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The speaker presents a video showing “oil coming out of the earth,” claiming there is an unlimited amount of oil, unlimited water, free energy, and abundant food. They argue that the Rockefellers “bought out the educational system” and taught a scarcity mindset to put people into a fear state that resources are always running out. After posting the video, the speaker says many people responded that they work on oil rigs and that when an area supposedly runs out of oil, they go back and find oil coming out again. The speaker claims this means oil is being managed and prices manipulated, similar to how water and food and energy prices are supposedly manipulated. They also claim people are kept in fear that water is running out. The speaker then points to mining: miners who go into the earth reportedly have to use pumps to remove water because mines flood from water coming up from inside the Earth, including “oceans underneath the oceans.” They say this contrasts with how surface water scarcity is presented, because there is water deep below. They continue by saying energy and food are “heavily manipulated” markets. They claim “GMOs and pesticides” are promoted as a solution to save the world. The speaker adds that before the 1900s there were “tons of free energy,” including technologies using mercury, electricity, and different types of gas, and they state that these examples are not shown.

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The speaker discusses a large radium water bottle called the revigorator, which contains radium ore inside clay. He asserts that the government tells people radium is toxic, but claims this device was used to heal people. He demonstrates the device’s radioactivity, noting it is “as radioactive as it gets” and showing measurements of “45 up to 90.” He points out that there is water inside the jug, visible as liquid in the container, and labels the contents “radioactive water.” He asserts the government would tell you this is dangerous if you do this, and counters with, “You’ve been duped,” recounting his journey of believing there were lies about the benefits of radium. He shares experiential claims about drinking radium water, stating that it makes you feel calm, real zen, real focused, and that the world feels like a peaceful place. The speaker connects radium water to a broader claim about turning ordinary water into spring water, describing radium water as related to hot springs. He explicitly states that radium water is “uranium water” and also mentions “thorium,” implying that the composition or effect includes these elements.

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The speaker asserts that there is a depopulation agenda between now and 2050. They argue that if a plan were to make a massive portion of the global population sick and lockdown people, the only things people can control entering their homes are water. They claim water treatment for drinking and showering uses proprietary blends, including a protein called e carol, described as a snake venom component that elicits blood clotting. The speaker urges viewers to look for venom and asserts that they are poisoning us, specifically pointing to the water. They state that there is no part of me that even questions whether or not they're poisoning us in water. To keep a family healthy, they conclude, you must ensure the air you breathe, the water you drink, and the food you eat are clean.

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Check this: Tartaria, interesting. Tartars, they would put copper in their water, and they would water their plants with copper water and had great success. This was studied by Victor Schauberger. Then he noticed if you put zinc, which is making brass or another conductor, it would enliven the sick fields. The excerpt centers on copper usage in irrigation and its alleged positive effects on plants, attributing the observations to Schauberger. It also mentions zinc, described as a conductor, and claims it would enliven the sick fields. The discussion frames Tartaria and Tartars as sources of copper-water practice and connects these ideas to Schauberger's work, highlighting copper and zinc as key elements mentioned in relation to soil and plant vitality.

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The speaker discusses water they describe as radioactive, stating “this is radioactive water.” They claim that “the government would tell you this is dangerous if you do this,” followed by the assertion “Yeah. You've been duped.” The speaker describes a personal journey, saying, “I have gone on this whole journey understanding that we have been lied to about the benefits of radium.” They then describe the effects of drinking radium water, asserting that “when you drink a little bit of radium water, what happens is you feel real calm, you feel real zen, you feel real focused in, and the world is just a peaceful place.”

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The speaker asserts that WiFi can cook the water in the body, despite conventional claims that it only heats water a little. The core idea is that WiFi signals have the potential to affect bodily water, including water in the eyes. If a home is not hardwired with an Ethernet connection and relies on WiFi, there are unwanted frequencies pulsing throughout the home. These pulsing frequencies, according to the speaker, can actually cook the water in the eyes. As a consequence, while people are performing detoxing, exercises, and efforts to restore balance of their eyes, they should also focus on getting rid of WiFi from their house. The speaker emphasizes that all spectrums of WiFi operate on the same spectrum as a microwave, specifically at 2.4 gigahertz. The speaker points out that microwaves are labeled 2.4, and WiFi uses 2.4 as well. According to the speaker, this constant pulsing throughout the house can slow down people’s repairing because the body is being bombarded by these signals. In summary, the speaker links WiFi exposure to potential effects on bodily water, including eye water, and argues for eliminating WiFi from the home to avoid continuous pulsing frequencies that purportedly interfere with the body's repair processes, reinforcing the claim by drawing a parallel between WiFi’s 2.4 GHz spectrum and microwave radiation.

