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The dialogue opens with a contrast between outlooks: Speaker 0 says, “The pessimist in this world, and you spend your time with optimism,” highlighting a tension between pessimistic and optimistic perspectives. The subsequent speaker, Speaker 1, reframes the topic around genomics, describing it as “taking a global picture, all of marionettes that are manipulated by strands of DNA?” and raising a question about whether this perspective could undermine our self-perception as beings with free will and spirit. The speaker suggests that the issue should be obvious, yet acknowledges that it isn’t obvious to everyone, that “we are far more than just our genes.” The claim is that we are “a fairly a complex mixture of what our genes are telling us and what the environment does to us.” The passage ends with an incomplete thought from Speaker 1: “But I.”

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"You know, there's been a major breakthrough here in the world of health." "Had this pasture manager who did the FLASS study." "We discovered the germ theory." "Then Fleming discovered penicillin, another tremendous" "Now since 2010 we have another tremendous advance just equal to those which people don't know about, but if you avoid seven factors you can, decrease by eighty percent your cardiovascular disease, your strokes and your heart attack, eighty percent you could decrease kills more people than the next five leading causes of death combined." "They've checked it out, only ninety three percent of the people it doesn't help them one bit." "And you see they put all these people on drugs, statins based on their cholesterol level."

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My name is Gwen Olsen, a former pharmaceutical industry veteran. The industry focuses on maintaining diseases, not curing them. Psychiatric drugs keep patients reliant on medications for life. Many drugs are no more effective than placebos, with exercise often proving more beneficial. The pharmaceutical industry prioritizes profit over patient well-being, pushing unnecessary medications. It's crucial to educate yourself on alternative health options to avoid becoming a lifelong pharmaceutical customer. Take charge of your health, share knowledge, and prevent loved ones from falling victim to unnecessary medications. Thank you. Translation: The speaker, Gwen Olsen, discusses the pharmaceutical industry's focus on maintaining diseases rather than curing them, highlighting the ineffectiveness of many drugs and the importance of educating oneself on alternative health options.

