Alec Zeck: "You mentioned needing to maintain the health of the collagen in our fascial system. What would be some ways that we maintain the collagen health?"
Carrie Bennett: "Well, movement's one, for sure. If we're sedentary, we're going to lay down what's called basically cross-linked fascia. We're not going to lay down the nice collagen fibrils, the way I was talking about. So if we're sedentary we have to take movement breaks.
"I love red light therapy for the collagen. I think it is really great. But sunlight again, I've seen sunlight do amazing things to help support collagen.
"We do have to be hydrated. If we're dehydrated in there, they're not going to be conductive.
"And then just minimizing those toxins whenever possible.
"Getting myofascial release, if you feel like you need it. There's some great practitioners out there, but I love self-myofascial release, too.
Alec Zeck: "What do you do for that?"
Carrie Bennett: "I use softer. . . I know a lot of people who love like lacrosse balls and more dense foam rollers. But what I want people to realize is that the fascia is responsive to intensity. For example, if I anticipated someone was going to come at me with a punch, my fascia is going to anticipate that and it's going to kind of tense up a little. Whatever tool you use, you have to be able to soften around it."
Alec Zeck: "Gua sha?"
Carrie Bennett: "Yeah, sure. Gua sha is great. There are some just softer, RAD rollers make some softer balls that I like as well. I mean there's softer tools. Even a tennis ball, something that's softer. So it's like easing into it, easing and being gentle. And then taking the time to find spots in your body that feel energetically stuck, which to me feel kind of like, to me they feel a little zingy. Not nerve zingy; they just feel a little, 'Ooh, yeah.'"
Carrie Bennett with Alec Zeck @ 01:54:55%%01:56:37 (posted 2024-09-30)
Why would I get fat?
npub1jlgf...v44k
I am not a doctor. I do not give health or medical advice. Instead, I excerpt what others say.
Alec Zeck: "We haven't talked about fascia at all and I know that's another thing that you're super big on. […]"
Carrie Bennett: "Yeah, it's like our liquid crystalline matrix or I call it our connective tissue superhighway. […]
"I went to massage therapy school and it was there that I started physically interacting with other people's connective tissue through things like acupressure. What I began to realize is as I would feel the client's body and there would be certain knots in it. I would sink my thumb into a knot, […] let's say next to someone's shoulder blade, and you push the finger in until it reaches what almost feels like a rock, it's like solid glass there. Then if you wait long enough it starts to soften. As it softens you sink again to another layer and you feel that hard spot again soften, soften, soften.
"As the tissues would soften, sometimes, not every session, but sometimes I would get a flash of a memory, or I would feel physically nauseated or something like that, or like my body temperature would change drastically. At first I was just like, 'I'm going crazy.' But then I started to ask the clients, 'Well, um, were you ever in a car accident (or the things that were popping up)?' […] No one's been able to explain this to me, but it's always been just something that I had.
"As I started learning about water in our bodies and how we're this interconnected highway of water, basically. A vast majority of that water is around our connective tissue, our fascia. I started to realize water holds memory. I started to make this connection of, oh my gosh, as I'm changing the hydration level of a tissue by helping it to create or hold more water (we can talk about the physiology behind that), as I'm softening this tissue we're releasing stuck memories, interference fields.
[…]
"When fascia becomes dense and tight it's dehydrated. It's essentially taken the water out of it and it's kind of walled itself off. As you hold what's called compression into a point that's dense fascia, you're essentially just holding a spot for an extended period of time, typically at the two to five minute mark it starts to soften. What's happening at that moment in time is that fascia is producing hyaluronic acid. Hyaluronic acid is this molecule that can hold (I think it's like) 1,600 water molecules. It basically imbibes the tissue back with water. As you pull water into this tissue, it's not about forgetting the memory; you're allowing the trauma to move again. […] It comes into your physical body through the water and out through your field (at least this is what I've intuited).
[…]
"That's where again this idea that the water is forming this interconnected highway that can store memories. We want to kind of move that through by rehydrating the dense areas of fascia.
"That's also what I talked about earlier where it's like, OK, so then I can strike my skin with with infrared and it can funnel anywhere, or I can pull in earth's energy and it can go anywhere it needs to. The integrity of the fascia, specifically the collagen, the collagen is key here. The integrity of the fascia also dictates my ability to implode and distribute energy, whether it's from the field or whether it's from the earth or whether it's from sunlight. So my fascial system also needs to be intact in order for that system to be complete."
Carrie Bennett with Alec Zeck @ 01:44:00–01:46:59, 01:48:00–01:48:48 & 01:49:48–01:50:31 (posted 2024-09-30)
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Here's the point that people ask me all the time. Why am I so fucking pedal to the metal about this? 25,000 kids a month, Marty, are getting popped with this vaccine. Since Trump has been elected, three million doses have been given to children.
[…]
"You don't need them popping your kids with 72 jabs through the first six years of your life. Realize those kids have to get a three-, six- and nine-month COVID jab as part of the current schedule.
"As far as I'm concerned, Mary and I are the loudest two that are fucking furious about this. We're going straight to the point. We're not playing games here. This is to the death. People need to understand that this is the biggest issue facing MAHA now. It's not fucking Froot Loops. It's not red dye. It's not the metabolic disease. It's going to take you 50 years to die from fucking Froot Loops. It's going to take you 50 years to die from processed food.
"But the messenger RNA job can drop you like Damar Hamlin, can end your career like JJ Watt, can end your career like all the footballers who've dropped dead on a soccer field. It can happen like that [snaps fingers]. There's so many people that are injured. We're talking about the deaths. How about the people that are injured on X that we see all the time? They're not supposed to have a voice?"
