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Speaker 0: - You should avoid uranium; stay away and don’t put it in a cloud buster because then it’s gonna clear up your skies. - Uranium makes plants grow like crazy. - It also supports the bees; same with electroculture. - If you add radium or uranium into the water, you get artesian spring water; that’s where all the hot springs come from. - To see how green it’s becoming, look at that—look at those guys; stunning. Look at the bees—bees galore in Arizona. - Interesting. - The old fake nukes, they gotta scare you away. - The other interesting thing about uranium is how yellow the brittle burst becomes. - It’s pretty wild. Look at him having the time of his life. - And if you wanna get crazier, look at my shoe. Look at how big these are.

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The transcript centers on claims about the history and alleged manipulation around radium and radon, framing it as a widespread government deception. It opens with a reference to “the radium girls” and asserts that a book debunks the government’s lie, followed by a provocative contrast between what is claimed and what is alleged to be true about radium. Key assertions include: radium used to be in everything; people drank water out of radium glass containers; radium springs and hot springs were described as very beneficial and healing, but the speaker warns to “better run away.” The speaker then states that there have been no studies showing that the radium itself poisoned anybody, and concludes that it was “the paint” that caused harm. The discussion moves to a post–World War II claim: “after World War two, they said, oh, can't have any more radium for you guys, but we can put it in our aircrafts.” This is presented as an example of selective use of radium. The narrative then shifts to radon gas, challenging conventional views by claiming that there were discussions about radon gas and that it is associated with paradoxical health signals. The speaker asserts that there are areas with radon gas that have the lowest levels of “the big c,” with “best immune systems, lower cases of the c,” and uses this to claim that the government has lied about radon’s dangers. A broader critical stance is stated when the speaker asserts that “the US government just lying to the people,” suggesting a pattern of deception regarding radium and radon. The closing lines introduce a sensational comparison: “Radium apple, immortal. Nonradium apple, not immortal.” This juxtaposition is used to illustrate, in the speaker’s view, why people were told to stay away from radium. Throughout, the transcript preserves the speaker’s voice and rhetorical stance, presenting a series of factual-sounding claims about radium’s ubiquity, supposed health benefits, alleged lack of poisoning evidence, postwar distribution, radon-related health narratives, and the provocative immortal-apple imagery. The overarching message is that there has been extensive deception by authorities regarding radium and related substances, leading to a conclusion that certain warnings were issued to steer people away from something deemed “immortal.”

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Speaker 0 discusses deionized water in pharmaceuticals, claiming that water is treated to remove its electrical conductivity and that this process transfers conductivity out of the water into the pharmaceutical products. He describes an experiment in which he drank deionized water purchased at Whole Foods after running out of distilled water. He emphasizes that he does not endorse drinking it and characterizes the experience as the most crazy he ever had. He states that the water “kinda tasted weird” and, within about 30 to 40 minutes, he felt his whole body shut down. According to his account, he experienced a rapid drop in blood sugar, turned white and pale, and found that he could not function. He describes the effect as instant and extremely rapid. From his perspective, these observations lead to the conclusion that pharmaceuticals containing toxins and deionized water are capable of “shutting your body down.” He further asserts that as different parts of the body are shut down, this would result in various side effects and health problems.

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Speaker 0 argues that the cream in an Oreo cookie isn’t real cream at all, but rapeseed oil mixed with emulsifiers, which are used to glue oil and sugar together so it stays smooth even when it isn’t real food. The cookie part isn’t chocolate either; it’s stripped cocoa and chemical stabilizers. They remove most of the cocoa fat, then rebuild the powder with stabilizers and conditioners so they last forever. The speaker asks what happens when you try to burn these long-lasting ingredients, noting that it doesn’t burn and instead glows. They say, “What kind of natural food do you know of that does this? Food doesn’t usually do that, but materials do. You’re already infected.” The segment ends with “Brain rot reels.”

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People get energy from sunlight, and those in the sun eat less food. Children should be outside in the sun without shirts, running barefoot on the grass to get electrons, which is free energy. The electron transfer chain in mitochondria is powered by the sun. The idea that the sun causes cancer is false. The sun is a nutrient that makes all life exist and charges everything. Sunscreen contains carcinogenic chemicals. The speaker, age 51, has never used sunscreen, has had no work done, eats meat, and drives a convertible to maximize sun exposure because it makes them younger. The government is lying. Do the opposite of what the government says.

