if you can meet the bills at this point with two of you working. This is the way that they put the stress, you know, on us. And, you know, as you pointed out earlier, one of the one of the things of ruining your internal terrain is stress. [02:42:19] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:42:19] Speaker E: So the stress factor high. And keeping the stress factor high keeps people sick. They get to sell more pharmaceuticals. And then anybody like you who comes along and says, well, wait a minute, there's a better way, he's a conspiracy theorist. Don't listen to him. He's crazy. You know, yeah, this is what we put up with. [02:42:38] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, it's, it's. Stress plays a major role overall and people don't get that. And you know, and on top of that, the system is set up to not just disconnect you from self, but it's also set up to pull you away from nature. All your answers really, is really understanding how to reintegrate nature. So for instance, the scientific way that modern day science has tried to come up with the answer for, for sun Laka Son is, oh, just sit in a red light bed. Okay, so you're telling me you need to go spend a thousand dollars for a red light bed. Take the time to sit in a red light bed instead of actually just getting your ass out of bed and walk, go walk out in the sun. [02:43:37] Speaker E: Yours is crazy. [02:43:38] Speaker B: This is all silly. This is how silly the system is and everybody believes it. And then you have a Joe Schmo out there from, from, you know, the, the Ben Greenfields and to, to whoever else out there that are pushing that this is better for you than just going out and getting sun or the. [02:43:56] Speaker E: The sun is dangerous. Don't go out in the sun. You got to put sunscreen on, which is more dangerous than the sun itself. The sunscreen's got so much garbage in it. It doesn't harm you than anything else. Oh, but you got to have, you know, you gotta have sunscreen. Favorite things was to go fishing. And I had the opportunity to buy a boat and a van. I got a package deal for a really sweet price. So I went fishing quite a bit. I was a firm believer if you're gonna have a boat, you got to use it, because if you don't, it just starts to fall apart. So I was, When I tell you I'd go fishing at least one time a week in my boat, and I'm not exaggerating, and I would go, no sunscreen. I'd come back, you know, sometimes sunburned a little bit. Never had skin cancer, never had to worry about it. Just one of those things. Now I have, I do have some adopted kids, and one of them, I call her the white meat girl, if she's out in the sun for 15 minutes, she's burned. Okay, so my question's a little different, but what I'm saying is all the times that I went out there and I don't know how many hours a day, never had a cancer of the skin. Never had a problem with, with any of that. And it's because the sun is good for you. It's supposed to. God figured all that out before we came around this insanity, you know, oh, you got to be careful. The sun. Oh, you got to put on. And you know, in some places, I think it's Hawaii. And they're working on it down in the Keys in Florida, where if you put sunscreen on, it'll watch it coming in the water because it's killing off the coral reefs, the chemicals that are being released. [02:45:32] Speaker B: Oh, sure, yeah. [02:45:33] Speaker E: So imagine if they're killing off the coral reefs, what are they doing to your body? Yeah, not good. Not good. [02:45:41] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:45:42] Speaker E: And your skin is the largest organ organ that we have, right? [02:45:46] Speaker B: Yeah, it is one of the largest organs. I mean, it definitely not just what you put on top of it, but also from an eliminatory standpoint as well, because if all the other avenues of exiting, meaning either through the, the colon or through urine or through the lymphatic ducts and kidneys and liver, if it, if it can't get it through those internal channels, it will push it literally out of the skin. So whatever that is. You know, I actually wanted to make a comment. It was. And this is how silly, how silly it is that to me, it just kind of people falling for this. And that was when we went through this thing, this whole Covid, and they convinced you that, they convinced you that doing or receiving this, this so called shot, a covet shot, that it would prevent you from getting Covid. But, but, but yet everybody that got it, that I know of also. [02:46:55] Speaker E: I. [02:46:55] Speaker B: Would literally just tell them, how does that make sense to you? And you've had covet how many times now? This is what I did when I, when I was, when I, when Covid hit, I was running around with, with a nebulizer and keen tone isotonic so they could breathe. [02:47:15] Speaker E: Yeah. [02:47:15] Speaker B: And I would walk into a home with 8 or 8, 8, 10, 12 people with mask on. I would walk in there, no mask on, have everybody breathe Quinto. And it would give them relief. I'd walk out. I never once during COVID got Covid, not once. And I would walk and then a house with. Full of people with COVID I had. [02:47:40] Speaker E: A personal friend of mine, we were