[…]
Marty Bent: "The other thing is like COVID doesn't seem that bad anymore. Why do you need a vaccine against it? You hear people getting COVID it's like, 'I had a sore throat for a couple days.' It's like, is this something that necessitates a vaccine?"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "That's a common sense argument. But the thing is, there's no common sense about anything centralized medicine does around vaccines. That's the whole point. […]
"You want to hear bigger common sense thing? Kids never got sick from it, even when the shit show was going on. So why in the hell would you ever vaccinate a child to give them that risk? The risk benefit ratio is so upside down. It's clear that the incentives are driving the outcomes."
Dr. Jack Kruse with npub1guh5grefa7vkay4ps6udxg8lrqxg2kgr3qh9n4gduxut64nfxq0q9y6hjy @ 25:21–25:38, 27:07–28:27 & 46:32–47:25 (posted 2025-05-15)
Pain management, vitamin D
Dr. Jack Kruse: "I'll give you the example. When you had a failed fusion or a pseudoarthrosis in the lumbar spine, if you kept their vitamin D level high they wouldn't use oxycodone, OxyContin, Percocet. It made me realize that people had higher levels of melanin were more resistant to pain. I found out it was from α-, β- and ɣ-MSH from POMC. Then I realized about the story about β-endorphin. β-endorphin is another one of the cleaved chemicals. If β-endorphin levels are high they didn't need pain medicine.
"I pointed this out to one of my better pain specialists. Like this guy would never not tell me the truth. He said to me, 'Jack, I never knew there was a link in the literature between vitamin D levels and pain.' So I showed him about 30 papers. You know what he did? He turned around and took his worst offenders of using Suboxone past five years in his practice, he found that every single one of them had vitamin D levels below 30.
"Then he came up with the idea to begin to supplement. Like the ones that he couldn't get because somebody's already a drug addict, they're never going to go out in the sun, because most of them live at night with the TV on, you know, or are heavy metal guys. He put people on the supplementation and guess what? Turned out, the people that supplemented did pretty good.
"That was one of the things that got me over the threshold. Even certain people who have problems, I'm okay with using vitamin D supplementation. The big issue for me is that I don't think you can use this on a population basis. It has to be very specific for the problem you're dealing with. It requires you, the clinician, to understand truly what's going on.
"That's the reason why I don't recommend like the use of methylene blue or vitamin D pills to everybody across the board. I need to know a little bit more about your history in order to understand how it goes. Obviously, do I think there's less risk from using vitamin D than there is in using Suboxone? Obviously. That's a no-brainer. But if you can get somebody off like 80 to 120 of Suboxone down to say 20 or 30 mg of OxyContin over a period of six months, dude, that's a winner winner chicken dinner.
"It turns out the pain doctors really appreciate this because they're not making money off of people coming in for more drugs. They're actually creating fucking nightmares for the public because those are the people that eventually kill themselves. They're always afraid that they're going to be linked to these suicides through the prescriptions. When I pointed this out to him he's like, 'Dude, you may have just saved my practice. I had no idea that that link was there.'
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 01:34:45–01:37:37 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Denis Rancourt, PhD: "In fact, I would say that 99% of medical trials nowadays have to be false."
Ryan Cristian: "Wow."
Denis: "They're completely funded and controlled by the industry. They buy the scientists who write it for the journals. They buy the editors. They buy the journals. They control the trial at every step of the way. If the results are not going in the direction they want, they put an end to the trial, or they select some of the patients from the trial that they're going to study and let go the others. They manipulate these trials from A to Z, in every detail. They have complete legal control. The scientists who participate to recruit patients, they all have to sign contracts. The patients themselves have to sign contracts.
"This is complete propaganda. Medical trials have become complete propaganda to sell drugs. That's what they are. So that means that any time you see a paper about this stuff, even though it looks good and it sounds good and it's double-blinded and all of this, it's necessarily all garbage."
Ryan: "Interesting."
Denis: "I discovered a fantastic book that describes this in great detail recently. It's written by Peter Gøtzsche. It's called Deadly Medicines and Organized Crime. I highly recommend it. It's an amazing book."
Ryan: "I love the title. [laughs]"
Denis: "Yeah. It goes into great detail about the extent to which there is complete capture and control of the entire enterprise."
Denis Rancourt, PhD with Ryan Cristian @ 01:34:29–01:36:08 https://rumble.com/v63gjdn-denis-rancourt-interview-the-covid-19-illusion-biological-stress-induced-ba.html?start=5669
Diabetes, oxygen, fluoride, dielectric collapse
Dr. Jack Kruse: "The use of fluoridated toothpaste is equivalent to big pharma's loading up every freaking pill with fluoride. Dude, that's the single biggest problem that is so hidden from people. Think about what we just spent this whole podcast talking about. We're talking about ROS. We're talking about oxygen being the most biologic electronegative atom on the periodic table. What's more electronegative than oxygen? Fluoride. In other words, you don't make any ROS.
"For example, do I believe fluoridation is one of the things with blue light toxicity behind type 1 and type 2 diabetes? Yeah. You know why? Because type 1s and type 2s don't make any superoxide pulse. Well, if you don't make any superoxide pulse, what does that mean? Something is acting as a giant sump in the system to keep oxygen down. Guess what I think that is? Fluoride.
[...]
