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Drug companies won't test natural substances because they can't be patented. FDA requires testing for safety and efficacy, but natural products won't be tested due to lack of patentability. This creates a cycle where natural remedies are deemed unproven by the FDA.

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The speaker discusses peptides and their rise in popularity on social media, describing them as big pharma products. They claim peptides are essentially the same as big pharma vitamins, just in injectable form, and assert that people are now supporting the same pharmaceutical companies by using peptides rather than taking vaccines. The speaker expresses astonishment that, after 2020, people would inject things into their bodies without knowing what they are putting in, yet peptide injections have become a trending topic across the Internet and social media. They extend the critique to other substances, stating that methylane blue, ivermectin, and nicotine are also part of the same pattern: if something is trendy on social media, it is backed by big pharma. The speaker asserts that this is what is happening with peptides and that big pharma maintains powerful marketing to influence public perception. They claim that big pharma gets people to believe in certain products and to ignore other concerns, such as “cell phone towers out in front of their house,” while encouraging them to jump on the bandwagon of other products to put into their body. The speaker argues that peptides represent a broader phenomenon where trendy health products are promoted by big pharma, similar to the way vaccines were promoted in 2020. They state that after 2020, one would think people would avoid injecting anything into their body because they don’t know what they are putting into it, yet the trend continues with peptides and related products. The overall assertion is that big pharma has strong marketing that convinces people to adopt various products and to overlook potential concerns, shaping consumer behavior through trends on social media. The speaker notes that the peptide trend is part of this larger pattern, alongside other substances like methylane blue, ivermectin, and nicotine, all of which are implied to be backed by big pharma when they gain online popularity.

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This video discusses the discovery of major corporations owning multiple shampoo brands, some of which have been involved in lawsuits for causing hair loss. The speaker also mentions researching the wrong company and finding a billionaire who had nothing to do with shampoo. The focus then shifts to finding brands owned by founders or families instead of big investment banks. The speaker highlights Fairy Tales Hair Care and Mane and Tail as examples. They provide a spreadsheet on their website with information on shampoo brands and their owners. The speaker also explores the black hair care aisle and discovers that some brands advertised as black female founder-owned have been bought out by large corporations. They plan to make more videos exploring other store aisles and products.

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Drug companies are not interested in natural substances that cannot be patented. The FDA requires substances to be tested for safety and effectiveness before they can be used legally. However, since natural substances cannot be patented, drug companies are unlikely to spend the money to test them. As a result, the FDA will always consider natural substances unproven and condemn them.

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Today, we'll discuss the war on natural remedies. The AMA formed the Committee on Quackery in 1963, leading federal agents to arrest those selling vitamins and supplements. Independent health practitioners faced persecution by the AMA, American Cancer Society, and Arthritis Foundation. People were jailed for herbal formulas, while harmful drugs were freely distributed. The Rockefeller Medical Monopoly funded these aggressive actions, targeting elderly women for selling herbal teas.

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Speaker 0: Ivermectin is owned by Merck. Merck created the first vaccine. Anything ivermectin, I wouldn't be touching any of that stuff. Here's the thing. If they didn't get you with the vaccine, they're getting you with ivermectin. You're still funding big pharma either way. Like, you're still giving money to big pharma. You might not be taking the vaccine, but you're giving money to pharma on the other side, which would be ivermectin. So they're getting you either way. They're putting in graphene oxide in both of those. Think about it. Like they know exactly what they're doing. It's a $30,000,000,000 business. Parasites is a $30,000,000,000 business. $30,000,000,000. They're not gonna tell you to eat some papaya seeds. They're not gonna tell you to cleanse the heavy metals. They're not gonna tell you to do a little dragon's blood or some turpentine. They're going to sell you the solution which comes with x y z side effects. Keeps big

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I'm trying to filter through vitamins and minerals that are not synthetic. Well, vitamins and minerals, those would all be synthetic. When you go back into who made the first vitamin, have the John D. Rockefeller. The oil companies are making the vitamins. So if you are consuming vitamins, you are bringing a petroleum based product into your body. So when you're to sort through vitamins and minerals, you should just stick to food. And if you think about it, if you were looking for something from nature, you would grab an organic orange and you would eat that whole orange. You would eat the peel, you would eat the flesh, you would eat the skin and the seed. And that's it. So when you want to heal the body, you need to stick to food.

