For some of you that has already tuned in, I asked Bill if I can do the show this week because we, Kim and I, have gotten quite a few emails and some phone calls and people asking us about Dr. Wallach and his products and what they can do for them.
So I thought this way, me playing Dr. Wallach's Dead Doctor Don't Lie lecture will help answer quite a few of your answers.
I know a lot of you folks have already heard this before and I'm hoping a lot of your questions will be answered and that you will get a lot out of what Dr. Wallach is saying.
This Thursday, and I'm hoping if everything goes alright, I do have another, I don't think you would call it a lecture, Dr. Wallach is talking to a Dr. Frager I believe is how his name is pronounced.
He's a psychiatrist.
Psychiatry.
Psychiatry I think is how you pronounce it.
He talks about selenium and other things about different diseases and stuff like that.
So if everything goes all right I'll be able to play that for you also and maybe that would help you too.
I know a lot of you out there like to Or as well I know a lot of you out there like a lot of do a lot of health things you know instead of going to the oh like seeing a doctor and stuff like that you want to try to do as much natural as possible so I thought this might help with you guys and for me also to um learn quite a bit about the herbs and the vitamins and minerals and what it can do for you.
So yesterday I did play the first part of Dr. Wallach's lecture and I did back it up for about the last, I'd say the last maybe two, three minutes, maybe five, I'm not too sure.
But we'll go from there.
Now we learned in 19, oh I think it was 57, that he died of something that even a turkey wouldn't die from.
The reason why we say that is, 1957, we learned that aneurysms are caused by a copper deficiency.
We had a pellet project, 250,000 turkeys, and we made complete food pellets where you put All the 90 nutrients in there.
And in the first 13 weeks, only half of those turkeys died.
125,000 of them.
Farmers were out there every morning picking them up by the bushel basket.
They took them to the state diagnostic labs in their autopsy and they found out that they all had died from a ruptured aortic aneurysm.
So they doubled the amount of copper in there, and the next year they tried to raise 500,000 turkeys, and they didn't lose a single turkey from a ruptured aortic aneurysm.
And they ran that experiment in mice, and rats, and rabbits, and dogs, and cats, and calves, and sheep, and pigs, and whatnot, and guess what?
They found out there's a whole series of diseases that are caused by copper deficiency.
Gray hair is the first sign.
Instead of getting gray hair regardless of your age, you've got copper deficiency.
You get skin wrinkles because the elastic fibers in your skin are going.
Those little crow's feet around your eyes and facial and body skin wrinkles.
You look like you're a little pruned, drying up.
Okay?
Then, of course, there's the varicose veins.
Varicose veins.
That's caused by an elastic fiber breakdown.
And of course, parts of your body begin to sag.
Under your arms, your breasts, your bellies, your legs, all this stuff starts sagging.
And you can go to a cosmetic surgeon or a plastic surgeon if you want, but it's a lot cheaper and a lot more effective and a lot safer if you just take some copper.
Okay?
Well, Dr. Cartwright may have had a medical degree, but he didn't have expensive urine, so he died of something that even a turkey wouldn't die from.
And here's one.
This fellow, he was a doctor's doctor.
Dr. Martin Carter.
He almost made it.
He died at age 57.
He got his medical degree from Havoc Medical School and his PhD in medicine from Yale.
Of course, he was autopsied by the best because he was a doctor's doctor.
He said, quote, the cause of death was a ruptured aortic aneurysm, said Dr. Jules Hirsch of the Rockefeller University Hospital, unquote.
Where did he die from?
Copper deficiency.
See, he didn't have expensive urine either.
And here's an attorney.
I know you guys, you're not a doctor, are you sir?
Here's a, um, an attorney.
She was so famous, she was from Detroit, age 44, Ellen Joyce Alter.
She was in the New York Times obituaries.
She made the big time.
And of course, she probably had steel buns because she belonged to one of those private health clubs.
All these gals want steel buns, you know, doing their little exercises.
But she didn't have expensive urine because she died of a ruptured cerebral aneurysm.
When they don't do an autopsy, the symptoms could be called a stroke or a subdural hemorrhage, but very frequently they're caused by a ruptured aneurysm, which is a copper deficiency.
She didn't have expensive urine.
How many of you here have ever heard of a guy by the name of Stuart Berger?
Stuart Berger.
He wrote five best-selling books on health and diets and nutrition.
He got his medical degree from Tufts Medical School, which is a very fine medical school in Boston, not too far away from Harvard Medical School.
And the books he wrote included The Southampton Diet for Weight Loss.
He wrote for every young, 20 years younger in 20 weeks, and How to Be Your Own Nutritionist.
And he died at age 40.
How'd you like to follow his dietary practices?
He died at age 40 of cardiomyopathy, which is a selenium deficiency.
The same causes white muscle disease or stiff lamb disease.
And any farmer can go to a feed store and get selenium pellets or selenium injections or things like Celeptoc and Bosie and so forth.
And Dr. Stuart Berger, a guy who wrote five best-selling books on nutrition, died of a nutritional deficiency.
He didn't have expensive urine.
Now, you can prevent, totally prevent, cardiomyopathy for ten cents a day.
And if we don't do it, we're malignant dumb, I like to call it.
You're malignant dumb if you don't take in ten cents a day worth of selenium.
It's a waste of your life.
That's one of those landmines you can avoid.
The medical treatment of choice for cardiomyopathy as a heart transplant was $750,000.
I want you to think about that.
They get the heart free from a donor.
They get the blood free for the surgery from the relatives.
