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The speaker thanks the committee and President Trump for the nomination to improve American health. He believes great societies protect the vulnerable and commits to providing Americans with superb care. His experiences, from creating a nutrition class in medical school to working in Spanish Harlem, have prepared him for this role. Healthcare expenditures are growing unsustainably, the Medicare trust fund is nearing insolvency, and Medicaid strains state budgets. The US healthcare cost per person is double that of other developed nations due to chronic diseases linked to poor lifestyle choices. High obesity rates, poor maternal mortality rates, and medical errors contribute to a shorter life expectancy. To address these issues, the speaker proposes empowering beneficiaries with transparency, incentivizing doctors to optimize care with real-time information and AI, and modernizing tools to reduce fraud and waste. He seeks to stabilize insurance markets and enable healthier lifestyles, aiming for better care, outcomes, and a healthier America.

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The speaker claims American healthcare ignores metabolic dysfunction and its causes. They state they learned virtually nothing in medical school about environmental factors impacting health, such as the link between ultra-processed food and early mortality, or the harm shown in independently funded studies of processed foods. They assert conflicts of interest exist within the USDA food guidelines and that synthetic pesticides are linked to various health issues. They claim microplastics are accumulating in our bodies, and numerous toxins in our environment alter gene expression and disrupt hormones. Heavy metals in food and medications are allegedly neurotoxic. The speaker notes Americans walk too little and that medical errors are a leading cause of death. They claim sleep deprivation can induce prediabetes and that children spend less time outdoors than prisoners. They allege professional organizations take money from companies like Coke and Moderna. Addressing these root causes could reverse chronic disease. The speaker concludes this is a spiritual crisis, requiring a renewed respect for life and nature.

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The healthcare system is a hoax, and people should avoid hospitals. Lifestyle choices like diet, sleep, and sunshine are crucial because the medical system will harm you. The U.S. spends more on healthcare than any other Western country but has a significantly lower life expectancy, which has decreased by three years, blamed by the White House on global warming. The U.S. consumes 55% of the world's prescription medication despite comprising only 5% of the global population. Atorvastatin, a statin, is the most commonly prescribed drug, despite the "great cholesterol myth" that lowering cholesterol prevents heart disease. Statins increase the risk of diabetes, Alzheimer's, and dementia. Studies show elderly patients with the highest cholesterol levels had the best survival. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol has a lack of association with mortality in the elderly. Diabetes and Alzheimer's medicine are also a hoax.

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As a child, diabetes was rare, but now it's common due to unhealthy food. Processed foods can lead to violence in girls. Kids are suffering from chronic diseases and mental health issues, which is not normal. The US has the highest chronic disease rate globally, with many COVID deaths due to underlying health conditions. Bill Gates' plan involves unhealthy food choices. The green revolution in Africa caused food insecurity, which we don't need in our country.

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The speaker claims the tobacco industry applied their expertise in addiction to food production, creating ultra-processed foods that lack satiability, leading to overconsumption. They state that almost 1,000 chemicals in American foods are banned in Europe and elsewhere, and that these novel chemicals are poorly processed by the body. The speaker notes a significant increase in chronic disease since their uncle's presidency, when 6% of Americans had chronic diseases and there was no budget for it. Now, chronic disease costs $4.3 trillion, five times the military budget. Pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies, and hospitals profit from this. The speaker asserts that the medical advice we receive is compromised due to corporate capture.

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To address the chronic disease epidemic, I propose banning pharmaceutical advertising on TV, as only the U.S. and New Zealand allow it, yet we have the highest disease rates and drug costs. Countries like Italy spend significantly less on healthcare and enjoy longer lifespans. We need a president who will tackle foreign wars, end censorship, and restore freedom of speech. It's crucial to eliminate corruption, remove harmful chemicals from our food, and prioritize the health of our children. We deserve a leader committed to making America healthy and great again. Let's ensure we make our voices heard at the polls on Tuesday.

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The speaker claims to have learned virtually nothing in medical school about the root causes of declining American health. They state that for each serving of ultra-processed food, early mortality increases by 18%, yet this makes up 67% of children's diets. They assert that 82% of independently funded studies show harm from processed food, while 93% of industry-sponsored studies reflect no harm. The speaker alleges that 1 billion pounds of synthetic pesticides are sprayed on US farmland annually, linking them to various health issues. They claim microplastics are filling our food, water, and air, and now constitute about 0.5% of our brains by weight. They state that 80,000 toxins have entered our environment, altering gene expression and disrupting hormones, and that heavy metals are present in food, baby formula, and vaccines. The speaker notes Americans walk an average of 3,500 steps daily, while 7,000 steps could significantly reduce the risk of major diseases. They add that medical error is the third leading cause of death in the US, and that professional organizations have taken millions from processed food companies and vaccine manufacturers. They conclude that addressing these root causes could reverse the chronic disease crisis, but instead, doctors are taught to drug, cut, and bill.