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Dr. Alexis Cohen (Jasmine Cohen) and the host discuss a wide-ranging view of health, science, and society, centered on mitochondria, light biology, and decentralized approaches to knowledge and healing. - On science, health, and authority: - Cohen argues that “we really haven’t been doing science for about seventy years now” and that modern science has become scientism, with people looking to scientists and doctors as authority figures over personal health, even though no one can fully know another’s lived body experience. - She emphasizes that aging is a reflection of mitochondrial heteroplasmy and that there are ways to slow or speed that burden, but contemporary living habits harm mitochondrial health. She asserts there are incentives to promote lifestyle advice that is not monetizable (outdoor activity, barefoot grounding, seasonal eating, movement), which she says slows research and access to information. - The conversation asserts a need to reclaim personal authority over health and to recognize life as magical and miraculous. - Personal entry into Bitcoin and crypto curiosity: - Cohen notes she and her partner became interested in Bitcoin in 2018, with a continued engagement including taking a cryptography course to understand the underlying proofs rather than accepting information at face value. - Background and work: - The host introduces Cohen as a Princeton-trained molecular biologist, a PhD focusing on metabolism, gut health, and circadian biology, who shifted from academic research to helping people rebuild health through nutrition, movement, mitochondrial function, and light exposure. Cohen shares that her own childhood illnesses, weight issues, and colitis prompted a pivot from academia to health coaching, emphasizing ownership of wellbeing through science and practical lifestyle strategies. - Cohen highlights that she values rigorous science but seeks practical lifestyle strategies to empower clients to understand their biology and take ownership of their health. - Dance, embodiment, and biology: - Cohen describes taking up social dancing (salsa, bachata, merengue, fox trot, hustle) and training intensely. She explains dancing challenges the brain in novel ways, requires being guided by a partner, and expands neural connections. - The host shares similar experiences with dance, noting body memory across decades and the importance of movement, rhythm, and social connection for health. - Mitochondria, heteroplasmy, and light: - Cohen explains mitochondria as the battery of the cell, with their own circular DNA and multiple roles in ATP production, biosynthesis, and epigenetic regulation. Heteroplasmy, the mutation burden in mitochondrial DNA, reflects dysfunction that can lead to energy production deficits across tissues. - She notes three key mitochondrial outputs: - ATP production powers cellular processes and metabolism. - Metabolic water production (including deuterium-depleted metabolic water). - Biophotons, photons largely in the UV range, emitted by mitochondria and nucleus during electron transport; older, sicker individuals emit more light due to increased permeability of the system. - Cohen argues aging mirrors mitochondrial heteroplasmy and mutation accumulation, with higher mutation burdens in tissues like immune cells, gut, liver, and brain associated with disease. She also discusses that mitochondria contribute to energy, water, and biophotons, and that modern life elevates heteroplasmy by lifestyle choices. - She argues heteroplasmy can be slowed or sped, and that there are actionable interventions—though the exact list is not exhaustively enumerated in this segment. - Why mitochondrial health isn’t the central target: - Cohen says mitochondrial health research is less profitable because it emphasizes lifestyle and environmental changes rather than drugs, which affects funding and research direction. She describes a system where focusing on broad environmental and lifestyle changes could be financially less lucrative than drug-centered approaches. - She expands on historical dynamics in science, including siloing of scientists and the development of a paywalled academic publishing model, suggesting that the system discourages holistic, integrative approaches that would unify mitochondrial biology with systems biology. - Light, circadian biology, and UVA/UVB: - The discussion shifts to light as a regulator of mitochondria. Cohen divides the sun’s spectrum into ultraviolet (UVB and UVA), visible light, blue light, and near infrared (NIR). She emphasizes that near-infrared light penetrates deeply and stimulates mitochondria, while UVB promotes melanin production via POMC and MSH peptides, affecting energy balance, mood, and metabolism. - UVB light triggers alpha-MSH and beta-endorphin production, the latter contributing to mood and dopamine support, and helps regulate energy expenditure and appetite via POMC-derived pathways; UVB exposure supports melanin synthesis, redox balance, and photoreception across tissues. - UVA light activates Neuropsin receptors on eyes and skin, aiding circadian entrainment and nitric oxide production, which improves vasodilation and nutrient delivery. Neuropsin is present in skin and testes; its stimulation is linked to testosterone and fertility enhancements. UVA also helps anchor local circadian rhythms in tissues. - Cohen discusses the misperception that UV light is universally harmful and argues that melanin is not only protective but can facilitate energy capture from high-energy photons to support energy metabolism in humans. Melanin’s roles extend beyond protection to potential energy transduction, with POMC, MSH, and alpha-MSH linking light exposure to metabolic regulation. - The My Circadian app is recommended as a tool to track sunrise, UVA/UVB rise, and lux (brightness) to optimize exposure. Cohen notes indoor environments rarely exceed 1000 lux, while outdoor brightness can reach 60,000–60,200 lux, significantly impacting serotonin production, mood, and cognition. She emphasizes the importance of bright daytime light for circadian alignment and melatonin suppression at night. - Infrared, LEDs, and indoor lighting: - The conversation covers lighting technologies, noting fluorescent tubes and LEDs minimize near-infrared and maximize blue light, which disrupts circadian rhythms and flicker, stressing the eyes and sympathetic nervous system. Cohen argues that modern lighting deprives people of infrared and UV radiation, both critical for mitochondrial function and circadian health. - She criticizes the push for energy efficiency that reduces thermal and infrared energy, arguing it contributes to systemic health issues. She emphasizes the importance of incandescent and near-infrared-rich lighting for indoor environments and sun exposure to sustain metabolic health. - Grounding, EMF, and environmental exposure: - Grounding (direct contact with the earth) is presented as a way to discharge excess positive charge in tissues, reducing inflammatory burden and supporting mitochondrial function. Cohen shares practical grounding instructions—grounding directly to the earth when possible, wearing natural fibers, and using grounding footwear. - Non-native electromagnetic fields (EMFs) from Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, 5G, and other sources are discussed as contributors to mitochondrial dysfunction and inflammation. Cohen cites Robert Becker’s historical work on non-thermal EMF effects and Havana syndrome as context for potential biological risks. She suggests practical mitigation, including reducing EMF exposure, using Ethernet where possible, and using tinfoil to shield exposure in certain situations. Plant life can absorb EMF, and grounding, sunlight, and strategic use of red and infrared light are recommended to compensate where exposure is high. - The discussion includes practical home strategies, EMF-blocking window panels, EMF-blocking paint, and even temporary shielding (e.g., tinfoil) as a do-it-yourself mitigation approach. - Travel, circadian disruption, and protocols: - Cohen outlines travel challenges: high altitude cosmic radiation exposure (non-AVMF exposure), cabin EMFs, circadian misalignment, and sedentary behavior. She suggests pre- and post-travel strategies such as grounding, sun exposure, hydration, lymphatic support, and blue-light management to ease time-zone transitions. - She promotes an ebook protocol focused on lymphatic support and circadian realignment, available for purchase, with a holiday discount code holydays. Blue-light blocking strategies and red-light strategies are included to facilitate adaptation to new time zones. - Health, mental health, and pediatric considerations: - The hosts discuss mental health concerns, including PTSD, anxiety, and depression, emphasizing circadian regulation, light exposure, sleep hygiene, and reducing screen exposure. Cohen notes the importance of bright daytime light and a dark, cool sleeping environment for sleep quality and mood. She mentions a study showing even small nighttime light exposure can influence daytime metabolic markers, emphasizing the importance of darkness at night. - Birth, medications, and vaccines: - They touch on birth experiences, epidurals, and how early life interventions can influence long-term health and microbiome development. Cohen discusses pain as a portal to healing and critiques reliance on certain pharmaceutical approaches. - On vaccines, Cohen describes observed adverse effects post COVID-19 vaccination, including histamine issues, barrier permeability, and rapid cancer reports linked to vaccine exposure, while underscoring the lack of widespread funding to investigate these relationships. She mentions turbo cancers and batch variation as topics already discussed by researchers like Kevin McKernan and a need for independent inquiry. - Decentralization, science, and Bitcoin again: - Cohen envisions a decentralized health system in which multiple modalities (acupuncture, Chinese medicine, Ayurveda, allopathic medicine) can be tested for proof of work, with outcomes guiding what works best for individuals. She believes decentralization is necessary for genuine innovation, with a future vision of a decentralized, funded light research lab and a retreat model to study circadian biology, mitochondrial function, and nature-based health in diverse environments (North America and equatorial regions). - She sees Bitcoin as a tool that enables financial sovereignty and autonomy, providing an opportunity to fund decentralized science and publish findings on blockchain to protect against censorship. She highlights the potential for Bitcoin to support a lab through deflationary funding and to empower researchers and patients alike. - Closing: - The conversation closes with practical resources: Thinkific-hosted classes, an online book club, and a QuantumU course that reframes science education around decentralized, nature-based principles. Cohen emphasizes accessible contact options (Instagram and email) and a holiday discount for courses and ebooks. The participants express enthusiasm for ongoing collaboration, travel and events, and continued education in Bitcoin, science, and holistic health. Overall, the episode centers on mitochondria as a foundational health driver, the essential role of light and circadian biology in energy, mood, metabolism, and aging, and a call for decentralized, nature-aligned science, with Bitcoin framed as a funding and governance tool to empower individuals and researchers to pursue health innovation beyond centralized institutions.