conversing on Facebook. They put up a post about. There was this thing about real popular, but, oh, I got my shot. No, I'm responsible. I'm not going to spread it. Blah, blah, blah, blah. So all I did is I just asked a question, and the question was, what's the purpose of getting this? It doesn't stop you from getting it, and it doesn't stop you from spreading it. Well, this person wrote back to me and said, basically, they hope I get it and die. Okay. About six months later, they're no longer with us. They're gone. They took the original, then they took the booster and another booster and they're gone. I don't know what the reason behind why they're no longer here. I just know that they're no longer here. They didn't bother to tell people that the average recovery rate for this godforsaken disease that was killing all these people, the average recovery rate was well over 98%. So that meant over nine out of 10 people were able to recover without medical intervention. Why do we need this? You know? [02:48:44] Speaker B: Yeah, the. [02:48:46] Speaker E: The ability to have critical thinking and common sense was thrown out the window in exchange for fear. And out of the fear came panic, and out of the panic came poor decisions. And a lot of people are paying a price for it. And, yes, I do believe it was a biological attack from the beginning, as well as what was supposed to stop. It was a biological attack. We were getting attacked from two different angles. People trusted this. Trust the science. Trust the science. Don't question the science. And when they came out with hydrochloroquine or where they said ivermectin. Oh, ivermectin is a horse paste, and hydrochloroquine is dangerous. You'll die if you take. Come on. [02:49:28] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:49:28] Speaker E: How many people believe that? It's sad. Yeah. [02:49:32] Speaker B: Yeah. I mean it. Sitting back and watching that. That essentially the first year of lockdown was. Was really challenging for me. [02:49:42] Speaker E: And look what they did to us, Arnel. Look what they got away with. How many people's parents, grandparents and so forth, husbands and wives having been separated and put into a hospital and. No, you can't visit them and they pass away and you never get to say your final goodbyes. [02:49:59] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:50:04] Speaker E: For that. [02:50:06] Speaker B: Yeah. Yeah. I mean, and. And, you know, I just. I. I'm having a defense difficult time. Even though they've had plenty of Senate hearings about all of it and. And have proven that this was intentional. [02:50:23] Speaker E: They'Re still pushing it. [02:50:25] Speaker B: Yeah. My question is, is, is anyone gonna Pay for it. [02:50:30] Speaker E: That's what I'm waiting for. [02:50:32] Speaker B: I, I, I, I feel that the, the people as a, who have lost their will in a sense, to fight for the rights and fight and be okay in the uncomfortable. Most people are not comfortable in the uncomfortable. And when you look around the globe here and you see some of these upheavals and some of these riots and some of these protests, and many of them can be very peaceful. Yes, I agree that some of them get out of control. But for the most part, some of these protests, like let's just say for instance, this recent protest in Manila, I mean, that was just about the corrupt government. That's all it was. But it was a peaceful protest of millions of people. Right. And the thing is, is that I don't really feel many people have enough guts to, to really go out there and speak about really their right. Because what people forget is that the government works for you. You don't work for the government. [02:51:45] Speaker E: That's what's most promise. [02:51:47] Speaker B: Yeah. And, but the problem is that you don't, people don't do anything about it. They don't speak up anything about it. So therefore the government's just going to continue doing what they're going to do. [02:51:57] Speaker E: Your silence is considered consent. That's how they look at it. So if I use this analogy quite frequently on my shows, if you and I are standing alongside of each other and I say, I'm gonna kick you, and you don't say anything. You don't say, don't kick me. You don't say, you better not. You just keep, you were just standing there, all of a sudden, I kick you. Well, I told you I was gonna kick you. You didn't say anything. Your silence became my consent. That's how they look at it. So they'll tell us in many different ways. They'll tell us what they're going to do far before it happens. May not be right in your face. It may be encrypted in some way, but they will tell you. And if you don't speak up and say something, then whatever they do, they believe they're, they're justified in doing it because they told you they were going to do it ahead of time. We were told about 9 11, long before 911 happened. We were told about 9 11. A lot of the stuff that goes on these, these school shootings. How many of the school shootings had a, quote, drill before they had the school shooting? I'm guessing almost every one of them had some kind of a drill. Prior to the shooting. And then you have the shooting. So they're telling you what they're