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Speaker 0 describes an experiment in which young white rats were placed directly in front of a TV set for the same time periods as bean plants and children exhibiting tired child syndrome symptoms. Using semi time lapse photography, partially speeding up the action, the results show that the young rats on the left, protected only with black photographic paper, became aggressive and more difficult to manage. In contrast, those on the right, protected with a lead shield, remained perfectly normal and docile. Autopsies were performed on all of these animals, revealing brain tissue damage in the rats protected only with the black paper, but not in those protected with the lead shielding.

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The speaker claims that uranium placed in the sun “charges” and gives a charge to the body. They also claim that uranium or radium placed in or next to water “turns it to spring water.” The speaker then asks, “Do you see why they tell you stay away? Get steep.”

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We've been misled about history, like the benefits of radium in the past. Radium was used for health, heating, and everyday items. Despite its widespread use, we only hear about negative stories like the radium girls. Natural radiation is safe, but man-made radiation is different. Greed led to the abandonment of radium for profit. Question everything.

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In this talk, the presenter argues that uranium should be avoided, presenting a series of claims about its surprising effects and implications. The central message is to stay away from uranium, with several sensational points used to illustrate its supposed influence. - Cloud busting and skies: The speaker says, “Stay away. Don’t put it in a cloud buster because then it's gonna clear up your skies,” framing uranium as something that disrupts weather or sky clarity. - Plant growth in the desert: It’s claimed that uranium “makes plants grow like crazy,” implying unusual or enhanced growth in desert environments. - Bee support and electroculture: The narrative suggests that uranium “supports the bees,” and later ties this to electroculture, presenting uranium as favorable to bee populations and related practices. - Water enrichment and artesian springs: The talk asserts that “if you add radium or uranium into the water, you get artesian spring water,” connecting uranium to a desirable water source. - Green transformation and visual evidence: The speaker indicates there is a “green” transformation happening, prompting the audience to “look at that” and observe “those guys,” followed by a claim that it is “stunning,” with mention of bees “galore” in Arizona and a broader assertion that uranium is driving visible ecological changes. - Opposition to conventional narratives: The phrase “old fake nukes” is used to suggest that there is a scare tactic to keep people away from uranium, implying misinformation or manipulation around nuclear topics. - Physical and sensory notes: The talk briefly describes uranium as making a “yellow the brittle burst” (likely a reference to a visual or material property) and ends with a personal aside about someone “having a time of his life,” and a remark about the speaker’s shoe size as part of the casual, offbeat tone. Throughout, the speaker uses provocative visuals and provocative statements to argue for considering uranium in unconventional or controversial ways, emphasizing the idea that conventional warnings are to be resisted and that uranium has striking, surprising effects on environment, water, and biology.

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We've been misled about history, especially regarding the health benefits of radium. In the past, radium was used for heating, in bathhouses, and even in everyday items like chocolates and cigarettes. Despite its widespread use, only negative stories like the radium girls are highlighted. Natural radiation is safe, but once corporations saw profit potential in other energy sources, radium fell out of favor. It's a tale of profit over health and history.

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The speaker discusses radium and challenges the common warning to stay away from it, linking radium to healing properties historically observed in radium hot springs. They describe how radium hot springs were used to address inflammation, arthritis, pain, and brain fog, noting that people looked up radium hot springs worldwide to find these benefits. The key point made is that the healing effects attributed to radium water come from the sulfur content, which the speaker claims is present in radium water because radium and sulfur look exactly the same. Therefore, while the public is discouraged from radium, the speaker argues that radium water’s benefits stem from sulfur. The speaker brings up the well-known “radium girls” to counter the narrative that radium is purely dangerous, explaining that the girls were exposed because they were licking paint for long hours. The implication is that their illness was a result of licking paint, not radium exposure itself, and the statement is framed to support the idea that radium-related health outcomes are misunderstood or misrepresented. Additionally, the speaker asserts that radium springs exist nearby in British Columbia, Canada, and claims that such springs are widespread. They state that prominent figures and elite groups—specifically naming the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, JFK, and “all the presidents”—used to visit radium springs, suggesting a history of elite patronage of these waters. The speaker also mentions that people used to hold radium stones in their hands to heal inflammation and pain, emphasizing a practice involving direct contact with radium as a form of treatment. A broader claim presented is that humans are inherently radioactive, which the speaker ties to the rationale for being told to stay away from radium. The overall thread is that radium has healing potential, particularly through sulfur in radium water, but public warnings and historical narratives have been crafted to discourage engagement with radium. The speaker presents radium and radium-related practices as historically sanctioned by notable individuals and used for medical benefits, while contrasting these with the contemporary caution against radium exposure.