They use $2.50 worth of suture material.
and fifty cents worth of suture material and he charges seven hundred and fifty thousand
dollars for that procedure.
Now six months ago in L.A.
when they had the earthquake, they were putting people in jail for 60 and 90 days for price gouging for selling these terrified people a gallon of water for $4.
They put them in jail for price gouging for selling them a gallon of water for $4.
Now, to me, that's entrepreneurialism.
You know, that's being in business for yourself.
If you had a way to distill water and make water and you had a car and you could get in there and sell those people a gallon of water for four bucks, hey, more power to you.
Because if you go to a 7-Eleven and buy a quart of Evian water, it's $1.29.
So four of those quarts isn't five bucks.
Kind of interesting, isn't it?
They said it was price gouging because those people were terrified.
Well, talk about a person who needs a new heart.
They're terrified.
$750,000, we should put those doctors in jail.
But we bow to them because, oh, that's high-tech medicine.
Out of 270 million people in America, you save about 50 a year.
Is that cost effective?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
At any rate, Dr. Stuart Berger didn't have expensive urine.
Here's the last one.
Many of you may know this woman.
Her name is Dr. Gail Clark.
She was age 47.
She was the Chief Cardiologist of the West St.
Louis County Group of Hospitals.
She was the Chief Cardiologist for the St.
Mary's Hospital, St.
Mary's Health Center in Richmond Heights in St.
Louis County.
She was age 47.
Guess what she died from?
Heart attack.
A cardiomyopathy heart attack.
You can just see her walking down the hall.
She's got the stethoscope around her neck.
You know, this is her little status symbol.
I've got my stethoscope around my neck.
Back when I was in school, they folded it up very bravely and put it in their pocket.
And she falls down.
She has a heart attack right in the hall.
And, of course, the nurses scoop her up and put her on a gurney.
And they call the technicians and another doctor, Code 3, Code 3, Code Blue, whatever it is.
And they whip her into the room.
And you can hear them.
Let's say you're a cardiac patient.
You're laying there.
You're all hooked up to the monitors and the IVs.
And you hear them say, OK, dear Clovo, Okay, stand back.
Didn't work.
Turn it up.
Stand back.
And then you hear that terrible sound when you know that the treatment didn't work.
The flat line when you know the heart is gone.
Everybody walks out of the room dejected and you say, nurse, nurse, what happened next door?
And she says, well, you're a cardiologist.
You know, the chief cardiologist of this hospital, age 47, Dr. Gail Clark, just died of a cardiomyopathy heart attack.
You can see all the patients are holding their gowns.
And they're running out of that house leaving their watches and their shoes and their checkbooks and everything and their plastic credit cards because they don't want to get what Dr. Dale Clark got.
My mommy sent me that one.
Lastly on that subject, how many of you have ever heard of Reggie Lewis?
Reggie Lewis was a great athlete.
He was a good, clean athlete.
Aged 27, he was the captain of the Boston Celtics basketball team.
Had a $65 million a year contract.
Didn't cause the team or his public any problems.
Didn't use four-letter words.
Didn't use drugs.
Had a bad word come out of his mouth.
In April of 1993, he collapsed on the floor during a game with the San Antonio Spurs, and he was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy.
Now, because he was an athlete in good shape, he survived that first heart attack.
The Boston Celtics paid 12 cardiologists a million dollars each on the front end to save Reggie.
Save Reggie, and they spent 12 million bucks.
They didn't take $20 and send a medical student to the library to find out what are all the causes of cardiomyopathy.
They just argued and bickered over who was going to get famous and rich by doing the heart surgery, the transplant on Reggie.
On July 28, 1993, Reggie died of his cardiomyopathy.
And here's a $65 million a year athlete and they paid $12 million for 12 cardiologists to save him.
What chance do you think you have In a hospital with a cardiologist who needs a Mercedes payment or has five ex-wives to pay, he's not going to give you ten cents a day worth of selenium.
He wants $750,000.
He earned it.
He went to medical school for eight years.
Well, if you believe that's true, you just go ahead and get in line.
But if you object to that, don't get in line and take your selenium.
Well, why does this go on?
Even though we know, even though we know that these things are wrong, we inherently know that, and we know that there's the truth out there.
We see it in the newspaper every day.
Why does it go on?
Well, there's a five-letter word that's worse than any four-letter word.
It's M-O-N-E-Y.
Now, I'm not against people making a living or making money.
There's nothing wrong with that.
But when you injure other people to get it, then there's something wrong with it.
At any rate, this was illustrated by an article that was in the Washington Post, November 2, 1992.
second, 1992, and the title of the article is Lining Doc's Pockets.
The first paragraph says, if you go to your doctor, you want him to think of you as a
patient, not a cash cow.
But two studies in this month's New England Journal of Medicine show that doctors are
out to milk you dry.
I couldn't believe doctors would write that in their own medical journal.
So I went to the medical school in San Diego, La Jolla, took out those articles out of the
library, and sure enough, they were in there.
But they were written by two Ph.D.
hospital directors, administrators.
What they said was, hey, it's not paperwork, it's not insurance, it's not all this computer stuff that's running the cost up of health care.
It's you doctors, because there's a lot of things you can do in your office for 50 bucks.
But instead, when a person has good insurance, you say to them, well, I can't quite tell what's wrong.
Let's say you've got good insurance.
Let's check into the hospital for a week or 10 days and run some tests.
Well, who do you think owns the hospital?
The doctor!