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The speaker claims groups like the Trilateral Commission, created by Rockefeller, have been pushing a eugenicist agenda for a long time, and that Keir Starmer is a member. They believe these groups envision an upper and lower class becoming different species, with the lower class becoming mentally retarded and serving the super elite. The speaker asserts technologies framed as mental or genetic enhancement are dual use and can diminish as well as enhance. They state groups like DARPA and the Pentagon have heavily developed these technologies, not only as enhancers but also as weapons of war that can target people on a genetic level. The speaker concludes that "maniacs are in the driver's seat" and people need to take action.

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The talk traces a throughline from mid-20th century to today around nicotine products and the medical establishment, tying financial and political power to how health is marketed and regulated. - In the 1940s, Rockefeller doctors are described as being paid by tobacco companies to promote cigarette smoking. The argument then extends that tobacco companies realized they wouldn’t endure indefinitely, so they sought to keep influence by steering doctors to promote nicotine replacements—nicotine gum and nicotine patches—and they expanded into other nicotine deliveries, including inhalers and CBD products. - The narrative continues by asserting that, by 2025, pharmaceutical companies Johnson & Johnson and GSK are producing all of these nicotine products. It labels these same brands as wanting global vaccination and depopulation and claims they are run by the Rockefellers. It further asserts that another Rockefeller is involved in controlling the medical system and its connections to tobacco. - A chemical claim is raised: polysorbate eighty is found in nicotine gums, and this is described as the same chemical used in vaccines to break down the blood–brain barrier. The claim is made that polysorbate 80 is a modified neurotoxin nanoparticle used in nicotine products and ivermectin, suggesting a link between these products and broader vaccine technologies. - The speaker questions trust in doctors, noting a contrast between ongoing virus narratives and supposed alternative explanations. A claim is made that radio wave sickness has affected people since 2020 and that medical books describe viruses as being manipulated by the Rockefellers and Rothschilds. - The discussion references a recommended reading list: a book about pandemics resulting from new forms of technology and the rollout of injections, and Tom Conlin’s The Contagion Myth, which is said to debunk germs and viruses and the Rockefeller narrative. It notes this discourse traces back to the Flexner Report of 1913. - The closing sentiment frames a choice for the audience: decide whether to believe the stated lies or to move forward, with the implication that the path chosen will determine one’s understanding of health, medicine, and the role of powerful families in shaping medical narratives. In sum, the speaker weaves together claims of Rockefeller influence over doctors, tobacco and nicotine products, pharmaceutical dominance in nicotine delivery by 2025, chemical links to vaccines, alleged misinformation about viruses and “radio wave sickness,” and recommended literature that challenges mainstream germ theory and historic medical authority.