Doug Sandquist: "There's probably zero amount of fluoride that is acceptable probably, on those terms, on the biological level. . ."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Well, if you understand photoelectrically what fluoride does [...] If you accept that we are a system of semiconductors that basically collects light, and you understand that semiconductors move light throughout the system to do different things, fluoride basically is a dialectric collapse. In other words, it pulls all the electrons out and stops them from moving. What does that mean in the system that I just told you? It means it's the off switch for the entire system. A way for you to think about it: fluoride in a system built around semiconductors is equivalent to what cyanide does on the inner mitochondrial membrane. That's how I think about it."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 53:48–54:48 & 55:30–56:36 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Doug Sandquist: "I'm uncomfortable with the holistic dentistry world of amalgam removals and root canal re. . . I mean, I've had patients come to me with their physicians telling them to take out four teeth, because they have root canals and they have boli of infection. […] They read online that a root canal is a dead tooth. Well, based on our discussion of Leonora's work, if it's in there, there's still fluid flowing in there. If the body can actually get in there, if you get your environment right, the body will take care of the infection that's in this tubules. Because really, it's the dentinal tubules that are the problem."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Yeah, but you never hear that. These functional dentists got their ideas really from the Weston A. Price Foundation."
Doug Sandquist: "They did. Yeah."
[…]
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Think about Ketac cement that I remember learning about in dental school. What the hell is it made of? Glass ionomer cement. It's loaded with fluoride."
Doug Sandquist: "Right. That's actually the selling point."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Yeah, how many amalgams is that sitting under? You got the Weston A. Price idiots out there blaming the amalgam and not realizing that just about every big amalgam with more than two surfaces probably has Ketac cement underneath it."
[…]
If you're the dentist that says, 'But I will tell you tooths three, six, nine out of all of them, those need to be done because based on your history, you have Ketac cement underneath those, and I want to remove the fluoride.' OK bro, then now we're cooking with gas. […] Dude, if you're that dentist then I'm OK with you. Because if you remove that fluoride, you may have figured out why the tooth has got a problem. […]
"I looked at the guys that have made a career out of taking amalgams out of people's mouths just the way I look at plastic surgeons that do ___ jobs and tit jobs. They're not really doctors; they're basically vanity experts. They're pushing an agenda that is popular with the public but actually really hurts them. Like plastic surgery fundamentally, and I'm talking aesthetic plastic surgery, is absolutely one of the most useless things that American women and American men have adopted. I feel the same way about removing amalgams. I don't think there's any difference between those."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 40:26–41:21, 54:50–55:19, 01:08:26–01:10:44 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Dr. Jack Kruse: "I said is it possible that if I do bone biopsies on all these kyphoplasties that I would find out that really osteoporosis, the most common cause in the United States is probably fluoride in the bone. So when I sent it off I started sending it off for fluoride. Guess what I found? About 90% of people with the worst cases of osteoporosis, those are the people you're going to do a kyphoplasties in, their bones were loaded with fluoride.
"Then I started talking to my orthopedic colleagues. I said, 'Have you guys ever thought about people who get fractures that shouldn't have fractures?' Like the most common one that I thought about with this kyphoplasties thing was the issue with Colles fractures. Everybody knows Colles fractures are linked to old ladies with osteoprosis. So I got a couple of the orthopedic guys saying, 'You know, that's kind of an interesting thing.'
"The reason I'm bring this up to you now as a dentist, I've had this sneaking suspicion that all of the osteoporosis meds I've looked into it they all have fluoride in it. So you know that they get that crazy change like we see classically in Fosamax with the jaw. I actually have always wondered if those problems were always related to the drug and not the original disease, like it was a fluoride problem.
"Now I was already out of the oral surgery game at that time but I talked to several of my oral surgery friends. […] This guy, ironically, he trained with me at LSU. He has an MD and a DMD, like I do. When I pointed it out to him he goes, 'You know, it's a really interesting idea that you're presenting here, that actually it's a complication of the pills that big pharma is selling to primary care doctors for osteoporosis.' I actually think that people will find out that it is, and it's very easy to prove, because we have so many people on these meds.
"And then when you think about how these meds also affect the gut barrier. A lot of the gastroenterologists I've talked to I said, 'Have you seen problems with gut barrier problems with people on the osteoporosis meds?' And they're like 'Yeah, it's like it's amazing how bad some of these people's gastrointestinal systems are.'
"But nobody's making the link. Remember, how are you taking these pills? You're taking these pills through the GI system. It's got to get through a pH of one or two at the gut. I said, 'Do you know what happens with fluorine when you put it in a pH like that? It actually becomes even a bigger problem.'
"Most people I think know when you heat fluoride up, they know it from Teflon pots that it also becomes a big problem. Then you're scraping that shit off and then it's a bigger issue. But everybody keeps blaming the pots. I think the bigger problem is actually the drugs."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 01:00:58–01:04:26 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Doug Sandquist: "Implants in my world. People are just dumping their teeth and just having implants put in. I mean it's like the number one thing people are doing today. I feel like in another 10 to 20 years we're going to have an epidemic of all of these falling out. […] I've seen them fall out."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Well, I think some of them will, but I think that has probably more to do with the osteoporosis that's induced by them. Do I think living in a blue-lit, non-native EMF world is going to create other problems with free titanium teeming through your system? Yeah, because I don't think people understand what transition metals do, how the d-shell electrons work in a semiconductive system, what the potential pitfalls are. […] This story with implants is very similar to the story with fluoride. Fluoride is a net stealer of electrons. What titanium is doing is putting a ton of electromagnetic sensitive d-shell electrons into a system. And it's putting it in a way that the system is not used to getting them. That is going to create another effect.
"Do I believe that we're beginning to already see some of that? Yeah, I think many of the head and neck autoimmune conditions are linked to the use of implants. Like anybody who's got Hashimoto's, I tell them stay away from an implant. Anybody who's got Sjögren's disease or calcinosis from scleroderma, I tell them stay away. I've actually seen somebody die, and I felt that the initial problem was implants that were placed in the lower jaw."