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Baby products are a minefield of corporate greed, and it's infuriating. Pediasure is pumping kids full of sugar, and baby food is even worse. A report alleges that mega-corporations are knowingly feeding babies toxic heavy metals at dangerous levels. Some companies refuse to cooperate with investigations, and internal standards are shockingly lax. These corporations don't care about our health; they prioritize profit. They'll cut corners, use cheap ingredients, and avoid recalls to save money. Even lawsuits don't always deter them. Parental vigilance is key. Support small, family-owned brands that prioritize your health whenever possible, especially when it comes to baby food and personal care products.

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Johnson and Johnson knowingly sold baby powder with asbestos since the 1970s, leading to lawsuits. FDA recalls products for asbestos. Johnson and Johnson owns popular brands like Splenda, which contains harmful ingredients. FDA-approved Splenda linked to health risks. Top owners of Johnson and Johnson are Vanguard, State Street, and BlackRock, who also own major food brands. Research ownership of brands to uncover connections. Concerns about other harmful ingredients in products.

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The US has twice as many toxic chemicals in the same products compared to other high-income countries. For example, US Quaker Oats, Mountain Dew, Heinz ketchup, and Doritos contain ingredients like high fructose corn syrup, yellow 5, brominated vegetable oil, and artificial colors, which are absent in their UK counterparts. The reason for this is that the same shareholders own the food and healthcare industries. Top shareholders of companies like Pepsi and Kellogg's also have major stakes in the healthcare industry. This creates a system where the population is poisoned through food, leading to increased healthcare needs and financial dependence, especially since the US spends the most on healthcare without universal coverage. These same entities also own major media outlets like Sony, Disney, CNN, Comcast, PBS, and Fox, enabling further manipulation of consumer behavior.

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Big Pharma and mega corporations own a significant portion of the supplement aisle. Brands like Nature's Maid, 1 a day, Stentrum, and VitaFusion are all owned by these corporations. Even supposedly natural brands like Nature's Way and Simple Truth have hidden ownership by Suave Group and Kroger respectively. However, Oregon Wild Harvest stands out as a family-owned brand. Other popular brands like Garden of Life, Natural, and Country Life also have hidden ownership by Nestle, an Indian big pharma company, and Lion Equity Partners respectively. This consolidation is concerning because the same companies that sell chemicals and drugs are now buying out natural supplements, which are supposed to be alternatives to pharmaceuticals.

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Dandelions, often seen as weeds, are actually great for heart health, cleansing and strengthening the heart naturally. The company that produces the best-selling heart medicine also owns Roundup, a controversial herbicide. This connection shows how they profit from both sick and healthy individuals.

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We're going down rabbit holes on this podcast. Bayer is a pharmaceutical company. Monsanto is a pesticide company. Bayer bought Monsanto. Bayer makes drugs for non Hodgkin's lymphoma. Monsanto makes a toxic herbicide called glyphosate that they spray on food. Glyphosate, wait for it, causes non Hodgkin's lymphoma. Now we've come full circle. Big pharma is in bed with big food, and both of them are in bed with our western health system. None of which is concerned with making cures, all of which is concerned with making customers. Welcome to the circus.

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At a veterinary conference, a six-doctor practice owner described constant corporate offers to buy her business: 'it's constantly every single week' with 'great offers to buy her practice.' She would 'be willing to take a loss to be able to sell the practice to an individual instead of corporation.' The talk underscored a broader trend: 'Mars now owns so many of the vets, so many of the ERs, and now insurance, animal insurance companies.' To counter this, she urged consumers to 'Seek out veterinary hospitals that are owned by an individual' and to 'Call them, ask them who owns them.' She concluded that 'The consumer becomes more knowledgeable about the process and gravitates toward veterinary practices that are owned by individuals,' and that we should 'support small businesses and small practitioners' for better patient care and outcomes.

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Vitamin D3 is popular, but I advise against it. It's made from rat poison's active ingredient, causing hypercalcemia. Big pharma profits more from vitamins than drugs. Pfizer's investment led to a 90% deficiency rate. D3 is made from radiated sheep's wool and toxic chemicals, then added to GMO soybean oil. The sun is better than a pill. Share natural ways to boost vitamin D for a free guide.