The doctor does, and so he's referring you in there to make sure those beds are full and that all the overhead is taken care of.
Remember, when you pay the doctor bill, where does it go?
Where does it go?
Well, it's gotten so bad that even the Reader's Digest has jumped on the bandwagon.
To me, the Reader's Digest is a magazine that never says anything negative or bad about anybody or any group.
It's the sweetest little magazine that ever was.
The September 1993 issue, It features an article that says, can you trust your doctor?
There's 12 ways that doctors scan your money.
And I'll let you read 11 of them yourself.
I'll give you the worst one.
In addition to their income from office fees and surgical fees and lab fees and hospitalization, in addition to all those fees, doctors get a kickback from the labs and the x-ray labs and clinics and hospitals.
They get a kickback of $421 every time they send you in for a CAT scan or an MRI.
And doctors tell you, oh, we do that because we're practicing defensive medicine.
Because if I miss something, 1 in 10 billion, you're going to sue me.
So I do this just to protect myself.
Well, if it was just to protect themselves and you knew them and they knew you, 90% of the people say, oh, just skip it, doc.
You don't really think it's necessary.
Let's save the money.
But they got something more than defensive medicine to worry about.
They get $421 in a kickback for every time they send you in for an MRI or a CAT scan.
Well, when I practiced for 12 years up in Portland, somebody come to me with a terrible headache, never had one, I just walk up to them and tap them on the sinuses, and if they collapse to their knees, I know they had a sinus headache.
Oh, doc, why'd you do that?
Well, I just wanted, that's a cheap lab test, you know.
Then if they had, thank you, if they had blood dripping out of their nose, if they had blood dripping out of their nose, they'd take a $35 x-ray to see if they had a cancer in there.
$35 in a free lab test, as opposed to $421.
If I wanted to make that $421, I'd have been a good thief.
What I'd have done, I'd have built a chute right into that CAT scan machine, because I knew how to build chutes living on a farm.
And I'd have gone out in the street, and I'd have got every homeless person, I'd line them up in them chutes.
I'd put soup and a Big Mac at the end of that tube, you know.
I'd say, I'm going to buy you $1.50 dinner.
I'm a good guy.
I'm going to buy you $1.50 dinner.
You just got to go through this chute, go through that tube, and you get your sandwich and your soup.
Man, they'd be flowing through there, maybe a hundred a day.
Now, I could start adding some things up.
It'd be a lot of fun.
Anyway, the average docker gets $228,660 a year in capstan kickbacks.
A quarter of a million dollars a year.
And any other industry, if you do that, politicians, lawyers, businessmen, stockbrokers, they get put in jail!
But dockers, it's okay.
Because insurance pays for it.
Hillary will pay for it.
We don't mind if they steal us blind.
It's free.
Remember I told you I was going to tell you about pica.
Pica is a funny disease.
P-I-C-A.
I'm not talking about the type style that you see in typewriters and computers.
But pica is a disease that farmers know about.
In horses it's called cribbing.
When they chew on the feed bunk, the wooden feed bunk.
You know you better give them some minerals, otherwise they're going to eat that feed bunk.
Also, in cattle, dairy cattle especially, they're losing lots of minerals through their milk all the time, intensive milking.
You'll see them picking up big rocks in the creek and chewing on them, or they'll chew on barbed wire, or maybe you'll see them walking down through a path with a deer bone in their mouth or something, or a shingle.
That's called pica.
And a good farmer or husband or woman knows you better give them some minerals, otherwise they're going to eat the barn or something.
In human beings, we see this at funny times.
Pregnant women are notorious for pica.
In the middle of the night, they'll elbow their husband and say, hey, you better get up.
I want some pickles and ice cream.
They're craving minerals because that fetus is pulling minerals out of their body.
They need some more minerals.
And so it's recognized as a craving for things like sweets and salts and so forth.
We see this in pregnant women.
I used to have people come to my practice, and they'd say, Doctor, I need to go see a shrink.
I'd say, why's that?
Well, I wake up in the middle of the night, and I go outside with a spoon, and I eat dirt.
And, no, that's okay.
Just make sure it's clean dirt.
Then they'd say, my kid sits there with a kitty litter box between his legs, and he has a spoon, and he's eating that stuff out of a kitty litter box.
And then in housing projects, little kids will eat lead paint off the walls, and they
get lead poisoning, get learning disabilities and bone problems and anemia.
And we're good, so we spend $5 million to scrape the lead paint off of there and repaint
it with Lapex paint.
And all we have to do is give those kids 10 cents a day worth of minerals and it would
be better for them and save us $5 million.
Thank you.
It's your tax money, and if we allow them to throw them away, those dollars, it's kind of interesting.
At any rate, if you have a selenium deficiency, And you don't want to wait until you get cardiomyopathy and drop dead from a heart attack to recognize it.
If you look on your hands and look in the mirror in your face, if you have liver spots or age spots, and I see quite a few from here, you have an early selenium deficiency.
That's called free radical damage.
And fortunately for you, if you recognize that, And you start taking in some colloidal selenium, in four to six months those will all go away.
You'll reverse that in four to six months.
I mean, they go away on the outside, they're going away on the inside, in your brain, in your heart, in your liver, in your kidneys.
And if you have low blood sugar, how many in this room have low blood sugar?
Anybody in here have low blood sugar?
Okay, about 10%.
How many of you have ever seen a hyperactive kid who gets on sugar?
Okay, about everybody in the room.
People who have sugar problems are like alcoholics.
There's good ones and bad ones.