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The host references declassified CIA files suggesting that dating back to the 1950s there was a plan to manipulate Americans’ minds through covert drugging via vaccines, food, and water. They also note Epstein’s reported obsession with transhumanism and gene editing, and observe that there are currently many powerful people who share similar interests. The takeaway asserted is that nothing fundamental has changed, but the technology and capabilities to implement such ideas have advanced, making it a particularly important topic in today’s volatile environment. The host then asks what is really meant when officials talk about humanity merging with AI. Joining the discussion to address this question is researcher Lisa McGee, who appears after a short sponsor message.

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Transcript excerpt from January 1999 discusses a subtitle question about how genetic engineering will change us in the next century. The speakers present the following claims: 'This is January 1999. The statement in the subtitle is, How Genetic Engineering Will Change Us When? In the Next Century.' 'Statin drugs will shut down the absorption of CoQ10.' 'And that's why what Doctor. Group was saying, we need to we're doing this because this conversation has to start now.' 'Because one way direction is giving up your power to somebody else to fix you. The other way is you taking your own power to fix yourself.'

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One question for me. Where does any synthetic molecule serve the living? They don't. And am I right in suggesting that a medicine by definition is something which contains synthetic molecules, something that that is registered, patented, and put into the market as a medicine? Absolutely. a quadrillion dollar enterprise is at work amongst us decimating, culling the human family. Intentionally. Intentionally, using synthetic molecules, which by design are cancer aids, all of them. It's so for purpose of sterilization and population control. There's too many people on the planet we need to get rid of. In the words of Bill Gates, at least three billion people need to die. It is. It's not a bacterial war. It's a systemic poisoning war. And they're using chemical warfare against all of us.

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An integrative doctor with 15 years of experience argues that cholesterol is not the villain and that money heavily influences the medical system. In the 1970s, doctors weren’t aggressively screening for cholesterol because it wasn’t seen as a villain; cholesterol is something the body makes and it is necessary for many bodily functions. By 1984, the government launched the National Cholesterol Education Program, a move the doctor says was largely funded by pharmaceutical companies that were introducing their first statin medications. The American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology also contributed to these guidelines, and the doctor claims both organizations were heavily funded by pharmaceutical companies. Based on this, the doctor suggests that if you’ve been told to take a statin or have been shamed for having high cholesterol, you should revisit the issue because cholesterol is not the villain; our bodies produce it and we need it for everything in the body.

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The speaker presents a slideshow of Time Magazine covers from 1971 to 2015, highlighting the progression of genetic engineering. The covers discuss topics such as the new genetics, DNA manipulation, genetic engineering, and the future of medicine. The speaker emphasizes that these advancements have been openly discussed for decades, but many people have not paid attention. They also mention the importance of RNA in the body's functioning and the existence of an on-off switch for genes.

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The key focus is on well-being, which has shifted over the past 20 to 30 years towards expensive remediation rather than wellness and prevention. The FDA plays a crucial role in this discussion. It raises the question of whether it's worthwhile to continue promoting costly drugs while neglecting preventive measures and overall wellness.

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Your doctor says your cholesterol is too high. "What was considered acceptable cholesterol in 1960 was 300, then two forty, then 200." Every time they lower that number, another fifty million Americans need drugs. "Pfizer made a $125,000,000,000 selling Lipitor, the best selling drug in human history." For every one thousand healthy people who take statins, they prevent exactly one heart attack. The other nine hundred and ninety nine just get side effects. "Up to twenty nine percent of them develop muscle soreness so severe they can't exercise, which actually prevents heart disease." "Nine percent of them develop diabetes, which actually causes heart disease." "Eight out of nine members had financial ties to statin manufacturers. The chairman was paid by five different pharmaceutical companies." "Your brain is 25% cholesterol. Every single hormone in your body needs it." "Those with higher cholesterol lived longer, not shorter." The guidelines are written by Big Pharma's payroll. "Forty million Americans are on statins right now." It's a "$20,000,000,000 annual market" for a drug that helps "zero point one percent" of the people who take it. Share this before your doctor prescribes you a solution for a problem you don't have.

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One speaker argues that mold should not be feared because mold consists of spores, and spores are everywhere; spores are equated to pollen, suggesting that fear of mold is unfounded since they are the same thing. The other speaker adds that there are studies indicating that “those ones all heal all the diseases,” highlighting a notion that fear campaigns around mold are misleading. They claim that if a person has mold, candida, or similar issues in their body, it signifies “too many toxins” and that the body is signaling this excess as a remedy to keep the person alive. The dialogue includes a specific recollection about Ajana, who purportedly said that certain things are in the body so that toxins, metals, or similar substances may not actually take you out; otherwise they would seep into the organs and end you quickly. This is presented as evidence of the body’s miraculous nature. A central theme repeatedly asserted is that “the human body is absolutely miraculous” and that “everything is reversible.” The speakers list various conditions—autism, autoimmune diseases, lupus, and even eyesight—claiming they have witnessed people reverse these conditions. It is stated that people can regenerate their eyes and no longer need an eye professional, and that reversing all conditions is possible if one takes initiative. The speakers critique the medical establishment, implying that “every single professional will tell you the opposite because they want you to be their patient for life.” This sentiment is tied to a broader call for personal action: if people do not make changes—such as removing WiFi or taking other unspecified steps—they will continue to complain rather than find solutions. Overall, the message emphasizes that fear about molds and toxins is misguided, that the body possesses remarkable self-healing capabilities, and that proactive efforts can reverse a wide range of health issues. The speakers express a strong desire to provide solutions and to move people forward, rather than remain mired in complaint.