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In 1960, the speaker's uncle, then president, was distressed about physical fitness. Obesity was at 13%; today it's at 45%. 75% of Americans are overweight. Chronic disease affected 6% of Americans when he was in office, but by 2006, it was at 54%. The speaker ran for president to end the chronic disease epidemic and restore Americans to good health. A country is as strong as its citizens, and mental and physical health go hand in hand.

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It doesn't matter who comes before us as long as they support this administration and ignore your beliefs. If your views are fundamental, how do you reconcile that? President Trump tasked me with ending the chronic disease epidemic and making America healthy again. This is my primary focus at HHS. If we don't tackle this issue, all other discussions about healthcare funding are irrelevant. The U.S. has the highest chronic disease burden globally, and during COVID, we accounted for 16% of deaths despite having only 4.2% of the world’s population. The average American who died from COVID had multiple chronic diseases. This situation poses an existential threat to our economy, military, and overall well-being, making it a top priority for President Trump. If confirmed, I will address this challenge directly.

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In recent years, there has been a concerning increase in chronic illnesses, particularly in children. Conditions like autism, obesity, allergies, and respiratory problems have become more prevalent. We need to investigate the causes behind this rise, such as the food we eat, our environment, over-prescription of medications, and the toxins in our homes. Our public health system often fails to question these issues due to their close ties with big pharma and other special interests. If pharmaceutical companies prioritize profits over people, they should be held accountable. As president, I will establish an independent commission to investigate the root causes of these illnesses and provide recommendations for a safe and healthy childhood for every American child. This conversation is long overdue, and I am committed to taking action. Thank you. (134 words)

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Medical intervention is a leading cause of death in the United States, claiming around a million lives annually. Many people trust their doctors without realizing that a significant portion of medical education is based on unscientific principles. The current medical system is outdated and needs a complete overhaul. The idea of treating illness with harmful substances is flawed, yet it persists because it generates substantial profits for pharmaceutical companies, which wield significant influence.

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the woeful lack of nutrition education in medicine. Poor diet drives America's chronic disease crisis, fueling seven of our 10 deadliest conditions. Each year it claims an estimated one million American lives through diet related illnesses. Most medical students report receiving no formal nutrition education throughout their entire training. A fewer than a quarter of practicing physicians feel adequately prepared to provide nutrition advice. We'll start by embedding nutrition directly into college pre med programs and testing it on the MCAT. Every future physician should master the language of prevention before they even touch a stethoscope. Under president Trump's leadership, we are going to systematically transform nutrition education throughout American medicine. For more than 200 of America's medical schools, 13,000 residency and fellowship programs, and ultimately each of the nation's 1,100,000 practicing physicians.

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What we've done is we've confused diseases that are more common with aging, with age being a cause of those diseases in the first place. They're not inevitable diseases, And many of them are preventable. In The US, which is arguably one of the worst health care systems, it is the worst health care system among the industrialized Western world, we spend approximately 3% of our budget, our medical budget, on prevention. when people walk into a doctor's office, seventy five percent of the time, the disease is, according to the Center for Disease Control, a preventable disease. It's not that hard to prevent a lot of these things. It takes willpower and takes education and it takes access to good quality food. The good news is it's not that hard to prevent a lot of these things. The optimist in me says, know, we really can do something.

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The U.S. has the most expensive healthcare system globally, spending significantly more per person than any other nation, yet achieving poorer outcomes. Life expectancy ranks 49th worldwide, and infant mortality is 54th. Additionally, a higher number of people live with multiple chronic conditions compared to other wealthy countries. This situation is alarming, yet many find healthcare unaffordable.

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They just published an article showing which industries employ the most Americans state by state. In 1990, the map was filled with manufacturing, retail, hospitality, and public sector jobs. Today, the entire country is blanketed in one color, healthcare. Nearly every state's top employer is now in the sickness business. Since 1990, diabetes has doubled from seventeen to fourteen percent. Obesity has tripled from eleven to over forty percent. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, colorectal cancer in young adults, and myocarditis were once rare, now they're exploding. Six in ten adults now have one chronic disease with four in ten living with two or more. Big pharma, big food, and a broken medical system created the perfect loop.