Doug Sandquist: "That also would be the same with like orthopedic implants too, like shoulders, hips, knees and even spine."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Yeah, the ortho guys though right now in the position where they've got 50 years of their patients living in electromagnetic environment and their joints are falling apart. Why? Because none of the people know the fundamentals of what I told you about electromagnetism and how it affects those two copper atoms between calcium and apatite in bone that Becker found.
[…]
Dr. Jack Kruse: "I'm okay with you doing the surgeries, but I want you to tell people to go out in the sun. In other words, if you want to make that knee lasts forever and them have less complications, tell them still to do the right things. But they're not doing that. […]"
Doug Sandquist: "[…] When I tell people the prescription, I mean it's like so simple and yet it's so hard."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "[…] I just try to point out people the low-hanging fruit. People don't realize how conditioned we are to be inside now. I tell people most of our big problems in chronic disease will go away if I can just get you to restart outside and do things.
"Like everybody always ask me on a podcast, what's the number one thing that you should tell everybody to do? I say see the sunrise. That's like Pareto's principle. You get that right and it's really almost hard to fuck things up from there. You can still do it, like if you've already got, say, a mitochondrial disease like an autoimmune condition or cancer, yeah you got to do more. But that's the way to start. I think when you kind of understand this I don't think it's that hard to fix.
"Like I said to you before, there's enough people post-covid that are going to get this information. They're gonna say yeah I'm just gonna do what Jack's saying because it doesn't cost me anything to go outside, so I can still have my knee, I can still have my hip. […] And if I can make them better then I can extend the longevity of the surgery that I had done."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 01:38:20–01:37:37 & 01:42:32–01:44:35 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Dr. Jack Kruse: "I think before I would let anybody do anything on me, that includes a machine, a device in the mouth, any type of surgery around the oral cavity for sleep apnea, you have a duty as the patient to understand that anything they do is just like a surgery and it can lead to irreversible changes.
"So what am I saying to you very clearly as a dentist? Just the act of putting a retainer on the teeth, or palate expansion, or a plastic retainer, is no different than when a surgeon goes in and does surgery, say for orthognathics, or say a UPPP. And that's not how people look at it. When I say this and people think this is hyperbolic, then I immediately turn around and say, 'OK, how come when Medicare pays for people with central sleep apnea who have apnea machines, they get cancer more frequently? Explain.' No one can. Everybody knows that the link is there. It's in the literature. But no one can explain.
"It turns out sleep apnea is the body trying to protect itself from unabated ROS. Why? Unabated ROS leads to cancer. What abates the ROS or the RNS signal? Melanin.
"So look at every person with sleep apnea. You know what you're going to find? Everybody knows the link to obesity. Well what have I already told you what the link to obesity was? No fucking melanin in the leptin-melanocortin pathway. So it would stand to reason that sleep apnea is exactly the same thing. It's just that the melanin loss is in a different part of the hypothalamus and the neural tracts. Most of that melanin loss, as I wrote in the Patreon series, is right at the DLF, which is the dorsal longitudinal fasciculus. That's almost always where they have it. The thing is when you try to blow open with positive pressure, which is what CPAP is, you allow more oxygen in. What does more oxygen mean to a bad mitochondria? You make more ROS. And then you have no way to buffer it. It's not rocket science, dude. It's common sense."
Doug Sandquist: "It is. And that's actually what I found. I have a few patients who we've expanded them and there's been no change in their apnea. There's been no change and actually they can breathe, but we're just throwing in more oxygen into the system, which is exactly. . ."
Dr. Jack Kruse: "You need to actually, if you're a good doctor, good dentist, you need to tell those people you might want to go get term life insurance before you go any further. I'm being dead serious when I say this. I'm not being hyperbolic. Obviously that's going to cause you a problem. But you need to tell them because your apnea has not gotten better, you probably should not use any machines or devices or do anything. Leave your body alone and let it self-correct.
"The real issue with those people, and you'll be surprised to hear this, the single most important thing for those type of patients, like what I would do if they contacted me, I'd make sure that their trigeminal system, they always had melanin, they always were constantly in the sun. I'd actually want them, even to the point, I don't advocate people getting sunburned, but I don't think sunburns are toxic like centralized medicine does. [...]"
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doug Sandquist @ 10:16–13:58 (Posted 2024-07-19)
Tristan Scott: "We are designed for this electromagnetic environment that goes on into the earth. […] I want people to know that we are electromagnetic beings. The Schumann resonance, for example, is a phenomenon where lightning strikes occur, there's an electromagnetic resonance in the cavity in the atmosphere, and the earth's naturally resonating like 7 to 8 Hz in its first harmonic. That's the same frequency as our alpha brain wave. And you know that's that's not a coincidence that that occurs. And then when we have these low frequency fields from technology, of course it's going to have a potential effect on our mental states. That's something that again is very esoteric for mainstream science and medicine, but it's the truth. And the overall acknowledgment that we just need to to study more phenomenons on the electromagnetic environment.
"And the other point I want to make here is that this is all very localized. So if I were to give a recommendation for health, it's not only you know, getting outdoors is beneficial and getting connected to your environment is beneficial, because we are designed to take all the input signals from our local environment. But that local environment is different depending where you are.
"So what you're doing in Florida and what I'm doing in Wyoming is different. And different modalities and foods and things will affect us differently because the electromagnetic environment is different. There's a different magnetic field coming out of the earth at different directional vectors. And that's where all this gets really complicated, because there are things such as resonance with certain molecules in our body that are interacting with various fields, such as the electromagnetic field of the earth. And depending on your location it's going to have a different effect.
"So if we do research this stuff there's just so many confounding independent variables to consider. And I hope someone has the foresight to think about all of that. But that's also why where you live and embracing the local environment and season is very important, because we're cyclical creatures. Everything that goes on, even the magnetic field of the earth has a rhythm, our circadian rhythms, the seasonality. I'm very big on all of that stuff and it's kind of nuanced.