Now, the good alcoholics are the one when they get two drinks, they just go off in a corner and go to sleep, right?
Same way as somebody with low blood sugar.
They eat a big meal, or they eat a piece of pie, three hours later, they clunk out and go to sleep.
Then there's bad alcoholics.
They're the one that gets two drinks in them, and they get violent and enraged, and they want to fight everybody.
They punch holes in the wall, you know, big brave fellows, and they kick their wife, and kick the dog, and take the chainsaw, and cut their neighbor's tree down, and all these wild things, and drive reckless down the roads and kill people.
Those are the bad drunks.
Well, people who have blood sugar problems are bad blood sugar people, too.
They get a little crazy.
Okay, I don't know how many of you remember the Twinkie defense.
Right?
Remember, somebody murdered two people.
And he claimed he ate a Twinkie three hours before he murdered them, so they let him off because he got temporarily insane every time he ate sugar.
Now, don't any of you try that.
Well, chromium and vanadium deficiency will result in these sugar problems.
Low blood sugar, if you let it go on for any length of time, you develop diabetes.
Chromium and vanadium.
And a tin deficiency, the early symptoms of a tin deficiency are male pattern baldness.
I see a lot of tin deficiency in this room.
Yes.
And if you let it go on for any length of time, you get deafness.
Then there's boron deficiency, and you gals should know about boron because it helps you keep the calcium you take in in your bones so you don't get osteoporosis.
Boron.
Also, it helps you make estrogen.
It helps you fellows make testosterone.
If you don't take in enough boron, you ladies are going to suffer miserably going through menopause.
Okay?
You're going to have all those terrible symptoms.
You fellows don't get enough boron, can't make testosterone, you won't know whether to lead or follow on the dance floor.
You're gonna be confused.
She's saying he's got a boron deficiency.
Then in laboratory, oh I should tell you too, we said this on the show today, those of you who may not have heard it, some of you didn't hear the whole show.
The first symptoms of a zinc deficiency is you lose your sense of smell and your taste.
You say, oh, you know, food just doesn't taste good anymore.
You don't have a cold or anything like that.
And you say, well, aren't you excited about dinner?
I spent the whole day in the kitchen cooking dinner.
I said, well, I didn't smell anything when I walked in.
You know, he's got a zinc deficiency.
Well, in laboratory animals, there's some seven rare earths.
These rare earths are trace minerals you need in lesser amounts than you need trace minerals, and they actually double the lifespan of laboratory animals.
They've not been proven in humans yet, but I'm not going to wait 500 years for doctors to approve it.
They're still arguing over vitamin C and calcium, right?
So I'm just going to do it.
It didn't kill any laboratory animals.
It just doubles their life, and it's not a drug.
These rare earths are called lanthanum, praseodymium, neodymium, samarium, europium, ytterbium, and thulium.
There must be a reason why they're named after Old Testament cities.
Well, remember I told you we needed 90 nutrients, we need 16 minerals, we need 16 vitamins, 12 essential amino acids, and 3 essential fatty acids.
And of course, we're lucky In that plants, as a group, can make most vitamins, amino acids, and fatty acids.
Plants can do that because they just take carbon out of the air and make carbon chains to make vitamins, amino acids, and fatty acids.
But you have to eat 15 to 25 different plants a day in the right combinations to make this happen.
Theoretically, it's possible, but most Americans don't do it.
The average American thinks that they eat some potato bugs out of a Betty Crocker box.
They're eating a vegetable.
Okay, so you've got to be careful what you're considering a vegetable.
Then, of course, people want to do right by their doctor, and they eat low-fat turkey breast, and they put a half a jar of mayonnaise on there, and they put it between two slices of Wonder Star foam bread.
Remember that stuff you can insulate your house with, and put in your shoes when you get a hole in a shoe?
I remember when I was a kid 50 years ago, it was a lot of fun because we had Wonder Bread.
We didn't have TVs back then on the farm.
We didn't even have dryers that went round and round, so the only thing you could do in the wintertime was sit in the kitchen and wonder at a loaf of Wonder Bread.
and they had the blue and red and green and yellow balloons on there.
And if you read the labels many times as I do, you know it said things like,
helps build bodies at 12 ways.
And about 15 years later, the FDA made them change it to help build your body eight ways.
Now if you go to the store and look at Wonder Bread wrappers, it just says Wonder Bread.
So it kind of gives you a clue.
So even though this is theoretically possible, it's not likely to happen that you're going to get your
vitamins, amino acids and fatty acids in proper proportions from your
diet.
And so, if your life is as valuable to you as mine is to me, and my children's and my grandchildren's is to me, I would make sure that I take in all my vitamins and amino acids and fatty acids because I guarantee you won't make it to 120 or 140 if you don't.
You're just not going to do it.
Now, minerals are another story.
We have a tragic story when it comes to minerals, because plants cannot make minerals in any way, shape, or form.
And if they're not in the soil anymore, they're not in our plants.
We have for you, when you leave, a free copy of the summary of U.S.
Senate Document 264.
U.S.
Senate Document 264 is from the 74th Congress, Second Session, and it says, That our farm soils and our rain soils are depleted of minerals, and the crops, the grains, the fruits, and the vegetables, and the nuts that are grown on these depleted farm and rain soils are minerally deficient, and the people who eat them get mineral deficiency diseases.
And the only way to prevent and cure them is with mineral supplements.
As U.S.
Senate Document 264, 74th Congress, Second Session, it was written and printed by the U.S.
Congress in 1936, 58 years ago.