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Rockefellers own the medical system and produce ivermectin with all their companies, trickling it down to others and selling in other countries—it's the same thing. It's a monopoly; we literally live in the game monopoly. After posting ivermectin-toxicity, viewers asked who I'm paid by, but the speaker says it's a pharmaceutical product and they are not paid by anybody. They caution that if you're still using pharmaceuticals after 2020, you should check yourself, referencing mask-wearing and sticker policies as part of what happened. Vitamins are described as synthetic, fake, and made in a lab, and peptides as made in a lab. The speaker concludes: Eat from food. That's what we're supposed to do.

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Speaker claims ivermectin is part of a diabolical Rockefeller plan devised in 2010, predicting people would reject vaccines after 2020 and turn to another pharmaceutical. They question ivermectin’s safety by listing side effects such as blindness, liver failure, and infertility. They argue the Rockefellers own the entire medical system worldwide, so buying from a different country is ineffective. The discussion notes ads for pharmaceuticals on alternative-health platforms, suggesting a marketing push. They say parasites are really heavy metals in the body, and that ivermectin contains heavy metals. The claim is that ivermectin, like antibiotics, suppresses symptoms. They describe a $32,000,000,000 industry fueled by this narrative, and when they researched producers, they found Merck, Johnson and Johnson, Pfizer, and Bayer. The same companies making vaccines in 2020 allegedly also make ivermectin, framing it as a bait-and-switch.

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The medical industry is based on a lie. John D. Rockefeller bought major universities and media companies, creating his own medical curriculum based on pharmacology, which extracts substances from oil. These medicines were found to cause cancer. Rockefeller used his power to debunk natural therapies, discredit doctors who spoke against him, destroy their lives, and even assassinate some. If you think you need pills, pharmaceutical companies will control you.

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Speaker 0: I was talking last time about ivermectin. Well, since the Rockefellers own the medical system and they're the top dog up here and they produce the ivermectin with all their companies, which you can look into that, then what they do is they trickle them down to other companies and then they sell them in other countries. So people are like, well, well, I buy it in a different country. Guess what? It's the same thing. It's a monopoly. That's the thing. If we don't understand that these things are monopolies and that we literally live in the game monopoly, then we're just blinded. Then it's funny because I put up that video of ivermectin toxicity and people were going nuts. They were like, who who who are you paid by? And who how dare you tell people this? It's like, it's it's a pharmaceutical product. I'm not paid by anybody. It's literally just a pharmaceutical product. Like, if you're still using pharmaceuticals after 2020, you gotta check yourself. That's that's that's all I'm gonna say. Because after 2020, like, after you went through all of the things that we all went through with stepping on stickers and you people telling people to wear masks, then you gotta check yourself. That's all I'm gonna say. Vitamins, same thing, synthetic, fake, and made in a lab. And same with peptides, made in a lab. Eat from food. That's what we're supposed to do.

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Mega corporations like Procter and Gamble and Unilever own most of the baby products and toilet paper options in stores, prioritizing profits over the safety of consumers. Reports and studies have revealed toxins in baby food and diapers. While there are expensive family-owned brands of baby food, no good solutions for diapers were found. However, there are family-owned toilet paper brands like Who Gives a Crap, which offers chemical-free options. It is important to be mindful of who owns the products we buy and support family-owned businesses that genuinely care about consumers. By doing so, we can make a positive impact and protect ourselves.

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A few years ago, the New York Attorney General discovered that 79% of supplements from Target, GNC, Walmart, and Walgreens did not contain the ingredients they claimed to have. Some even contained sawdust instead. Only 4% of Walmart products tested had DNA from the listed plants. To ensure you're getting quality supplements, it's important to buy from companies that conduct third-party testing and have high-quality facilities. The speaker, who has experience in pharmaceutical sales, recommends trusting certain brands that do their own due diligence.

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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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The speaker claims that the synthetic vitamin industry is a scam created by Big Pharma to sell more products. They argue that even organic vitamins are made from industrial waste such as coal tar ash, petroleum oil, black mold, and cyanide. The speaker explains that the push to sell vitamins began in the 1920s, with organizations lobbying for iodine to be added to table salt. This was followed by the fortification of milk with vitamin D and the identification of new vitamin deficiency diseases. The speaker suggests that this created a cycle of new vitamin discoveries and the need for chemical substitutes to keep people healthy.