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Microplastics such as BPA, PCBs, and Triclosan mimic estrogen, which lowers testosterone. Adequate testosterone prevents diseases and promotes muscle growth, strength, and healthy libido. Drinking from plastic bottles, even those containing alkaline water, can be harmful. It's better to drink from glass to benefit both your wallet and testosterone levels. The speaker always drinks from glass and uses BPA-free plastic only when necessary, such as for blender bottles. While eliminating all toxic exposures is difficult, switching to glass is a significant step for your health.

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"Everybody's asking about copper cups." "Copper cups are very beneficial for your brain, for your gut lining, and also for cleansing out your system." "That's what copper does." "It cleanses out your system of all the toxins and poisons and pesticides out that's in your body." "I don't care for brands." "If someone's selling you a brand with copper cups, you're doing it wrong." "You go on an antique store and you buy your copper cup on the antique store." "We are meant to shop with the antiques in the vintage ways because those were when they made things correctly." "And they take magnets and they stick to it, which means it's steel or iron." "They should be real copper." "If they're not real copper, you're doing it wrong." "How come they're not ill if the copper's gonna get you?"

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Scott Lubick discusses EMF paint, highlighting copper in paint as a way to block EMFs, noting that 25% copper blocks EMFs. He then asks why we should block EMF and asserts that the government promotes pandemics and has added chemicals to the water supply to corrode copper pipes to push a switch to plastic, claiming that the same chemicals corrode lead pipes. He points to coincidences: in 1973, the first rollout of cell phones, and “people start getting sick.” A few years later, the government bans lead paint. In 1991, he claims there was an attempt to get rid of all copper and lead pipes to switch to DuPont plastic. In 1996, he mentions a lawsuit protection act for cell phones, stating that if a cell phone tower in front of your house harms you, you can’t sue for damages. Based on these points, he concludes that the culprit is someone trying to get rid of copper, lead, and probably asbestos, suggesting asbestos would be harder to manage if people still had it in their homes. He ends with a note about discussing these topics during Thanksgiving.

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According to the speaker, water bottles labeled as "purified drinking water" are actually filled with tap water. They claim that companies like Dasani and Aquafina are misleading consumers for marketing purposes. The speaker warns against drinking tap water due to the presence of heavy metals, pharmaceuticals, and chemicals, which they believe can lower IQ and negatively impact health. They urge viewers to share the video and avoid tap water for the sake of their well-being.

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Face labels warn to call poison control if swallowed. Toothpaste also advises contacting poison control if swallowed. However, drinking eight 8-ounce glasses of tap water daily results in four times the dosage of the substance found in those products. The speaker advises people to eliminate tap water from their lives immediately, along with GMO foods.

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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 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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The speaker discusses a 1920s radium water bottle called the Revigorator, noting that radium ore is inside the clay of the bottle and that it was used to heal people. He emphasizes the bottle’s enormous size, saying, “this thing is just mammoth,” and that it’s a challenge to hold it. He demonstrates by saying, “watch this… You can hear that. Right there,” implying a loud or notable sound associated with the device, and references the water as radioactive, stating, “So this is radioactive water.” He mentions that the government would tell people this is dangerous if you do this, followed by the assertion, “Yeah. You've been duped.” He describes his personal journey, claiming that he has learned that “we have been lied to about the benefits of radium.” Regarding the effects of radium water, he asserts that “when you drink a little bit of radium water, what happens is you feel real calm, you feel real zen, you feel real focused in, and the world is just a peaceful place.” He concludes by prompting the audience to consider this perspective.

