reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that parasites and cancer have been kept separate topics despite evidence linking them, noting that the NIH has many studies on ivermectin and cancer while doctors worldwide show videos, and referencing a German 1990s project suggesting cancer is caused by intracellular parasites. He cites an example of an adenocarcinoma of the bowel or breast cancer under the light microscope appearing essentially indistinguishable from parasite egg sacs, and relays Brian Artis’s account of a forty-year Egyptian parasitologist who said, “In forty years in parasitology, not one oncologist has told me has made that association, but we talk about it all the time in parasitology circles.” He concludes that “they know that cancer is parasites” but that researchers do not speak about it to avoid losing funding.
Speaker 1 shifts to the microbiome and physiology, noting that 40–60 percent of blood volume passes through the mesenteric gut, delivering blood through arteries with melanopsin receptors. He explains that prokaryotes (bacteria) release 5,000 times more light than eukaryotic cells. Physicist Fritz Pott reportedly showed that every cell emits a specific frequency of light called extreme low frequency UV, though the spectrum remains unknown. He conceptualizes the microbiome as a light projector and the enterocyte surface as the screen, with the information buried in the emitted light driving microbiome function. He contends that light is central to quantum biology in the gut and that current biology and gut health research do not fully understand this.
Speaker 1 praises Jeff Leach’s work, referencing a paper on HASDA equatorial populations fed highly processed foods; the microbiome did not change with diet, and he views this as pivotal, arguing that exposure to nature and sun alters the microbiome. He explains that migration changes the microbiome due to changes in latitude and diurnal light variation, which suggests that light, water, and magnetism sculpt the gut microbiome in powerful, perhaps paradigm-shifting ways. He mentions a blog post (CPC number 42) and plans to share counterintuitive connections between the gut and brain in Europe (Poland and Germany) after releasing related material on Patreon.
Speaker 1 urges microbiome researchers to analyze the spectrum of light emitted by the microbiome, proposing photo multiplier techniques to understand species variation tied to environmental light. He notes UV light is toxic to most prokaryotes, while blue, green, and red light are preferred by many bacteria; mitochondria, derived from a bacterium 650 million years ago, tolerate UV light due to cytochrome components and fluorophore proteins. He describes NAD/NADH as a light-absorbing electron acceptor linked to tryptophan, absorbing 340 nm light, and asserts that carbohydrate electrons enter mitochondria via cytochrome one, with environmental light signals influencing both the skin and gut, and ultimately affecting the brain, blood-brain barrier, and even the cervical spinal cord barrier. He concludes that the gut is a counterintuitive quantum biologic tissue and that many diseases originate outside the gut, with skin and eye signals altering gut processes and biophysical properties of CSF and barriers.