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The speaker asserts that COVID-19 shots do more than affect the immune system; they can damage the brain and worsen mental health. They claim a wave of studies shows sharp increases in various strokes: ischemic strokes up to 44%, hemorrhagic strokes up to 50%, and transient ischemic attacks (mini strokes) up to 67%. They also report increases in neurological and autoimmune conditions, including myasthenia gravis up 71% and Alzheimer’s disease up 22%. Cognitive impairment is claimed to have risen by nearly 138%, while depression is up 68%, anxiety disorders up 44%, and sleep disorders up 93%. The speaker links all of these increases to “toxic spike protein accumulation and persistence in the brain.” The speaker states this is not a conspiracy theory and cites what they describe as documented peer‑reviewed research and studies by experts. They name epidemiologist Nicholas Holcher, who allegedly says that using mRNA to hijack cells in various organ systems to produce a highly toxic spike protein that persists in the body for months or years was “one of the worst ideas in medical history.” The speaker then asks, “So what can you do?” as a transition to presumably recommendations or actions, though no specific actions are listed in the provided segment.

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Speaker 0 contends that concerns over rising power bills due to AI data centers are about to worsen as BlackRock and Blackstone buy up local power utilities. The piece, attributed to The New American, claims globalist equity firms are acquiring local energy companies nationwide to support AI infrastructure, provoking pushback from ratepayers and regulators. The Associated Press is cited as reporting that private equity giants are purchasing utilities to power AI-driven data centers, raising ratepayer and regulator concerns, with Oregon Citizens Utility Board noting increased public discussion at Public Utility Commissions. Speaker 0 notes a widespread anxiety about electricity costs tied to aging and expanding power infrastructure, including lines, poles, transformers, and generators, as utilities harden for extreme weather. The narrative asserts that apart from general cost increases, the core issue is the AI race, and that large international asset firms are eager to back a technology with potential for surveillance, manipulation, and control, while also seeking strong returns on investment. It claims these firms have historically used monetary power to push corporate support for climate alarmism and transgender activism, and that BlackRock and Blackstone together controlled more than $13 trillion in assets (BlackRock about $12 trillion; Blackstone about $1.2 trillion). It states only the U.S. and China have GDPs larger than $13 trillion. Concrete buyouts and investments are listed: January 2024, Blackstone bought a 20% stake in Northern Indiana Public Service Company for $2.1 billion, with the utility planning to boost green energy production afterward. In January 2025, Blackstone outright bought Potomac Energy Center, a natural gas power plant in Loudoun County, Virginia, for $1 billion, described as Blackstone’s most recent investment in power infrastructure for AI. In March 2025, Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission approved the buyout of Superior Water, Light, and Power by Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and BlackRock subsidiary Global Infrastructure Partners, with BlackRock taking a 60% majority stake. A separate deal: Blackstone bought Hilltop Energy Center, a natural gas power plant in Pennsylvania, for $1 billion, with executives Bilal Khan and Mark Zhu describing the acquisition as AI-focused. Blackstone is also seeking regulatory permission to buy Albuquerque-based Public Service Company of New Mexico and Texas New Mexico PowerCo, while BlackRock and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s attempted purchase of Minnesota Power faces regulatory turbulence; a Minnesota sale could determine how such firms expand in a sector linking households, data centers, and power sources. Speaker 0 adds that the rise of AI is providing these firms with an “excuse” to control infrastructure, and mentions Yuval Noah Harari and the WEF. It cites the WEF’s “you will own nothing” rhetoric and notes Harari’s hypothetical about future irrelevance, Neuralink, and a broader agenda including surveillance, ownership consolidation, and potential reductions in access to private property. It asserts Larry Fink of BlackRock is at the WEF and CFR, and that BlackRock’s broader investments include real estate, farmland, timberland, and single-family rental homes, as part of a “build to rent” scheme. The piece warns that one corporation controlling vast natural resources and power utilities amid rising prices would be disastrous, urging citizens to resist BlackRock’s influence. It contrasts China’s influence with BlackRock’s power, condemning ESG models and the World Economic Forum’s agenda toward a “great reset,” digital currency, digital ID, and reduced access to resources. Speaker 1 interjects with a separate 1999 statement about how genetic engineering will change us and implies a need to start conversations now, arguing that one direction relinquishes power to others while the other empowers individuals to fix themselves. Speaker 0 reiterates that the conversation centers on power, AI, and control, warning against allowing a single corporation to own essential resources. The closing note references the January 1999 statement on genetic engineering, while Speaker 1 emphasizes taking personal power to fix oneself, framing the discussion as a shift in responsibility.