"So even the mainstream health influencers, like they live on a beach somewhere in the tropics, you really shouldn't always follow their advice if you live in the Northeast and it's January."
npub1yd2h2lrwchshvm46jq7auh65tjkxmgnapkavh7tjtqq07kknupxsa980tv with Danny Jones @ 01:54:05–01:56:45 (posted 2025-04-21)
Tristan Scott: "We went out there, we measured it [the 5G cellphone tower], we stood like 20 ft away from it. It's hot. But what did you realize? You're like, 'Oh that's not even as bad as my bedroom.'"
Danny Jones: "Right. My bedroom is worse than that, next to my baby monitor. That baby monitor, dude, was like sitting next to Chernobyl or something."
Tristan Scott: "[Laughs] Not quite but it was. . ."
Danny Jones: "It was like 400,000 on that."
Tristan Scott: "It was about 10× higher than standing 20 ft away from the cell tower.
"So that's what I like to tell you people: distance is everything. And I would worry. . ."
Danny Jones: "Yes. It was 10× next to a baby monitor than it was sitting next to a 5G cellphone tower."
Tristan Scott: "Yes, that's correct."
Danny Jones: "That is insane."
Tristan Scott: "But also our phones were off out there. If you connected your phone and then it was pinging the tower. Again, your phone is the biggest source. Whatever is closest to you is going to be the biggest source. Like that baby monitor was so close to where you're sleeping, so that's the problem.
"And that's good. Why? You can't move a cell tower. You can change how you use your technology and how you interact with it.
[…]
"Distance is your best friend, because electromagnetic waves and fields have inverse square law. So if you put a 2× or a 3× distance between you and the source, you actually (two square which is four, three square which is nine) reduce the intensity of that field. So even putting a foot, even putting a few inches away from the source […] can make a tremendous difference.
"So what did we agree on? We agreed to you should put the baby monitor across the room."
npub1yd2h2lrwchshvm46jq7auh65tjkxmgnapkavh7tjtqq07kknupxsa980tv with Danny Jones @ 01:12:22–01:13:29 & 03:03–03:34 (posted 2025-04-21)
Tristan Scott: "The Invisible Rainbow is an amazing book. (Rest in peace to Arthur Firstenberg, the guy who wrote that just died two weeks ago.) […] He correlated that the electrification of society directly correlated with the increase of chronic disease. Now that happened across the 20th century, mostly in the '40s. Then 99% of society was electrified, this by the '60s."
Danny Jones: "Chronic disease. Was there any like specification of which disease was the most prevalent out of them?"
Tristan Scott: "Heart disease. […] Again, this is correlation not causation. […] It's like rate of rural heart disease in 1940, which was when only the the cool states had electricity. […]
"He talks about some crazy stuff, that telecom cables, when they were introduced in the late 1800s, all of a sudden the flu went from being something that happened like every 5 to 8 years, now happened every single year. And it used to be more tracked to the peak. . ."
Danny Jones: "The flu?"
Tristan Scott: "The flu used to only be a phenomenon (apparently) that occurred like every few years like really badly. It correlated with the solar cycle. There's an 11-year solar cycle and we're actually in a peak year right now. So if you're wondering why a bunch of crazy stuff is happening, you could say the solar cycle has somewhat of impact. Because there's a solar maximum, and that means the most amount of sunspots are happening, the most amount of geomagnetic storms, which means the most amount of magnetic variables and disturbances. That's been studied and looked at.
[…]
"But apparently what Arthur Firstenberg wrote about was before telecom cables were put in society in the late 1800s, the flu was more of a uncommon, like it came around for a couple years and then left for like five six years, and it was more tied to the solar cycles."
Tristan Scott with Danny Jones @ 01:48:41–01:13:29 & 02:04:40–02:04:57 (posted 2025-04-21)
Dr. Jack Kruse: "So you brought up the the issue with Havana syndrome. I'm going to explain to you exactly how this works and why the tech is so ingenious.
"Inside your cochlea you have a melanin sheet. Sounds crazy to you. It's inside a bone that you use for hearing tied to the endolymphatic sac. What you don't know, it also is a place that doesn't have a blood-brain barrier. So when they use pulsed electromagnetic radiation, depending on the frequency, that depends on what you get distally. What is the ultimate endpoint in your brain? It causes a traumatic brain injury. Why? Because this isn't the way the system was evolved to work. It was evolved to work differently. But they have now disconnected your antenna, your GPS system in your brain. How did they do that? By putting these heavy atomic elements inside your CSF. What does that do? It ruins the fidelity of the antenna system.
"If you think that this is crazy, just so you understand, your thalamus in the center of your brain is known as where all the five senses come in. Your thalamus is actually what allows you to connect to the sun and the earth to create biologic rhythms. You've heard of those, they're called the circadian rhythms. Do you know what the emission of the thalamus is? 7.83 Hz. You know what that is? That's the Schumann resonance of the earth. Where does that come from, Marty?
"That's when the solar wind hits our ionosphere, you make an aurora, electricity comes down in lightning. The ionosphere that we live in on this tectonic surface is like the inside of a guitar. Every time electricity hits the planet it creates a waveform. That waveform is 7.83 Hz.
"Your brain, every living thing, let me be clear about this. Every living thing on the planet emits this alpha wave. What did MKUltra, SRI, and the Brain Health Initiative teach DARPA? That if you disconnect people from that signal you can take over the controls of the brain. So what did they do then? Once they take that away, then they start using directed energy weapons to target different senses in you. What's the ultimate effect?
"They started to do this at scale in the Iraq War. do you want to know why all these guys came back in the theater with PTSD? That's the reason why.