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The U.S. healthcare system is a hoax, and people should avoid hospitals. Lifestyle choices like diet, sleep, and sunshine are crucial because the medical system will harm you. The U.S. spends more on healthcare than any other Western country but has a significantly lower life expectancy, which has decreased by three years, blamed by the White House on global warming. The U.S. consumes 55% of the world's prescription medication despite having only 5% of the global population. Atorvastatin, a statin, is the most commonly prescribed medication, despite the "great cholesterol myth" that lowering cholesterol prevents heart disease. Statins increase the risk of diabetes, Alzheimer's, and dementia. Studies show elderly patients with the highest cholesterol levels had the best survival. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol has a lack of association with mortality in the elderly. Diabetes and Alzheimer's medicine are also a hoax.

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Since 2012, American life expectancy has stagnated, while European countries saw increases. The U.S. experienced a sharp drop during the pandemic, only recovering to 2019 levels last year. Sweden's life expectancy dropped in 2020 but quickly rebounded, continuing its upward trend. Current national investments in research aren't translating into improved health and longevity for Americans. Biomedical advances are treating previously untreatable diseases, but they aren't addressing the chronic disease and longevity crises. The next generation may live shorter, less healthy lives than their parents.

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80% of medical schools in the United States don't require a single nutrition course, yet 90% of healthcare costs are tied to diseases linked to food. The speaker didn't learn at Stanford Medical School that 95% of the USDA Food Guidelines committee had conflicts of interest with the food industry, or about the 8,000 conflicts of interest at the NIH. They also didn't learn about the 8 billion tons of plastic degrading into estrogen analogs, or the 6 billion pounds of pesticides sprayed on the global food supply annually, which are tied to diseases like Alzheimer's and cancer. The speaker states that taking 7,000 steps per day can reduce the risk of major chronic diseases by 40-60%, but the average American only walks 3,500 steps. They also didn't learn about the importance of sunlight for circadian biology and cellular health. Sleep is also important, as sleep deprivation can make a young, healthy person pre-diabetic in just five nights, and 50% of Americans are pre-diabetic or type 2 diabetic.

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In recent years, there has been a concerning increase in chronic illnesses, particularly in children. Conditions like autism, obesity, allergies, and infertility have become more prevalent. The causes of these health problems are unclear, but factors such as food, environment, medications, and household toxins could be contributing. Instead of focusing on treating these issues, we need to investigate their root causes. The public health establishment, often influenced by big pharmaceutical companies, needs to ask tough questions and be held accountable. If elected president, I will establish an independent commission to investigate the rise in chronic illnesses and provide recommendations for a safe and healthy childhood for all American children. This conversation is long overdue, and American families deserve a leader who will take action.

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The speaker claims the U.S. is the "sickest country in the world," with chronic disease affecting 60% of Americans, compared to 3% when his uncle was president. Autism rates have risen from 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 31, and diabetes is exploding, with 38% of teens now diabetic or pre-diabetic. This impacts national security, as 74% of American kids can't qualify for military service. The U.S. spends $1.3 trillion annually on chronic disease, bankrupting the country. The speaker praises legislators for addressing this at the grassroots level, opposing the "mass poisoning" by industries that have captured regulatory agencies. He notes the U.S. has 10,000 food ingredients compared to Europe's 400 due to regulatory capture. He challenges the press to investigate politicians who oppose the SNAP waiver legislation, questioning why taxpayers fund sugary drinks in nutrition programs. He accuses public health groups opposing the legislation of taking money from the soda industry, calling it "legalized bribery." He states that a healthy person has a thousand dreams, but a sick person only has one.

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Big food, big pharma, big chemicals get super wealthy. Right? What is the product of health care? It's a healthy body. If we take The US population and compare it to the world, we're at the very bottom when it comes to health, yet we spend the most for health care. Over $4,100,000,000,000 every single year.

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Our healthcare system is criticized as a hoax, and the speaker advises against getting sick or going to the hospital because they believe it will lead to death. They argue that instead, people should focus on maintaining a healthy lifestyle. The speaker presents a graph comparing healthcare expenditure and life expectancy in the US, highlighting that despite spending the most on healthcare globally, Americans have a lower life expectancy. They also mention that Americans consume a significant amount of prescription medication, indicating a high level of illness. The speaker questions the effectiveness of commonly prescribed medications like statins, claiming they increase the risk of diabetes and Alzheimer's disease. They conclude by stating that diabetes and Alzheimer's medications are also considered hoaxes.