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The speaker discusses pro powder and compares it to common magnesium supplements. The speaker asserts that pro powder provides minerals in natural forms, listing magnesium, selenium, iodine, glutathione, and calcium as examples, described as "natural forms" and "beautiful minerals which are very beneficial." In contrast, the speaker identifies several synthetic forms of magnesium—magnesium carbonate, magnesium glycinate, and magnesium oxide—and emphasizes that these are synthetic rather than natural. Beyond the mineral forms, the speaker notes a broader claim about the production of nutrients. It is stated that the same companies manufacture a wide range of products, including magnesium, vitamin C, vitamin B12, vitamin D, vitamin K, as well as protein products like creatine and whey protein. The speaker asserts that all of these items are produced by the same companies, implying a centralized or consolidated manufacturing sector. A controversial implication is raised regarding who controls the vitamin and supplement industry. The speaker singles out the Rockefellers as the entity responsible for making “the vitamins,” suggesting a powerful or shadowy influence over what is produced. This claim is presented as a factual assertion about the industry’s origins and control. Overall, the speaker contrasts natural, mineral-rich formulations with synthetic magnesium forms and highlights a perceived link between major supplement production through a single set of companies. The discussion frames pro powder as a natural alternative that includes multiple minerals and compounds in natural forms, while characterizing many widely used supplements as synthetic and part of a centralized manufacturing network allegedly led by the Rockefellers.

Genius Life

The Hidden Toxins Lurking In Wellness Products! - Oliver Amdrup
Guests: Oliver Amdrup
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This podcast episode features Max Lugavere and Oliver Amdrup, an industry insider, discussing the complexities and misconceptions surrounding the supplement industry. They begin by highlighting common issues like the oxidation of omega-3 fatty acids, the instability of creatine in gummy forms, and the presence of heavy metals like cadmium and lead in cacao products. These examples underscore the critical need for consumers to be aware of product quality and manufacturing processes, as many manufacturers and consumers alike are often uninformed about these nuances. The conversation delves into the broader landscape of the supplement industry, contrasting it with the pharmaceutical industry. While mainstream medicine often portrays supplements as unregulated and unproven, the hosts argue that the truth lies in the middle. They clarify that dietary supplements are intended to augment a diet, especially given the nutrient depletion in modern whole foods and the increased demands on our bodies in stressful times. The supplement industry, valued at $54 billion in 2023, is significantly smaller than the $670 billion pharmaceutical industry, challenging the "big wellness" narrative. They advocate for a more proactive approach to health, where supplements play a role in prevention, complementing reactive pharmaceutical interventions. A major theme is the importance of sourcing, testing, and transparency in the supplement industry. They discuss the prevalence of counterfeit products on large online retailers and advise consumers to purchase directly from brands. Key metrics for identifying quality products include active ingredient measurement (potency) and purity (absence of heavy metals, microplastics, etc.). Oliver emphasizes the value of third-party validation, citing certifications like IFOS for fish oil, which tests for label claims, purity, and oxidation levels. He notes that while brands pay for these certifications, they provide crucial independent verification of finished products, not just raw materials. Specific advice is offered for popular supplements. For omega-3s, high-quality, low-oxidation fish oil is crucial, with smaller bottle sizes recommended for liquid forms to minimize oxygen exposure. The discussion touches on the profound impact of omega-3s on brain health, vision, heart health, inflammation, and even longevity, referencing studies on the omega-3 index. For creatine, the monohydrate form is recommended, with a focus on GMP-certified manufacturers and third-party testing for purity and label claim, especially given issues with creatine gummies. They also address the misconception of "women's creatine," advocating for standard creatine monohydrate with dosage adjustments based on body mass. Finally, for protein powders, whey-based options are generally preferred over plant-based due to superior purity (less heavy metal accumulation) and bioavailability of amino acids, particularly leucine. They caution against cacao-flavored plant proteins due to higher heavy metal content and stress the importance of third-party testing for all protein powders, given the large doses consumed regularly.
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