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Speaker 0 asserts that parasites are a result of heavy metals in the body. According to them, if someone has parasites in the gut or elsewhere, it is because they have too many heavy metals. All the substances a person puts into their body are polluting the body with heavy metals, and that is the core issue. Once heavy metals are cleaned up, the parasites that the body supposedly created will disappear. The worms are described as the body’s last line of defense against heavy metals, functioning to protect the body by consuming the metals so that a person can survive longer. Speaker 0 continues by explaining that if metals begin to enter the organs, the person will die, and this is the underlying logic behind the presence of parasites. When people notice worms and fear them, the speaker emphasizes that the body is producing these worms to eat the metals and keep the person alive long enough to enable another day. The implication is that the body will continue to generate more and more worms until the metals in the body are cleaned up, at which point the “timer” would be turned off, i.e., the threat ends. The speaker notes that on social media there are parasite cleanses and related content, but frames these as irrelevant to the real issue. The core claim is that parasites are simply a manifestation of heavy metals. The remedy, in their view, is to remove or purify heavy metals from the body; after doing so, there will be no problems. In their broader point, they argue that the metals being ingested come from every source, including what is cooked into food. They assert that metal exposure occurs during cooking and through food preparation, implying that dietary and environmental sources continually introduce metals into the body. In summary, the key points are: heavy metals cause parasites; parasites arise as a defense against heavy metals; removing heavy metals will cause parasites to disappear; metals entering organs are fatal; the presence of worms is an adaptive response to metals; ongoing metal exposure maintains parasite production; social media parasite cleans are not addressing the root cause; and food preparation and cooking contribute metals to the diet. The overall solution, according to Speaker 0, is to pull heavy metals out of the body to resolve the issue.

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Many people are asking for examples of “primary water” because they were never taught it. The speaker says the education system was “taken over by the Rockefellers” in the 1900s, and that the media was “taken over by Operation Mockingbird” in the 1960s, and that “both systems don’t teach about primary water.” The speaker describes primary water as “the combination of hydrogen and oxygen coming in from inside the Earth at a volcanic pressure” to create “brand new water” and “living water.” They say this water “doesn’t contain fluoride,” “doesn’t contain arsenic,” and “doesn’t have Pharmaceuticals or drugs or anything inside of it,” describing it as “pure.” They also explain that historically, when mining for materials like copper, gold, or silver, the mines would flood. The speaker says they had to bring pumps because water was coming in through the walls “because there is so much water underneath us.” They contrast this with what they describe as media messaging about scarcity, saying the media uses fear by promoting drought and claiming “we are running out of water.” The speaker claims this fear is used to usher in “water police, water taxes, and all these water basically restrictions,” including restrictions that prevent people from “grow[ing] your own food,” “water[ing] your lawn,” and “wash[ing] your car.” They urge viewers to become aware of primary water—the water they say they “have never been taught about”—through “theprimarywaterinstitute dot org” in order to “remove the fear” and avoid “live in the fear that we are actually running out of water.”

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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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The speaker prefers distilled water, believing it to be 100% pure. They highlight the importance of the spiral factor in water movement, similar to a spring's vortex motion. They have consumed distilled water for fifteen years. The speaker claims that contrary to some beliefs, distilled water is beneficial, providing pure hydration. They argue that alkaline water and water with synthetic additives like calcium carbonate, magnesium, and minerals can clog the gut and calcify the body, contributing to bloating and swelling. They state distilled water has zero parts per million. The speaker suggests adding sea salt for minerals, if desired, but otherwise recommends pure distilled water.

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Face labels warn to call poison control if swallowed. Toothpaste labels also advise contacting poison control if swallowed. However, drinking eight 8-ounce glasses of tap water daily results in four times that dosage. The speaker advises people to eliminate tap water from their lives immediately, along with GMO foods.

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The speaker discusses “old fashioned dowsing,” arguing that it has been dismissed as “woo-woo” and discouraged from everyday use, even though major organizations use it. They claim Big Electric, Big Harma, and Big Oil all use a douser to find “unlimited water” and “unlimited oil,” and they state that the US military teaches a class on dowsing. The speaker contrasts this with advice to “stay away from dowsing,” asking why the richest corporations and the military would use it if it were truly “woo-woo.” They further argue that “we’re never running out of water,” describing a belief in “primary water underneath our feet” that is “unlimited water.” The speaker says Lake Elsinore dried up in the 1950s, and then a douser was called in to find water that filled it back up. They state that California “knows” there is unlimited water underground. The speaker claims books such as *New Water for the Thirsty World* were burned, and presents this as part of a larger narrative: governments allegedly promote water scarcity while allegedly knowing about unlimited water. They also say data centers “know there’s unlimited water too,” and suggest that the continued building of data centers implies knowledge that water would not run out. The speaker describes *New Water for a Thirsty World* as exposing that water is unlimited and ends with the statement, “Water is the real gold,” asserting that without water or food people cannot survive.

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Drinking from copper or depression glass has made a noticeable difference for me in just six months. My hair is growing back, and my nails are stronger. This improvement is linked to the minerals these materials provide, which nourish hair and connective tissue. When our bodies lack these minerals, it can lead to depression. Depression glass, created during the 1929 Great Depression, contained minerals like selenium, magnesium, and copper. Given the depletion of minerals in our food due to pesticides, the materials we drink from can impact our health. Using mineral-rich materials can promote healing, but the focus remains on profit-driven plastic products instead.