You think it's gotten any better?
No.
It has not gotten any better.
It's only gotten worse.
And the reason is, if you guys do what we did, and people continue to do, is we put NPK on our land.
Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium.
And you see it as these three numbers and many combinations of ratios.
These represent percentages of these three nutrients.
Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium.
And those of you who don't have any experience on farms, the reason why we do this is farmers get paid for tons and bushels.
There's no subsidy that encourages people to put 60 minerals back in the soil.
You get paid for tons and bushels, and for 40 bucks an acre, you can get the maximum yield in tons and bushels.
It only takes 5 to 10 years to deplete the land of minerals.
But every time you harvest a crop, those plants pull minerals out of the soil.
Many pounds per acre every time you haul a crop out.
So soon, those minerals are gone.
And if you only put back in $3 and you take out $60, it's like a checking account.
If you only put $3 in your checking account every month and write checks for $60, what's going to happen to your checks?
Boing, boing, boing.
They'd bounce.
Exactly.
Well, I can tell you that our health is bouncing right now to the tune of $1.2 trillion a year because there's no more minerals left in our soil.
It's our responsibility, each and every one of us, to be responsible for our health and consciously take in these minerals.
I have a lot of people asking, what did these people do thousands of years ago?
They didn't even have commercial fertilizer.
What did they do?
These societies that had long-lived people and whatnot.
I want you to think about the Egyptians, the Chinese, people from India that lived around these great rivers, the Nile River, the Ganges River, the Yalu River in China.
And what used to happen was every year or so would flood, just like it did here in northern Missouri last year.
And every time it flooded, guess what would happen?
It would bring silt or rock dust from mountains from 500 or 1,000 miles away, and those people would pray to every god they had, the water god, the sky god, the wind god, the rock god, to flood.
We pray, don't flood!
They used to pray to flood, because they had their floods during the wintertime, and would put silt and minerals back in the soil, and their grain was very valuable.
King Philip, who's the father of Alexander the Great, married the 12-year-old child queen of Egypt, Cleopatra.
She didn't look like Elizabeth Taylor, all made up and beautiful costumes.
She was a little flat-chested teeny-bopper, not very sexy.
But Philip married her because she controlled the best wheat in the world.
And he wanted his Macedonian army to conquer the world.
From his son, Alexander the Great.
He needed the best wheat in the world so he could march 20 hours a day, fight for 6 hours, and win.
If they used the wheat from the depleted soils in Greece, they couldn't go 20 minutes without saying, Mommy, pick me up!
Can you imagine these big Greek soldiers?
Oh, my legs hurt!
Pick me up!
And so they knew the best place to get wheat was from Egypt.
It was those floods that gave them those minerals.
And all those cultures that came up with all the great art and all the great technology came from those places because they had more intelligence or they had more nutrition.
More minerals, I heard somebody say.
Very good.
You're getting the picture.
But what I'm going to do here is I'm just going to pick out a couple of minerals.
Just a couple of them so you get the idea.
It applies to all of them.
Let's just pick out a common one, like calcium.
Everybody knows about calcium.
Calcium deficiency will result in something like 147 different diseases.
They're just different names.
They're named after people like Bell's palsy.
Bell's palsy, you know, everybody knows about that one.
It's how your face sags.
It's not a true stroke.
It just affects your facial muscles.
It's caused by calcium deficiency.
We'll talk about it in a little bit.
Everybody knows about this one, osteoporosis.
It's the number 10 killer of adults in the United States.
It's very expensive.
It costs you $35,000 each for each hip to replace.
It's okay, it's free.
Insurance or Medicare or Hillary will pay for it.
Costs you $70,000 for both hips.
As expensive as it is, and the number 10 killer, remember?
This is Steve from Radford, Virginia, aged 115 years of age.
He died of complications of a fall.
We don't have osteoporosis in animals, and it's because of farmers we don't have osteoporosis in animals.
It goes like this.
You have a pasture with a hundred cows in it, and this year you didn't have any calves, you can't repay your operating loan, you're in trouble.
Right?
Because you paid for the feed and the vet bill and mowed the pasture and fertilized and maintained the fence and fed the cows and all this, that, and the other.
You don't have any calves.
You can't pay back the operating loan and make any money.
So you call the vet out and you say, do I get rid of these cows?
What happened here?
And he examines the cows.
There's nothing wrong with them.
He says, let me look at the bull.
And he says, aha, here's your problem.
That bull has osteoporosis.
Those hips can't breed the cows.
Didn't have any calves.
He says, I'll tell you what, though.
He says, you give me $70,000.
He says, I'll put two new hips in that bull, and next year you'll have some calves.
Well, the first thing that farmer says is, stand back, Doc.
Boom!
He blows that bull away with a deer rifle.
Well, the kids are grinding the bull up with a grinder and cutting roasts and steaks off that bull.
The farmer's chewing on the straw and saying, now doc, which is sets him up a little bit and he says, you know, he says, you know, I wasn't going to pay you $7,000 for that old bull, so I can get a new bull every year for 70 years for that.
He says, but every once in a while I get a bull that throws good calves, I'd like to keep him.
Is there any way I can prevent that osteoporosis thing from happening to a good bull?
He says, well, yeah.
He says, if you'll give a bull calf ten cents worth of calcium every day after he's weaned, he'll never get osteoporosis.
I said, now wait a minute, Doc.
You mean if I give that bull ten cents a day worth of calcium from the time he's weaned, I can prevent a $70,000 disaster?