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The discussion centers on pets being used as self-amplifying mRNA vectors. The USDA quietly approved Merck's self-amplifying RNA shots called Novavac NXT for cats and dogs with no real safety testing. It says it gives a small dose of RNA particles delivered in the Novavac NXT vaccine. RNA copies exponentially in the cells, and the copies are transcripted into large amounts of the desired antigen. The antigen stimulates a more robust humular and cellular immune response. All sounds good in theory. However, these injections may shed messenger RNA and synthetic antigens to human owners through breath, saliva, or fluids may cause long term genetic damage similar to that seen in humans may recombine with wild viruses creating dangerous new pathogens. This rollout puts both pets and their owners into an uncontrolled genetic experiment without consent. “So says Nicholas Holcher, Miles per hour. So masters in public health. We don't know. Nobody tested it. Nobody did any studies. We don't have long term studies. We don't have short term studies. We just don't know. I'm a little scared. I really don't want to be a part of this.” And by the way, they're actually talking about spraying messenger RNA on our crops. How are we affecting our I feel like this is the everybody remember the book Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. I think I had to read it in high school. Was one of those required readings. Or what was the other book? 1984? Like, I feel like we're living in this dystopian universe where we just experiment with all these genetic things and we just throw it into the environment and throw it into our pets and throw it into people, and we don't know what the outcome is until we see. Are we all gonna go the way the dinosaurs? I don't know. Now I really sound like a conspiracy theorist. Are we all gonna like, is somebody gonna come along in a few thousand years and find fossil remains and try to figure out why we all died? I don't know. It's fine. It's fine. It's just a little nervous.” One speaker says they homestead: they raise their own chickens. They’re not treated with chemicals. Their dogs and cats don't get vaccinated with things that might shed into the environment, and they’re growing all their own organic fruits and vegetables. “Yep, I'm I'm I'm going that way. Y'all y'all do what you need to do. It's a little scary. I don't recommend that particular vaccine for your dogs. I I guess that's the bottom line. I don't know. Be careful what you eat.”

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The speaker claims the biggest issue is the transhumanism agenda, naming Bill Gates, World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab, and Ray Kurzweil, who 'started this in 2000 roughly '16 going public with what they wanna do.' They say 'we are going to convert God's carbon based life form humans into a silica based cyborg system' and 'they've been doing that,' urging people to take responsibility for health to become superhuman. They claim 'Right now, everybody is about 10% human and 10% machine.' They say they can show, for any person, whether 'vaxxed or unvaxxed,' 'synthetic red blood cells,' 'hydrogels,' and 'nanotechnology,' and insist 'it's everywhere'—in toothpaste, toilet paper, cereal—and that 'they're spraying nanotech and nanodust, smart dust everywhere in the sky with the chemtrails' and 'it's in the water supply.' They mention a transhumanism research team with an electron microscope, ending with 'What we have to focus on right now.'

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Everybody wants to improve their health. The speaker claims people are walking around right now at about 55%, maybe 60% of their true state of normal. "There is a nutrient, amino acid, a substrate, a compound, an element missing from their body that if they knew what it was, make the difference between them being an average person and being a superhuman." They say "This is not a consequence of any of those things." "It's a consequence of missing raw material." They will describe that in detail and "tell you exactly how to put that raw material back into your body and how to find out what it is that's missing so you could thrive in a way that you probably never thought possible."