[…]
"But guess what? When you look up Frey syndrome or microwave syndrome, you'll find out that I'm exactly right, that they can use pulse microwave to make voices in your head. And you know what the irony is when you talk to people who have had this problem? I've talked to so many solders with this problem. They have actually heard people, voices coming from the center of their head. Do you know why? Because that's where the thalamus is emitting the antenna signals.
"So guess what? The people that have melanin in their brain, they're the ones that actually can harm the government. The government doesn't. They want to stay completely clandestine and convert. That's the reason why people need to upgrade their melanin systems. It makes you more resistant at this. So if you want to keep your seed phrases clean 30 years from now, if you're the one of those people that keeps it in your head, then you better make sure that you live inside the Tropics and that you're outside like a rotisserie chicken.
"I'm going to tell you the people that have to worry the most are people that lived in geoengineered cities. If you want to know the reason why the cities are being geoengineered, remember, if you don't use processed food, if you don't use supplements, if you don't use drugs, what's the next way to get you? Geoengineer it, the shit falls out of the sky and goes right in the ethmoid sinus in the roof of your nose where your pituitary has no blood-brain barrier. Dude, they have thought of it all. They're that good. […]
"So Marty, you want to take a guess now why Uncle Jack lives in El Salvador?"
Dr. Jack Kruse with npub1guh5grefa7vkay4ps6udxg8lrqxg2kgr3qh9n4gduxut64nfxq0q9y6hjy @ 01:07:53–01:10:18 & 01:11:51–01:13:58 (posted 2025-03-04)
Mike Maher: "How do you protect a young, fair-skinned child if you go to where you live or to Thailand? […]"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Well, that's where you have to learn how to build a solar callus. I've got a Patreon blog on how to do that. For your child the answer is pretty easy. Those red lights that you got, people are shocked when they hear this. When you use infrared A light, that's light from 600 to 1000nm, that's not the near infrared stuff now, it preconditions your skin for UV light. So guess what? You won't get burned. […] This is the reason why I'm from the 59th latitude and I can stay out in the sun literally 12 hours a day here. I don't burn like I used to burn when I was a kid.
"The problem is when you're wearing clothes, sunglasses, contacts, putting sunscreen on, what are you doing? You're decreasing melanin in your integument and in your eye. Melanin is actually your natural sunscreen. So even when you're a white boy with blue eyes, the reason you're a white boy with blue eyes because you live at a high latitude the sun sucks. So what is nature doing? It's sucking all of your melanin out of you by design. And then what are you idiots doing now? You're listening to the dermatologist tell you to do more. That's the reason why you burn, because you have no protection.
"Building the solar callus gives you that protection. […] I think in a child, just getting them in front of infrared A light 20 minutes, three or four times a day, before you go. I would do that probably four to six weeks. I have a picture in my solar callus blog that shows you what skin looks like when it's preconditioned by red, and then UV comes in, and you'll see they don't get sunburns.
"I will just tell you sunburn, when you get it, it's not as bad as the dermatologist tells you. I'm going to tell you the literature even backs that up; they just bury that truth. But I'm going to tell you a sunburn means that you're not doing a good job with your solar callus. […]
"We're the only stupid idiot animals on the planet that have bought the BS from the ophthalmologist, dermatologist and Bill Gates that blocking the sun is smart. It turns out you don't ever want to block the sun, ever. OK? That's how you build your solar callus. The big protection for you is to upregulate melanin production in your integument and your eye. The way you do that is stop wearing sunglasses.
"Dr Alexis Cowan is a PhD I've done a couple podcasts with. She's got a really cool Instagram picture. She says, 'Before I die, I think it will be shown that most skin cancers are caused by wearing sunglasses.' I think she's absolutely correct. […]
"I would tell you with the baby: shellfish, seafood, the broths. That has all the phytochemicals in it that also help with the red light upregulate. Start making seafood broths. The thing about the UK is you guys can get pretty decent seafood. […] Just cook all this stuff down, use it as a base in your sauces. Let the baby eat that stuff, get it in the red light. I guarantee you when you go to Thailand you're going to be like, my little white baby is not getting burned, and you're going to be stunned. You're gonna be like, wow.
"If I can do it your baby can do it."
Dr.Jack Kruse with Mike Maher @ 01:11:01–01:15:38 (posted 2025-03-07)
Dr. Jack Kruse: "What was the natural chemical that was made in the decentralized forest in and around Tokyo? It's called avermectin, with an A. So what did this researcher do? He began taking between eight and 12 chemicals and he began to start screwing around with bond angles and bonds. He also used isotopic fractions to change avermectin into Ivermectin. He found out that Ivermectin actually had some pretty impressive properties. […]
"All drugs have side effects. Well it turns out Ivermectin truly was one of the first drugs that was ever found by big pharma that literally you could give it in whopping doses and not kill people.
"None of them could believe that that was the case. What they didn't realize, something that the Japanese scientist did, is that when you have a chemical that comes out of a decentralized pharmacy that's acted on by light, water and magnetism, that there's something special about that very issue. It turned out that was true with Ivermectin.
"Ivermectin then goes on, as you know, to be used for parasites. It goes on to treat river blindness. One of the things that's really interesting about river blindness, this is a disease that's called […] elephantiasis, that elephantiasis actually is very much like a turbo cancer. What does it do? It absconds T regulator cells that affect T and T natural killer cells. So these diseases actually cause a paucity of these cells to be present, therefore the disease manifests. In other words, it's an immune modulatory problem. And this is where the story of Ivermectin changes.
[…]
"I thought about these new findings from 2000 on that Ivermectin actually works in cancers and no one actually knows the reason why. I began to realize that some of the other drugs that are also associated with these parasites, these are quantum mechanical effects.