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The U.S. faces a severe chronic disease crisis, costing $4.3 trillion annually, which is five times the military budget. Medical expenses for chronic diseases have skyrocketed from zero during previous administrations to 95% of healthcare spending today. This situation is exacerbated by processed foods, chemicals, and a profit-driven healthcare system that benefits from keeping people sick. Pharmaceutical companies profit from lifelong patients, with drugs like Ozempic costing $1,500 weekly. A proposed bill could lead to $3 trillion in costs for treating obesity. Instead, for a fraction of that amount, providing every American with three organic meals daily could eliminate diabetes, a condition treatable with proper nutrition and exercise.

Tucker Carlson

Dr. Mark Hyman: Everything You're Eating Is Toxic, and Big Pharma Likes It That Way
Guests: Mark Hyman
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Tucker Carlson and Dr. Mark Hyman discuss the current health crisis in America, emphasizing the rising costs of healthcare, which now amount to nearly $5 trillion, and the prevalence of preventable chronic diseases. Hyman highlights that 80% of healthcare costs stem from preventable conditions, primarily driven by poor dietary choices and a flawed food system. He argues that the food industry, supported by government policies favoring commodity crops like corn and soy, has created an "illness industrial complex" that profits from disease rather than health. Hyman notes that chronic diseases, such as diabetes and heart disease, are on the rise, with obesity rates skyrocketing from 15% to over 40% in many states. He points out that the highest diabetes mortality rates are found in red states, indicating that this issue transcends political affiliations. Hyman believes that the conversation around health has shifted, with more people recognizing the root causes of chronic illness, particularly the role of ultra-processed foods, which make up a significant portion of the American diet. The discussion touches on the impact of marketing and food addiction, particularly among children, with the food industry spending billions on advertising unhealthy products. Hyman cites studies showing that ultra-processed foods lead to increased caloric intake and weight gain, contributing to the obesity epidemic. He argues that the current healthcare system is failing, as it focuses on treating symptoms rather than addressing the underlying causes of disease. Hyman advocates for a comprehensive approach to health that includes dietary changes, education, and policy reform. He suggests that the government could play a crucial role in transforming the food system by supporting healthier agricultural practices and improving nutrition education in medical schools. He emphasizes the need for transparency in food labeling and the importance of informed consent regarding dietary choices. The conversation also addresses the controversial topic of vaccines, with Hyman asserting that while vaccines have historically been beneficial, there should be ongoing research into their long-term safety and efficacy. He criticizes the polarized nature of the vaccine debate and calls for a more nuanced discussion based on scientific evidence. Hyman expresses optimism about the potential for change, particularly with the appointment of figures like Bobby Kennedy as HHS Secretary, who he believes could address the chronic disease epidemic and reform the healthcare system. He concludes by reiterating the importance of focusing on the root causes of health issues, advocating for a shift in how society approaches food and health.

Modern Wisdom

How America’s Healthcare System Keeps You Dependent - Calley Means
Guests: Calley Means
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Modern healthcare is fundamentally flawed due to economic incentives that profit from prolonged illness rather than promoting health. Insurance companies, under the Affordable Care Act, are incentivized to raise premiums, which leads to higher costs and more sickness. Pharmaceutical companies focus on chronic disease management, as 95% of their sales come from treatments for conditions like heart disease and diabetes, which require ongoing medication rather than cures. This creates a cycle where sick patients are more profitable. Childhood obesity and chronic diseases are rising, with 50% of teens overweight or obese. The pharmaceutical industry profits from this trend, as a healthy child is not a profitable patient. The healthcare system is structured to prioritize interventions and treatments over preventative measures. Hospitals, as the largest employers, are incentivized to fill beds and perform procedures, often leading to unnecessary surgeries and prescriptions. The healthcare system's focus on treating symptoms rather than root causes is evident in the rise of medications like statins and antidepressants, which are prescribed without addressing lifestyle factors. The American Academy of Pediatrics has recently recommended aggressive interventions for overweight children, influenced by pharmaceutical funding. Environmental factors, including diet and toxins, contribute significantly to chronic health issues. The prevalence of ultra-processed foods, heavily subsidized and marketed, exacerbates these problems. The U.S. food system is designed to promote unhealthy eating habits, with government programs like SNAP allowing the purchase of sugary drinks. The conversation around health must shift from treating diseases to promoting overall wellness. This includes recognizing the interconnectedness of various health conditions and addressing metabolic dysfunction as a root cause. The healthcare system needs to be reoriented to prioritize preventative care and holistic health solutions. The current trajectory of healthcare spending is unsustainable, with chronic diseases projected to bankrupt the system. There is a need for bipartisan action to reform healthcare policies, focusing on clean food and water, and addressing the systemic issues that lead to poor health outcomes. The conversation must include a reevaluation of how healthcare is funded and the role of pharmaceutical companies in shaping health guidelines.
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