He says, oh yeah, it's that simple.
He says, you mean all I have to do is give up a half a cup of coffee a day to do that?
He says, yeah, that's it.
He says, I choose that one.
is I'll give up a half a cup of coffee, and that's what we have to think like, okay?
Then there's receding gums.
Dentists and periodontists will tell you that if you want to prevent and cure receding gums,
you better floss and brush after every meal.
If you believe that works, I have some oceanfront property in Montana to sell you.
If you all know your geography, you know that doesn't work.
As a veterinarian, I've seen hundreds of thousands of animals of all kinds.
Mice, rats, rabbits, dogs, cats, sheep, pigs, horses, lions, and tigers, and bears, and they don't get receding gums.
And they don't floss.
Now, they do get funky breath, but they don't get receding gums.
Boy, if you want to smell something, you just let a camel breathe on there, boy.
Well, the reason we don't have receding gums in livestock is because we've dealt with the osteoporosis problem.
Receding gums is not a deficiency of flossing, it's in fact osteoporosis of the jaw bones and of the facial bones.
So if you have gingivitis or receding gums, you have advanced osteoporosis.
Those bones around your teeth are melting away little bit by little bit every day.
And if you take your teeth out at night and put them in a glass next to your bed and that fizzy stuff, you have major advanced osteoporosis because all your bone is melted away.
Okay?
Then there's arthritis.
You talked about that a little bit earlier.
Remember the chicken cartilage is a mock skeleton.
85% of all arthritis is caused by osteoporosis of the joint ends of the bones.
You're talking about degenerative arthritis, osteoarthritis, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, all those sorts of things.
They're caused by osteoporosis of the joint ends of the bones.
I want you to think about something for a minute.
If you don't take a pain reliever or an anti-inflammatory for that arthritis, let's say you've got arthritis of the hips, you're going to kind of favor that a little bit, aren't you?
You're going to get a cane or a walker or crutches.
You're going to favor it so you don't put any weight on it.
I want you to think about that for just a second because then I want you to think about driving your tractor in the field or you're driving a Mercedes down the highway, either one, doesn't matter, whichever you love more.
And let's say you didn't put the nut on that oil pan real tight and all the oil drained out.
And that light on the dashboard comes on and says, you're getting hot, you better give me some oil.
And that light irritates you.
So you stop, you open up the hood, you get your clippers out, you know, your fence clippers, and you clip the wire to that light and you close the hood and you just keep driving.
Would you do that to your tractor or your Mercedes?
No, you wouldn't!
But we take those pain relievers for arthritis, and we go out there and square dance, and do the Texas Toothpep, and do our five-mile walks, our aerobics.
That pill works real good, Doc, because it killed my pain.
And you're just wearing that pain off faster and faster.
Then your doctor's really going to get rich, because you need joint replacement surgery.
Then there's hypertension.
This is one of my favorites.
I'll put a star over here.
Hypertension is high blood pressure.
What's the first nutritional thing the doctor will tell you to give up nutritionally when you get high blood pressure?
Give up salt.
Everybody knows that one.
That's been ingrained in our head.
Well, they must think we're dumber than cows because what's the first thing you put out for your livestock and it's about that big?
A salt block.
No farmer is going to be economically viable if you don't put a salt block out for your livestock.
They're going to die.
And your veterinary bills are going to go crazy.
But we're supposed to believe that we don't need salt.
You can get everything you need out of your lettuce and your whole wheat bread and stuff like that.
Well, don't believe that one either.
If you believe that, I've got some more oceanfront property in Montana for you.
Remember those long-lived people put a big chunk of rock salt the size of a big black Concord grape in every cup of tea and they drink about 40 cups of tea a day because they live at high altitudes where it's very dry.
They have to keep hydrated.
And they put butter in their tea.
They put two pats of butter and a chunk of rock salt They don't put the pink stuff or the blue stuff, or skim milk, or what do they call it?
The creme brulee or whatever it is.
Okay?
Guess what?
The doctors who lived to be 58 tell you, no salt, no butter.
The people who lived to be 120, they put in butter and salt.
You've got to make some choices.
Well, they took $30 million of your tax money, And two years ago, after a 20-year study, they came out and said that they took 5,000 people with high blood pressure, they took them off their medication, and put them on a reduced-salt diet, a restricted-salt diet, and they all died.
No big surprise, but somebody got a PhD degree and everybody was happy, right?
But when they looked at this results, they said that, oh, only 99.7% of the people didn't get any results from that before they died.
0.3% did get some results, dropped their blood pressure one point before they died by restricting the salt.
So the referees who judged that article said, oh, it doesn't matter.
You might as well let high blood pressure patients eat salts and peanuts and dill pickles and salt their food to taste because it doesn't matter.
In fact, worrying about the salt is more stress than taking the salt.
Then they had a control group with 5,000 people with high blood pressure, and they doubled their RDA of calcium, and they stopped the experiment in six weeks.
Because 85% of them were cured of their high blood pressure just by doubling their calcium intake.
When you're out in the rain, getting your stomachs screaming, just mark down the double for me.
Two-Hooze Horkin' If you're coming straight to Drummable Way, you know what
that means, it's time to double for me.
Two-Hooze Horkin' Two-Hooze Horkin'
Two-Hooze Horkin' Two-Hooze Horkin'
Two-Hooze Horkin' It's time to gobble for me.
a little bit of a good thing. I think it's a good thing. I think it's a good thing. I'm
a little bit of a good thing. I'm a little bit of a good thing. I'm a little bit of a
If you have a piece of paper and a pen or a pencil to write with, if you want to get the information, pack about Dr. Walich products and if you have any
questions about the pig arthritis formula here is the number you can call it's 1-888-701-0502
I'll repeat that again it's 1-888-701-0502 and I'll return it back to Bill.