"When I thought about how Ivermectin was originally formed and found by the Japanese scientist outside of a golf course in a forest, I said, 'You know, I wonder if we go to different forests all over the world, could we find similar compounds that have been made over four billion years that are out there, that may help people that have jab complications? […]'
"I started looking at different forests all over the world where the answer would be. I was looking for specific evidence in the literature of weird diseases that were being cured that no one ever thought of. And I really had a dry tap until (I believe) it was 2022. The story that I started working with Kevin about, I had to get Kevin some proof that SV40 was in the jab. That's when I went back to work. And I made sure that Kevin would find that information. And he did, and he proved it, and then Phillip Buckhaults backed it up.
"Then the next part of the equation was, was there proof out there that there were drugs that could be repurposed that actually may help some of the side effects related to this jab? […] I started to see papers out there where Ivermectin was being used in off label, because now it was off patent, and it was helping people with really bizarre cancers, I mean cancers that are not considered treatable by modern oncologists, like sarcomas, things like that that are just deadly. And I started to see these case reports and I was going, 'Is this the answer? Is this the answer that we're looking for, that we need to go look for novel chemicals that are created like this?'
"So in the journey, the last step that I made was when I got on that cruise ship in Panama, and I decided to go look for some answers deep in the jungle […]"
Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Alexis Cowan @ 46:32—48:49 & 50:29—53:04 (posted 2025-02-15)
Denis Rancourt: "Historically, animals (including people), the main cause of death is infection. It's typically related to an injury from a fight or survival mode fight or defending yourself, whatever. […] Now, there's a lot of different ways to get infection. And the three main places are through your skin, your respiratory tract, and your gut, the digestive system. There's a complex microbiome, meaning all these different biota, including fungus, bacteria, you name it, that live in your gut and in your lungs. Your lungs are not sterile at any time. They're a living, breathing microbiome.
"The theory of the microbiomes is that this collection of microbes of different species and so on, it's in a balance that depends on its environment, that depends on what you're breathing, how you're breathing, what your health status is like, and so on. And that balance can be out of whack by various circumstances, one of the main ones being stress, biological stress. So you're being attacked, you're being threatened, you're afraid for your life, all these kinds of things. And that can put your microbiome out of balance to the point where it will kill you. That's what a self-infection is. […]
"Historically, there was not just the microbiomes; there were parasites as well. Now, thankfully, we've gotten rid of most parasites, but they're horrible things. People have lived with parasites on their skin, in their gut, even in their lungs, parasites everywhere. […]
"You can see death rates (the best data is since the Second World War, but even before, since 1900) from everything just dropping and dropping and dropping. That's largely because of cleanliness and better nutrition, so you're way more able to defend yourself against these parasites and you're way more stable against imbalances of your microbiomes. Therefore, you don't get killed by these things, which are the main killers historically. […]
"Nothing to do with medical science improving. Nothing to do with vaccines being developed.
"Antibiotics are very useful because they give you the tool to intervene when you have such an imbalance regarding your body, and you would normally could have a good chance of dying from that infection, we'll call it an infection, but understand it's not one single pathogen, it's a complex process going on in your body.
[…]
"One of the points I make in my articles is that Ivermectin is an extremely efficient antibiotic in the sense that it's really good at fighting bacterial infections of the lungs. Extremely good. There are scientific papers about this. I believe that a lot of MDs thought they were treating a viral infection when in fact they were probably treating a bacterial infection. That's what would have saved the lives of these people."
Denis Rancourt, PhD with Ryan Cristian @ 38:05–42:15 & 26:29–26:55 (streamed 2024-12-27) https://rumble.com/v63gjdn-denis-rancourt-interview-the-covid-19-illusion-biological-stress-induced-ba.html?start=2285
Denis Rancourt: "There were epidemics in care homes forever, ever since we've documented, ever since we've had care homes. They happen spontaneously, and they happen as a result of highly stressful environmental conditions, and they don't have to spread. They just spontaneously happen to several people within the same care home, but there's no evidence that there is spread.
"So you can't find any evidence of spread, except there are some papers that convincingly show that tuberculosis probably spreads. […] I believe that it's possible that bacterial pneumonia can spread, especially TB, where it's, you know, there's been a lot of work and there's been a lot of concern about the spread.
"But there's way more frequent that it's simply spontaneous. […] There's a whole area of science that studies these spontaneous bacterial infections and they're transmission-less. They basically are induced by aspiration, that is, you take in a bit of fluid from your digestive system into your lungs and that's enough to destabilize the microbiome of bacteria within your lungs that you will develop pneumonia. So this happens irrespective. You can be in isolation and it'll happen to you.
"You can be very careful about isolating elderly people, do everything and wear masks and gloves and everything, and they will get pneumonia because they will have aspiration problems, especially since you've changed everything. And the probability of aspiration is increased if you obstruct the breathing. So a mask would probably work in that way, you see, and I mentioned that in my paper.
"So you don't want to obstruct the breathing and you don't want to disrupt people's lives and cause them a biological stress because aspiration becomes more frequent and spontaneous pneumonia follows, especially among the elderly.
"I have proposed that basically all the respiratory deaths, there was definitely an excess of respiratory deaths during covid, happened before vaccination and after vaccination, in that they are all consistent with the idea that they were self-infections induced by all the various forms that would cause biological stress."
Denis Rancourt, PhD with Ryan Cristian @ 33:43–37:00 (streamed 2024-12-27) https://rumble.com/v63gjdn-denis-rancourt-interview-the-covid-19-illusion-biological-stress-induced-ba.html?start=2023
Ryan Cristian: "Is there, in your mind, a COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2 […]?"