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Speaker 0 presents several claims about uranium glassware. He recommends eBay as a source for purchasing uranium glassware, and asserts that uranium is very energizing. He contends that people are told not to drink from uranium glassware because “big pharma wouldn’t make any money if people are drinking out of uranium glassware,” and adds that uranium provides “the ionizing radiation of the sun,” implying that warnings about the sun’s danger are motivated by financial interests of big pharma. He extends this logic to uranium glassware and other beautiful glassware, claiming they are “very charging” and that they “boost your energy.” He further asserts practical benefits: uranium glassware can be used to water plants, with plants growing three times the size, and food stored in uranium glassware—such as flowers or herbs—will last three times as long. He asks why these claims aren’t more widely discussed, then references the “radium girls” who used to lick paint and the nuclear issue, stating that nukes are fake and that fear about these topics is used to control people. He concludes that vintage glassware is where it’s at. The speaker then challenges the idea that vintage glassware could be toxic by asking why, if it were, every grandma and grandpa drank from it. He cites examples of uranium-containing items that were common in households, including uranium plates, forks, bowls, dishes, and other vintage glassware, using this to imply a historical acceptance of the material. He closes with a concluding remark: “That’s yeah. That’s a funny one.”

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The transcript discusses “radioactive water,” described as something the government “would tell you to stay away from.” It references material dated “from 1914” and then “1912.” The speaker claims that in that period radium was infused into the water and that radium in water and clay turned it into “hot springs water,” which the speaker says gets its heat from radium, thorium, and plutonium present in the water. The speaker further claims that when people drank from this water, it “would get rid of arthritis, osteoporosis, all types of pain, neurological issues, and everything else.” They say they have been doing experiments for four days by drinking out of it and plan to drink from it during the video to show how radioactive it is. To demonstrate, they mention placing the water probe “in here,” stating the reading is “48 right now” and calling it “off the charts.” They add that if the probe is put “all the way in,” it reaches “90,” and they repeat that it is “radioactive water.” The speaker also says Galen Windsor described this as “all a lie,” claiming people were lied to “because they didn't want them to connect the energy with radium.” The speaker concludes by saying “Bottoms up,” drinking the water, and stating it “tastes like clay.” They also begin to say “they used to build things,” but the transcript ends there.

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The speaker discusses a book that is 800 pages long, focusing on how illnesses were healed with radium, including cancer (referred to as “the big c”), lupus, and autoimmune conditions. They point out that radium is connected to hot springs, which makes those springs hot. The speaker notes that wealthy people used to sit in hot springs precisely because of the benefits associated with radium, uranium, and thorium present in those waters. In essence, the speaker describes the book as containing 800 pages of studies documenting illnesses being healed with radium in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, specifically from the 1900s to the 1920s, with a focus on cancer. They imply that the radium-related healing properties were a central theme across these studies. The speaker then poses a question: do you think the incidence of cancer has increased because people are no longer receiving the radioactive nutrients they once obtained? They suggest that changes to our terrain have occurred, including the elimination of various factors, and they note that people used to drink from uranium glass regularly, which would have imparted radioactive properties. By presenting these ideas, the speaker connects historical practices involving radioactive materials and hot springs to debates about the modern prevalence of cancer, proposing that the removal of radioactive exposure (via the environment and everyday items like uranium glass) could influence how diseases develop or are perceived to develop.

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Speaker 0 discusses anemia as an iron issue but calls it a copper imbalance, and notes that Google says iron supplements are recommended but not too much because they can damage organs. The speaker advocates a natural solution and shares a friend’s story: Aunt Chill has been receiving shots for the last year and no longer needs the IV iron she’s been on for twelve years. This is presented as evidence of how conventional approaches are used. The speaker claims that people are not given natural solutions and that the cause of anemia isn’t explained. They mention fluoride in the public water supply and WiFi Bluetooth as factors that can lower red blood cells. Back to the Chillshot, the speaker states it also helps with hair loss, emphasizing that when hormones are messed up, hair starts falling out. They claim Chillshot can help with that. They assert Chillshot has some of the most studies for a natural remedy and suggest checking these studies. The product is said to help balance hormones, including during menopause and premenopause, and for people taking DIM. The speaker recommends starting to use Chillazade for balanced hormones, noting that there are solutions and that Chillazade comes from the earth. The underlying message is that by eating what is described as beautiful mother nature, one can heal and restore balance.
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