The Rubin Report

This Is How We Will Fight Disease In The Future | Jamie Metzl | TECH | Rubin Report
Guests: Jamie Metzl
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Jamie Metzl joins Dave Rubin to discuss how rapidly advancing biology and technology will reshape medicine, ethics, and society. The conversation centers on translating complex genetic science into accessible ideas so the public can participate in shaping its trajectory. Metzl describes the shift from traditional, population-based healthcare to precision medicine tailored to an individual’s biology, history, and even predicted life events. He explains that genome sequencing will become a standard part of healthcare, enabling big-data analyses that reveal probabilistic risks and guide preventive actions, not just treatment after symptoms appear. The discussion emphasizes the interplay between scientific capability and societal values, arguing that science does not exist in a vacuum but within the context of governance, culture, and policy. Metzl stresses the importance of broad public education and dialogue to avert dystopian outcomes and ensure technologies strengthen communities and human potential rather than exacerbate inequality. The episode then moves to gene editing, explaining how tools like CRISPR-Cas9 enable reading, editing, and rewriting genetic information. They cover germline editing versus somatic cell therapy, including recent controversial experiments and the ethical lines that separate therapeutic gains from enhancements. Metzl argues for cautious, transparent progress that targets serious genetic diseases while acknowledging the potential of genome edits to improve quality of life, provided governance keeps pace with innovation. The hosts and guest explore the speed of global collaboration and competition, the geopolitical implications of powerful biotech capabilities, and the need for globally informed decision-making. The discussion touches on popular culture references and the role of storytelling in making complex science approachable, including Carl Sagan’s influence and the idea that humanity must balance curiosity with responsibility as it reshapes what it means to be human.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #672 - Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Guests: Dr. Rhonda Patrick
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Joe Rogan and Dr. Rhonda Patrick discuss various health topics, starting with kombucha and its alcohol content. They touch on the dangers of excessive water consumption leading to health issues, including fatalities. Dr. Patrick shares insights on sauna use, highlighting a study that shows a 40% decrease in all-cause mortality for men who use saunas frequently. They discuss the cardiovascular benefits of sauna use, including increased heart rate and blood flow, and the activation of heat shock proteins that help prevent cellular damage associated with aging. Dr. Patrick explains the role of heat shock proteins in longevity and muscle recovery, referencing studies on worms and mice that show increased lifespan and muscle regrowth when exposed to heat stress. They also explore the effects of hyperbaric chambers, noting that while they can provide oxygen benefits, they may also cause damage due to increased oxygen levels. The conversation shifts to cold exposure, including cold water immersion and cryotherapy, discussing their benefits for muscle recovery and inflammation. Dr. Patrick mentions studies showing that cold exposure can enhance recovery and reduce muscle damage, but warns that timing and context matter. They delve into the importance of gut health, discussing how gut bacteria influence overall health and mental well-being. Dr. Patrick highlights the connection between gut health and conditions like depression and anxiety, emphasizing the role of probiotics and dietary choices in maintaining gut health. The discussion includes the significance of micronutrients like vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids in mental health, particularly their effects on serotonin pathways and impulsive behavior. Dr. Patrick shares insights from her research on how deficiencies in these nutrients can lead to increased risks of depression and other mental health issues. They also touch on genetic factors that influence nutrient metabolism, discussing how certain genetic variations can affect an individual's response to diet and supplementation. Dr. Patrick explains how understanding these genetic factors can help optimize health and prevent diseases. Finally, they discuss advancements in genetic engineering, particularly CRISPR technology, and its potential applications in medicine, including the possibility of using stem cells to treat various conditions. Dr. Patrick expresses excitement about the future of genetic research and its implications for health and longevity.

Philion

SLOPPY TUESDAY
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On this stream, host clocks in for a daily eight-hour session and explains the shift from polished, research-heavy videos to goofy, live content he calls 'slop.' He argues this style is sustainable, helps cast the widest net, and allows him to stay in control of what gets published. He describes chasing flow states by balancing challenge with skill, and he treats the algorithm as a tool to maximize consistency, audience growth, and personal satisfaction rather than mere clicks. Next, the main thread centers Hussein Farhat's claim of natural status and Anabolic Stick's critique. Hussein and coach Greg Ducet promote a drug-tested natural show as proof, but a competitor named Sharief says no one was tested at King Kong Classic's natural division; Hussein later acknowledges the testing omission. The creator explains he paid $400 in testing fees across eight categories, won seven medals, yet was not tested. He cites CPA testing failures and argues others benefited from lax rules, while denying he lied. On the geopolitical fringe, the discussion veers into 9/11, World Trade Center 7, and networks. The host traces alleged financial crimes tied to WTC7, Larry Silverstein, and connections among the Carile Group, the Bin Laden family, and U.S. defense contractors. The narrative threads imply foreknowledge of the attack and use of sensitive documents, with references to Saudi intelligence, CIA proxies, Safari Club ties, and a sprawling web that critics say is designed to chill inquiry rather than prove certainty. Interspersed is a scientific inflection about biotechnology and performance enhancement. A segment outlines Regeneron's two-drug myostatin/ActRI pathway antagonists—Travagramab and Greta Mab—purporting to unlock muscle growth, with non-human primate data and a warning that side effects, lipid risk, and metabolic burden accompany rapid gains. The host mocks the fantasy of effortless mass and frames biotech discourse as a frontier that could redefine training, demand regulation, and force athletes to confront what counts as real progress.

Mind Pump Show

Mind Pump Challenges Big Pharma: A Look at The Future of Health in America
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The pharmaceutical industry benefits from a population that is overweight and unhealthy, as they represent a significant consumer base. Dr. Fatima Stanford, a member of the Biden USDA's dietary guidelines advisory committee, claims that genetics is the primary cause of obesity, with a 50 to 80 percent risk of obesity for children of obese parents. She also describes obesity as a brain disease, suggesting that the brain regulates eating and storage. However, the hosts argue that lifestyle factors play a crucial role in obesity and express concern over the narrative that genetics absolves personal responsibility. They highlight the pharmaceutical industry's profit motives, noting that a larger market of obese individuals leads to increased drug sales. The discussion points to the alarming trend of labeling obesity as a disease, which could open the door for more medications and shift focus away from lifestyle changes. The hosts emphasize the importance of empowerment and personal agency in addressing obesity, warning against the potential consequences of accepting a narrative that diminishes individual responsibility.