Denis Rancourt, PhD: "Well first of all, all the hypotheses that I put forward and the conclusions that I come to as a scientist are based on hard data. What I mean is I go straight to the mortality. The all-cause mortality I feel is the most reliable data you can have. It's been collected by nations for more than a century. They're legalistically bound to collect this data. It should be of good quality, and you can test the quality by various measures and so on. It's hard data, and that's what I generally have relied on.
"The very first thing is, there is no doubt that there was a lot of mortality way before the vaccines were rolled out. There was excess mortality in large amount before the vaccines were rolled out. […]
"The all-cause mortality, when you look at its temporal and spatial dependence, where this mortality was occurring and as a function of time by day or by week, when you look at that in detail you can demonstrate unambiguously that there was nothing spreading. This was not spreading cause of death or spreading pathogen. There was no spread in the sense of epidemiological beliefs at the moment in mainstream science. OK? There was nothing spreading.
"And that is unambiguous because you get these hotspots of death and the neighboring regions do not experience the same hotspots of death. Their mortality does not increase following those hotspots, and so there's no spread. You can really see very distinct regions of high mortality that stop at a jurisdictional border. It's that simple. You know, county to county in the US, or country to country in Europe, or sub-country region to sub-country region in Europe, they're delimited by these jurisdictional borders.
"In other words, what local governments were doing in their hospital environments, if you like, and what directives were being given, that determined the deaths at the beginning of in 2020, more than anything else. It's very, very clear from these boundaries. […] This is institutions and governments killing people by the measures that they're applying, mostly in hospitals and so on.
[…]
"One of the really important causes of death is severe treatment of elderly and frail people. Isolating them is extremely deadly and removing their usual routine, their usual way that you give them nourishment and also hydrate them and their care that they normally would have. All of that was disrupted tremendously. They were isolated and treated as a danger to themselves, between themselves, and so on. That certainly would have contributed enormously to deaths of the frail people. What was done in care homes and hospitals to elderly and sick people was absolutely horrendous. It was a death machine, basically.
[…]
"The great majority of excess death was all in the elderly and the frail and the sick. The way you killed the elderly was not through the general lockdowns; it was because of how you treated them in their care homes and the hospitals. […]
"You have to think from the perspective of an elderly and frail person who is forced to be in a care home or a hospital and who is subjected to these policies, these measures and these rollouts and you name it. And whose meals and care schedules are being completely disrupted and they're being vaccinated for the flu at the same time. They're being continuously tested. And as soon as they get a positive, whatever that means, they get even more measures put on them and so on. That's what was causing the deaths in terms of all-cause mortality."
Denis Rancourt, PhD with Ryan Cristian @ 05:58–09:03, 11:08–11:55 & 59:44–01:00:50 https://rumble.com/v63gjdn-denis-rancourt-interview-the-covid-19-illusion-biological-stress-induced-ba.html?start=358
Mike Maher: "Vitamin D. Would you would you suggest somebody like me, who's in the latitude I'm in, should I be taking that supplement? You're saying no. Why no?"
Dr. Jack Kruse: "[…] Vitamin D when you take it doesn't equal Vitamin D from the sunlight. If you want to know the main reason, when you take vitamin D pills it's soaked in seed oils. The reason it's soaked in seed oils because it's a fat-soluble vitamin.
"When you understand how we use it, it's made from an ester of cholesterol in our skin from UV-B sunlight. It stays electromagnetically on that ester until it falls, just like an apple to a tree, but in the blood to a vitamin D binding protein. Then what happens? What makes the decision that it falls into the blood to go to where it needs to be transmitted to the kidney and liver? Turns out sulfation. You know what sulfation does in sunlight? It actually makes it water soluble. […]
"What's the effect when you take vitamin D pills? It raises your cholesterol. Then it also uncouples the system, because remember, how you decide to make vitamin D is from 315 to 325 light. If you never get that light, which you don't in the UK, well very rarely, that's why you can see everybody's got low vitamin D status. Which is why from a longevity standpoint, I don't want my little 18-year-old baby living in the UK long term. Now you understand the reason why. […]
"Vitamin D will raise your LDL cholesterol, it'll lower your HDL cholesterol. Then what will the doctor do when he sees that? Oh, I got to put you on statins. Do you understand? They have already gamed the system. […] You do not want to use pills to do this.
"Now unfortunately for many of you there, the best thing about vitamin D pills, it'll help prevent rickets, it'll help the bone issues.
"This will probably shock you even further. […] Do you know that vitamin D pills actually affect darker-skinned people worse than white-skinned people? It's true. Those studies have been done in the United States but they're not well popularized. What happens? People will take vitamin D pills who have darker skin, whether you're brown or black, the intima of your arteries get thicker. Why? Because it downregulates nitric oxide production when you have dark skin. Dark skin is designed to protect you from equatorial sun. There is no place in the UK, even in a tanning bed, where there's equatorial sun. So this is the reason why people who are African, when they come to high latitude Europe, they develop mitochondrial disease, peripheral artery disease, hypertension. They also get more mental illness. […] What makes melatonin and and dopamine? UV light. Those are the two aromatic amino acids. When you turn the telly on and you see what the hell is going on Europe, […] it comes from this story. It's a light story. People are stunned when I make the links for them.
"But no, if you're a white dude like me, if I lived up there, no I would not do it. My mitigation strategy if I had low vitamin D and I had say a shitty job, I would go probably buy a UV-A and a UV-B bulb from the pet store, that you use for reptiles. Then I'd probably add in some infrared A and near infrared light. Or the best way for you to do it, is if you build that sauna the right way, I'd get in that sauna and then I'd put combination of lights over my sauna. That's how I would raise my vitamin D if I lived where you live."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Mike Maher @ 01:05:44–01:10:28