If you're like me folks you're just really, I'm writing as fast as I can.
And I've heard all of this before.
And every time I hear it again, I hear something that I forgot to write down the last time that I heard it.
It's incredible.
Let's really pay attention Let's concentrate, let's do the right thing, and let's get everybody healthy again.
Let's ensure for ourselves and our families a long, healthy, productive life.
It's not going to do us any good to restore the Constitution to constitutional Republican government under law, ladies and gentlemen, if we're all sick.
That makes sense to me.
How about you?
If you'd like to obtain more information about what you're hearing tonight, and find out how you can help get your family back on the way to health, call 1-888-403-2405.
That's 1-888-403-2405.
1-888-403-2405 That's 1-888-403-2405
One more time. Write this down.
1-888-403-2405 Call right now, folks.
Make sure that you call this number.
I'm telling you, I can't even explain to you how much more healthy and happy I feel since I've been following the advice of Dr. Joel Wallace.
And I think that you're going to have the same experience.
At least I hope that you do.
It's incredible.
Absolutely.
Alrighty.
The other number is in case you get a busy signal and you don't want to be put on hold.
Go ahead and call the other number.
It should be open for your call.
Tim will be on the other line.
So we hope we hear from you.
I have struggled with the most excruciating pain in my legs for years, years and years and years to the point, ladies and gentlemen, where I actually thought that I couldn't go on anymore.
And if you don't believe that, you talk to my wife and children or some of the people who know me personally who have attended our conferences and seen me hobbling around at the end of the day in excruciating pain.
It's almost gone now.
Nothing that I have ever done has ever helped with this pain.
Except what I've learned from Dr. Walke.
He stopped their high blood pressure medication.
What they did was they went to the doctor and said, you don't need this medication anymore.
What are you doing?
Well, I'm on this experiment where I double my calcium intake.
Anybody get a recall notice from your doctor saying it's okay to salt your food to taste and please do double your calcium intake?
Anybody get that?
Not a single one.
That's very interesting.
Then, of course, there's insomnia.
That's where you roll around all night and you wake up in the morning and you're more tired when you went to bed.
That's insomnia.
Of course, doctors have two treatments for that.
They have Halcyon, which is a sleeping pill, and they have Barbiturates.
They kill about 10,000 people a year with overdoses of those things, but that's okay.
It's a prescription and they're watching out for us.
And remember, George Bush, when he went to Japan, they gave him some Halcyon so he could sleep on the way to Japan because of the time difference.
And when he woke up, one of the side effects of Halcyon is nausea and vomiting.
I don't know how you say it in Japanese, but it was very dramatic on world TV, right?
Not very presidential.
And so I'm sure that's why he lost the election, because he kicked over that Japanese ambassador.
And then, of course, there's kidney stones, and then there's bone spurs, heel spurs, and calcium deposits.
Physicians will tell you the first thing you give up nutritionally is calcium and dairy because they have this foolish belief, the stupid belief, the ignorant belief that the calcium in kidney stones, bone spurs, heel spurs, and calcium deposits come from your diet, when instead it only comes from your bones when you have a raging osteoporosis.
And when you get these things, you need more calcium, not less.
And then there's cramps and twitches.
Wake up in the middle of the night and your foot is all cramped up around your neck and
you say, Lord take me from the knee down.
I'm not going to make it till morning.
We've all experienced that.
That is very common.
The one that bothered me when I was a teenager was twitches.
My eyelids used to twitch.
And I'd look in the mirror and I'd say, do people see that or is that just my imagination?
Sure enough, I could see it actually twitching.
So I showed my mom and she got panicked, you know.
This was during the early fifties and she grabbed me by the shirt and she took me down to this lady doctor, I'll never forget her name, was Mary Jane Steffington.
And she had me sit down in my jockey underwear and her little stainless steel stool, you know, that she could wrench down and up.
I'm sitting there in my jockey underwear for an hour.
She'd look in my eye for 10, 15 minutes.
She couldn't figure it out, so she'd go on to another patient, come back, and look.
I knew she was lost.
Right?
Now, today, that'd be sexual harassment, sitting there naked for an hour in the doctor's office.
But then I knew she was just lost.
And so I said, look, Doc, I'm a man.
You know, I was 14 years old.
I'm a man, and I play football, and I'm on the wrestling team and the weightlifting team in my high school.
If you have to amputate my eyelids, just do it.
And so she got the picture, so she went in her office, she came back, she had a Maybelline Mascara Eyelash Brush with a little mirror.
I kind of looked at her and she says, I said, what's that for?
And she said, well, the only thing I can figure out is your eyelashes are curled back and they're tickling your eyeballs and that's what's making your eyelids twitch.
So what I want you to do, and she's giving me this feminine stuff, you know, she says, I want you to retrain your eyelashes with this Maybelline Mascara Eyelash Brush.
And I said, wait a minute, doc, you want me to sit on the bench I play defense.
You want me to sit on the bench and you want me to do this?
My own team will tell me!
You gotta be kidding!
So I put on my pants and I leave and I go to the school library and I get out a health book written by two nurses and I look up muscle cramps and muscle twitches and it says calcium deficiency.
So I knew when I was 14 years old that doctors didn't know anything about nutrition and it hasn't changed, believe me.