PBD Podcast

Dr. Rhonda Patrick: Fasting, Creatine, Brain Performance & Longevity Breakthroughs | PBD #740
Guests: Dr. Rhonda Patrick
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dr. Rhonda Patrick discusses how biological aging differs from chronological age and outlines lifestyle choices that can influence cellular aging, including the potential for regenerative approaches such as induced pluripotent stem cells and gene therapy. She explains how aging might be slowed or reversed at the organ level, with an emphasis on the brain and heart, and describes how stresses like obesity, inflammation, and poor metabolic health accelerate aging. The conversation covers the rapid trajectory of AI in science, highlighting how artificial intelligence and machine learning could accelerate understanding of aging processes and translate lab findings into human therapies, while also acknowledging that AI can generate errors and requires careful, evidence-based use. The host and guest explore three forward-looking possibilities in biotechnology, including reprogramming aging cells while preserving cell identity, growing organs from a patient’s own cells to avoid immune rejection, and delivering longevity-associated genes through gene therapy or gene editing tools such as CRISPR. They also debate the ethical implications of gene enhancement and the prospect of choosing physical traits in offspring, noting the social and moral questions that would accompany such capabilities. The discussion expands to practical health strategies, with a focus on exercise as a critical determinant of cardiovascular and brain health. They review intensive, evidence-backed exercise regimens that can reverse certain aging markers in middle age, compare high-intensity interval training to steady activity, and emphasize viewing exercise as personal hygiene. Alongside physical activity, they cover dietary approaches, intermittent fasting, and the role of ketones in cognitive endurance, particularly under stress, as well as creatine’s dual impact on muscle performance and brain energy. The guests also touch on the gut–brain axis, describing how gut inflammation, LPS translocation, and microbiome composition influence mood, cognition, and disease risk, while underscoring that diet quality, fiber, and activity are central to a healthier gut. The discussion closes with reflections on happiness, purpose, relationships, and mortality awareness as foundational components of longevity, linking science to everyday life choices including family, spirituality, and mental well-being.

American Alchemy

UFOs & Human Experiments: Big Pharma's Horrific Past... (ft. Brigham Buhler)
Guests: Brigham Buhler
reSee.it Podcast Summary
From the outset, the conversation stitches together a provocative thesis: the modern health system is deeply entangled with political power, corporate profit, and hidden histories. The speakers trace a throughline from the early 20th century reforms to today’s sick-care economy, then layer in a parallel story about UFOs, covert programs, and the uneasy boundary between government secrecy and private industry. The result is a portrait of a dystopian trend that feels both alarming and challengeable. Historically, the ascent of big pharma began with the Flexner Report of 1910, funded by Rockefeller and Carnegie, which prompted widespread consolidation of medical training around drug-based approaches. The American Medical Association and the FDA emerged as enforcers of this new order, and countless schools were shut or aligned to patentable therapies. The hosts juxtapose this with wartime atrocities and postwar intelligence, noting Unit 731, the transfer of data to the United States, and the collusion that tied medicine to military aims. The narrative continues with the corporate-military axis after the war: Bayer’s ties to the Third Reich, its later absorption of Monsanto, and the spread of defoliants like Agent Orange and glyphosate into agriculture and health. The conversation recounts contaminated HIV-laced hemophilia products and outbreaks of environmental toxins. It then traces intelligence-driven medical experiments from MKUltra to the CIA’s office of research and development, and how a private sector arm eventually absorbed those programs as SURL and its successors, linking private pharma to covert science. Amid these histories, the episode dives into electromagnetic therapies, DNA as a potential antenna, and visions of hidden science. The speakers describe early 20th‑century devices and researchers who claimed to zero in on pathogens through energy frequencies, then recount modern anecdotes of refractive devices, biophotons, and radio‑like effects on cells. They connect DNA’s fractal geometry to possible cosmic signaling, cite panspermia and directed panspermia, and reference Nobel discussions around living software written in DNA, suggesting a broader science just beyond mainstream acceptance. Toward the end, the guests pivot to agency and reform. They argue for proactive, predictive healthcare that uses biomarkers, bone density, fitness metrics, and wearable data to extend health span. They advocate separating genuine innovation from profit-driven inertia, closing the gap between research and practice, and expanding access to preventative modalities. The conversation closes with optimism about political leadership, cross‑disciplinary inquiry, and the belief that open dialogue can reveal truth across health, science, and the UFO question.
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