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The speaker argues that tanning with a UV bulb has benefits and presents tanning as a solution while noting that government actions block out the sun. They claim that during Obama's administration tanning beds were targeted to be taxed to eliminate them, and that this tax “worked,” causing many people to stop tanning because they feared skin issues. The speaker contends the real factors were the lotions and what people are eating, and asserts that the government targets anything that could make people healthy, such as the sun or UV bulbs, especially in opposition to “big harma.” They recount a claim about Kellogg’s, stating Kellogg's was the creator of the first tanning bed in the 1890s, supposedly to find a solution to diabetes, and suggesting his cereal was causing diabetes while he actually wanted a solution. The speaker then references the early 1900s, noting that hospitals would put people out in the sun and that this was a natural method of healing, contrasting it with injections, radiation, chemotherapy, and pills, implying sun exposure was the preferred healing method.

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The speaker discusses differences between radium and sulfur, claiming that radium’s apparent similarity to sulfur can mislead people. They state that radium water contains a lot of sulfur, and that sulfur is actually responsible for the healing properties attributed to hot springs. According to the speaker, people are told not to drink from radium glassware or to use radium pads on the body, implying that those cautions are intended to misdirect from the sulfur-related healing effects. The speaker notes a connection between radium and the UV spectrum, describing radium as related to the sun spectrum. They claim that people used to infuse radium into glass and then drink from it. The term “radium girls” is mentioned, with the suggestion that concerns about radium are overstated or part of a larger pattern of caution. A point is raised that painting with radium is linked to illness, highlighting that “the ladies were licking paint” for ten hours a day and that licking paint is dangerous, implying that those risks are more significant than the risks associated with radium itself. The speaker mentions a belief in radium hot springs, referencing British Columbia, Canada, and asserts that those springs are widespread. They list prominent families and figures—the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, JFK, and “all the presidents”—as having frequented Radium Springs, implying a historical elite association with the sites. The speaker claims that the admonitions to stay away from radium are deliberate, equating this with similar cautions about radium stones. They recall that people used to hold radium stones in their hands to heal inflammation and pain, emphasizing that radium is a radioactive material and that individuals are “radioactive beings.” The overarching assertion is that the public is told to avoid radium, but the speaker questions why, suggesting a hidden motive. In closing, the speaker reiterates that people are told to stay away from radium and advises not to go around looking at it, reinforcing the message that radium carries dangers that are framed as higher than the risks presented by other substances.

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This man ate radioactive uranium believing it was safe because uranium is not soluble in body fluids. Galen Windsor, a nuclear physicist, challenged the fear of radiation, claiming it was exaggerated by energy cartels to control power resources and prices. He performed daring stunts like swimming in reactor pools and drinking their water. Windsor wrote a book and spoke out extensively on the topic. Translation (if needed): Este hombre comió uranio radioactivo creyendo que era seguro porque el uranio no es soluble en los fluidos corporales. Galen Windsor, un físico nuclear, desafió el miedo a la radiación, afirmando que era exagerado por los cárteles de energía para controlar los recursos y precios de energía. Realizó acrobacias atrevidas como nadar en piscinas de reactores y beber su agua. Windsor escribió un libro y habló extensamente sobre el tema.

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In 1897, Scientific American discussed fake foods and mentioned that artificial eggs were to be made in a laboratory. The whites were described as a mixture of sulfur, carbon, and beef fat, and the yolks as beef blood, magnesia (magnesium), and colored with chrome yellow. The transcript notes that fake eggs in 1897 were made in a lab. It then connects this to modern discussions of lab-made foods in 2025, mentioning Billy Boy Gates and “all the other stuff,” and asserts that Rockefeller’s and Rothschild’s influence has involved making fake foods for a long time. The speaker claims that in 1897 many people appeared ill and unhealthy because they were eating fake food, and that this fake food was coated with super phosphate because John D. Rockefeller was supplying all the chemical fertilizers, which were burning up people’s feet. The speaker states that this is why people were told they had worms because they were being burned by the fertilizer. The transcript reiterates the point that in 1897 there were fake foods. It is further mentioned that the average person should be a carnivore, noting that this narrative has flipped over time. The speaker observes that Netflix no longer presents that story and suggests looking up information not covered by Netflix, specifically pointing to the Maasai tribe. The Maasai are described as having a certain diet, but the transcript notes that they don’t eat their natural diet anymore because foods have been shipped in and vaccines have been introduced. The speaker adds that Netflix isn’t going to tell anyone this because they have a story to tell.