going to do. They just may not be in your face, hey, listen, by the way, we're going to kick you. You know, they'll do it in a different way, but they'll do it and they'll get the message across somehow. And then when they do perform whatever it is that they're performing, they're justified because, hey, silence is consent, right? So we must be able to speak out. We must be able to be in that uncomfortable zone. Like you were saying. I don't like being there, but I don't. I don't like thinking in the future that if something happens to my children and I could have said something that may have stopped that from happening, then I share in that guilt. I don't want to carry that guilt. [02:53:40] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. And I echo that. And the uncomfortable is what's going to make you grow, by the way. I don't know why many people seem to resist that. [02:53:57] Speaker E: And the willingness to just listen to somebody else's point of view, that's something that has been drastically reduced. We're not able to have discussions, like many years ago. If you're having a discussion with particular person and they don't like what you're saying, it just shut you down or they will literally walk away or curse you out. But the point is, the discussion doesn't continue. It stops. [02:54:23] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean, I have that all the time with medical doctors and scientists who have been indoctrinated into the ideals of conventional educational systems and their way of thinking, and they're just not open to. To hearing perspective from a different set of lenses. Yeah, and, and, and the big part of it, the main reason is, is because they were never taught that. They never were taught to be, in a sense, a critical thinker. They were taught to. This is the truth. So therefore, this is all you should be talking about. [02:55:00] Speaker E: Yeah, exactly. That's right. [02:55:03] Speaker B: Anything outside of that is as. Like the Flexor reports that it's just pseudoscience. [02:55:07] Speaker E: It's Rocco, it's conspiracy theorists, it's snake oil. You know, all of them, all the terms that they come up with. Anyway, we are winding down pretty quick, so I'd like to give you an opportunity for any final thoughts before we sign off for the evening. [02:55:22] Speaker B: Well, I. Excuse me, I, I hope that. That your listeners really could hear what it is I was really trying to convey here. And science has missed something in science, and that is really addressing these unforeseen forces and the unforeseen forces being the most essential in DNA expression. But how to get those unforeseen forces is so simple and science today has made it so complicated. So, you know, the examples of the food and the salt and these other things I give examples to even there's new things out there. Not necessarily new, but like 5,000 year old technology. Like this really unique sugar out of India. And that sugar is just. I've been playing around with it for a while and talk about quality versus quantity. And what I've been able to, to prove with that is it's just beyond my expectation. So. [02:56:39] Speaker E: It'S a sugar from where? From India. [02:56:42] Speaker B: It's a sugar out of India. And it's just, you know, combine it with, with some salt and the sugar and I tell you what, it, the performance that you get out of that, it will, it will run circles around Gatorade. [02:57:01] Speaker E: Wow. [02:57:02] Speaker B: Yeah. [02:57:03] Speaker E: Gatorade is control. [02:57:05] Speaker B: Yeah, right. But it's just beyond the expectation of what that, what that combination. Just those simple, simple, simple solutions is what I want to give people. Understanding that there are solutions. Nature does, and I was always provided it. It's just that the narrative has changed in a way where conventional wisdom thinks they, they know more. So. Yeah. I just wanted to say thank you. Thank you for the opportunity coming on. [02:57:36] Speaker E: Thank you for the education. I learned quite a bit and I appreciate it. I'm certain that there are people out there listening who learn quite a bit as well and be able to take this information and make their life better through it. I greatly appreciate it, my friend. [02:57:49] Speaker B: Thank you. [02:57:51] Speaker E: I wish you well. Thank you guys. Appreciate you watching and listening. God bless. [02:57:59] Speaker B: Thank you. [02:58:02] Speaker C: Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. Take the red pill. Take the blue pill. You take the red pill. And I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes. This is your last, last chance. This is your last chance. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your left chest. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill, the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. Take the red pill. [02:59:22] Speaker E: Take the pill. [02:59:22] Speaker C: Take the red pill. [02:59:23] Speaker E: Take the red pill. [02:59:24] Speaker C: You stay in wonderland. You stay in Wonderland, And I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes. Goats. Goats. [02:59:31] Speaker E: Go, go.

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