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Speaker 0: They found thousands of microchips, nanotech, and show you in a video all the nanotechs in these shots and injections, including dental anesthetics. Then Rafa Calvin explains, "I'm now gonna do a test and an experiment, and I wanna see I'm gonna see if doctor Brian Artis's theory is correct." He takes organic tobacco leaf. He shows us. They actually boil water and for ten minutes put tobacco leaf in it and just steep the water. Then he takes the water and he drops it videoing the nanochips under the microscope. He then drops the water that has nicotine from the tobacco leaf in it. He drops it on there. And you should watch in this three minute clip, thousands of nanotech are just dissolved by the nicotine. It actually the nicotine in the water goes through the medium and literally grabs the the microchip and dissolves it, then goes to the next one, dissolves that one, goes to next one, dissolves that one. And not me. La Quinta Columnas research facility said, as showing the video of all nanotech being dissolved by nicotine, as I said, you should be looking at, they said, please share this video all around the world. There is no more important message or video that should be seen than this one for the whole world. It could single handedly protect all of humanity.

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- We take that chemical weapon that's an acute toxic flammable environmental hazard and ship it to compound pharmacies that put it in supplements, protein powders, and energy drinks. - Celsius energy drink has four times the amount of daily cyanide that a human being is meant to ingest. - Bang has methylcobalamin; this has cyanocobalamin. - Hydrogen cyanide is sourced from sewage treatment plant sludge—the waste from a human sewage treatment plant, called sludge. - They dry it into powder, ship it to a facility, synthesize it with a metal, and put it in your vitamins; they take metal, hydrogen cyanide, and put it in our supplements. - When you get home tonight, take all of your supplements and protein powders, look for cyanocobalamin, and if it has it, throw it in the trash. Do that for your kids too.

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Speaker 0 explains that pink uranium glass is actually magnesium glass. They state that you have magnesium, uranium, cobalt, and manganese, and those are all the different types of glass that exist. According to the speaker, when a person consumes each different glassware, each different property gives a different property to the body to heal the body. If a person is feeling down, they might use a little uranium. If someone has low energy, they might use cobalt. If they’re experiencing depression, they might use manganese or magnesium. The speaker asserts that all of these different glasswares emit different frequencies, which heal the body in a different way, and this is why people used to drink out of them. They mention uranium glass, depression glass, and baseline glass as part of the old world. The speaker then connects this to alchemy, stating that this is part of alchemy and part of the Bohemians. They claim the Bohemians used to perform alchemy where they would transmute a material into the glass. They assert that after World War II, they got rid of Bohemia, a country that no longer exists because it was absorbed into other countries, because they wanted to get rid of the Bohemian roots. The speaker notes that the only Bohemia people know is Bohemian Grove, which they claim has inverted everything. They conclude by reiterating that Bohemia was very connected to alchemy.

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Speaker 0 discusses radon gas, noting that people often ask about it when buying a house and that you’re required to fill out documents about radon. The speaker references Jane Goldberg and the Cohen study, saying the results were entirely unanticipated: the areas with the highest radon levels had the lowest levels of cancer, and the lowest cancer levels occurred where radon and radon levels were highest. The speaker states that this was concluded by the EPA, which also requires you to fill out a document to see if there is radon beneath your home. The speaker then suggests a pattern of deception, asking the audience if they see how “they’re tricking people.” The claim is that the highest levels of radon found in homes yielded a lower incidence of cancer, better immune systems, and longer life. The speaker asserts that “every single thing” supports this, and then shifts to a broader accusation: radon causes cancer, which the speaker says is why “they lied to people,” implying that lies exist so people will buy land “pennies on the dollar.” The goal, according to the speaker, is to access the radium and uranium underneath the land to use it in power plants for unlimited energy. The speaker reinforces this narrative by stating they are holding a uranium stone the entire time and claim to be perfectly alive and fully charged, adding that it “puts you in the zen state.” The overall message is that people have been tricked, brainwashed, lied to, and manipulated. In summary, the speaker connects radon, cancer, and supposed hidden uranium resources to a conspiracy about manipulation and control of land and energy, contrasting official documentation and EPA involvement with claims of deception and hidden energetic effects.

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A speaker presents a surprising experiment with an Aldi loaf of bread purchased over two and a half years ago, kept in an office as a demonstration. The speaker notes that the bread has been in the office for more than two years and can be used like an accordion, smashed up, and then it will return to its original shape. Eric is mentioned as someone who can attest that the bread has remained in the office for over two years. The speaker points to a close-up of the loaf and observes that there is no mold and that it smells fine. The bread’s resilience—being smashed and then bouncing back—has been demonstrated, reinforcing the claim that the bread has persisted for an extended period. The overall implication drawn by the speaker is a concern about food content and preservation, prompting a question: "What the hell is in our food?" This query signals a broader investigative aim. The speaker concludes with a commitment to action: they plan to come and find out what is in the food and to work on legislation to provide information on what is being put into people's bodies. The dialogue frames the experiment as a provocative example intended to drive legislative attention toward transparency about food ingredients and additives. Key points: - Aldi loaf of bread purchased over two and a half years ago is kept in an office as an experiment. - The bread has remained unmolded and smells fine after more than two years. - It can be smashed and will come back to its original shape, illustrating remarkable persistence. - Eric corroborates that the bread has been in the office for over two years. - The demonstration raises questions about what is in our food. - The speakers intend to work on legislation to provide information about food contents for consumers.

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Speaker 0 says creatine is made in a lab from two chemicals placed in a chamber and heated and pressurized until they turn into liquid, with zero meat involved. When people say it worked, he claims it's because it's a form of salt. He adds that instead of eating something from Bill Gates, he would choose red raw meat or raw eggs, and suggests to think about it.

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Speaker 0 claims that Chernobyl was fake and that it was a steam power plant, describing it as “steam energy” and saying the nuclear or nuclear, whatever, is fake. He asserts that all of this is just steam energy and that Galen Windsor “basically explain[ed] about how they’re just giant steam plants,” and asks how dangerous a nuclear reactor plant is. Speaker 1 responds by saying a nuclear reactor plant is “just a way to boil water” and calls it “the cleanest, neatest, most economical way to boil water that you’ve ever seen.” Speaker 0 continues, claiming he has held uranium in his hand and radium in his hand, and that he literally holds stones while he works out, insisting it’s all giant steam plants. He states that when a steam plant explodes, it can explode “just kinda like if you think of trains and and cars back in the day,” and reiterates that there is no radiation. He asserts that there is no radioactive anything and that “you are a radioactive being,” explaining that your heart beating is radiation, and asks where the beating of the heart comes from, implying it is radiation. He concludes with a reiterated association of Chernobyl to this viewpoint.

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"This is a small sample of uranium." "five g radiation is nonionizing radiation and has a wavelength in the millimeter range, very close to what microwave range frequencies just like Wi Fi and microwave ovens give off." "So technically, the main damage we need to worry about with five g is if it's giving enough power to heat your body up like in a microwave." "Let's see how strong the signal is from my phone." "Woah. 89." "you actually get way more radiation holding your phone to your head than being near a tower." "it's orders of magnitude lower than the amount that could cause heating to your body." "the battery warming up in your phone is gonna cause more heating on your body than the five g radiation is." "Aren't you glad cell phones don't use uranium?"

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The speaker shares shocking results from lab analysis on natural flavors in sparkling water. Residual solvents, including pentadione and diacetyl linked to health risks, were found in a lime flavor extract. These substances are known to cause popcorn lung. The speaker questions the true nature of "natural" flavors.

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Cereals are ground up, watered, and run through a magnet to extract metallic iron filings. In 1940, it was decided this was good for people due to iron deficiency anemia. Metallic iron filings were then put in food. The speaker hopes to bring this to Kennedy's attention to kick start public trust and open the door to discussing other toxic food additives. A woman who worked in a cereal factory said they put a cup full of metallic iron filings into the oven when finishing cornflakes. The speaker questions how scientists rationalize that a metallic form of something could be good for you, concluding that we are ruled by idiots.
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