Oh, I forgot to tell you how I fixed it.
I went home and I grabbed some of them calf pellets And after eating a handful a day, in three days they were all gone and never came back.
So if you've seen me with a handful of stuff bulging in my pockets, you know it's calf pellets.
Then there's PMS, premenstrual syndrome.
You know, the emotional and physical stuff.
The medical treatment of choice for PMS is what we call a hysterical ectomy.
It's been shortened to a hysterectomy.
That's a hundred-year-old treatment.
Now, doctors do about 285,000 unnecessary hysterical ectomies a year, but it makes Mercedes payments, so they do them.
Even the AMA said they're unnecessary, but they don't take their licenses away, and people keep going to them.
Can you imagine a poor woman in her 30s?
She says, Doc, you gotta do something.
Every time I go out to hang up the clothes, my neighbor's kids run down the basement screaming, which, my own kids think I'm crazy.
My husband's leaving me.
I'm gonna lose my job.
You gotta do something.
Instead of giving her some calcium, he says, well, I'm due for a Mercedes payment, and I know I'm not supposed to do that surgery, but let me give you a hysterical ectomy and we'll both be happy.
Well, University of California, San Diego came out three years ago now and said, if you just double the RDA of calcium intake, you can get rid of 85% of the emotional and physical symptoms of PMS.
And when that came out, there were huge lines around the health food stores, around the blocks, and people had sleeping bags, and they closed before they all got their calcium.
And every person in line was a man.
They were there for their daughters, and their girlfriends, and their wives, and things like that.
Okay, and lastly is low back pain.
85% of Americans get low back pain when you work on a computer or you unload hay or you drive big trucks.
Doesn't matter.
Low back is a big problem.
Low back is just osteoporosis of the vertebrae, whether you have a disc problem or whatnot.
Because if your disc doesn't have anything to hold on to, your vertebrae have melted away, what's going to happen to the disc?
Especially if you have a copper deficiency or because they're made out of elastic fibers, they go like a water balloon with a lot of pressure on them.
Well, I just want you to look at this quickly before we do the last mineral.
Low back, you go to an orthopedic surgeon or rheumatologist.
You might get a muscle relaxant.
You might get Valium and a muscle relaxant.
You get a laminectomy.
You get your vertebrae fused.
You might get a disc operation.
They don't tell you that 75% of the time you'll never be the same again.
Right?
PMS, you go to your OBGYN.
You can Go to an internist, you can go to a family counselor or shrink or divorce attorney.
Cramps and twitches, you go to a neurologist, you go to a sports medicine doctor, an internist.
Bone spurs, heel spurs, calcium deposits, you go to a rheumatologist, an orthopedic surgeon or a podiatrist.
Kidney stones, you go to a urologist, an internist, or a surgeon.
Insomnia, you go to a shrink, or a sleep clinic, or an internist.
Hypertension, you go to a cardiologist, an internist, or a surgeon.
Arthritis, a rheumatologist, an orthopedic surgeon, an internist.
Beating gums, you go to a dentist, or a periodontist.
Osteoporosis, you go to all those health specialists, including a tongue salesman.
They're nothing more than a calcium deficiency.
It costs you 10 cents a day to deal with.
On the average, because Americans have insurance and we have Medicare and Medicaid, we spend on the average $25,000 to $250,000 and we undergo 5 to 10 surgical procedures a year for calcium deficiency.
We beg the doctors to do it!
We beg the doctors to do it.
Well, it's our choice.
The last one I'll share with you is diabetes.
Everybody's touched by diabetes.
It's the number three cause of death in adults in the United States.
Number three cause of death and it has terrible complications and side effects, diabetes.
The side effects include blindness of many kinds.
Then there's a kidney failure with dialysis and kidney transplant.
There's cardiovascular disease of all kinds and of course that contributes to the number one cause of death, which is the number one cause of death.
Then there's amputations.
Everybody ought to have one of those because they're totally paid for in your health thing because they assume that you're not just going to get one because you want to get everything in your health benefits.
And then you shorten your life because you have diabetes.
On the average, you have a shorter lifespan than someone who doesn't have diabetes.
Now, we learned in 1957, in the animal industry, that we could prevent and cure diabetes with two-trace minerals.
That's a pretty profound statement.
That we could prevent and cure diabetes with two-trace minerals in 1957 in animals.
It was published in Federation Proceedings, which is the official journal of the American science.
The National Institutes of Health.
The official monthly journal.
It was August 1957.
Today, when your doctor gets a new diabetic patient, he drops to his knees and says, Thank you, Lord!
And he gets up and he runs to the phone and he picks it up and he calls his real estate agent.
Because every time he gets a new diabetic patient, you represent $250,000 to him over a 20, 30, 40 year period.
Because he knows that eventually you're going to go through that.
And so he calls his real estate agent and says, I need a new apartment complex.
I need a small farm.
Oh, their big thing now is they all want strip malls.
Yep, this thing is kind of like Monopoly, you know, they all want strip malls.
Well, there are two trace minerals that you can get to prevent and cure this are chromium and vanadium.
Vanadium alone, according to the University of Vancouver British Columbia Medical School, vanadium alone will replace insulin In anti-onset diabetics, which represent 85% of all diabetics.
First, they can't quit their insulin cold turkey.
They've got to gradually wean off of it.
It takes four to six months for most people to slowly wean off of insulin if they're taking in adequate amounts of chromium and vanadium.
I've seen it work on hundreds and hundreds of people.
Now, to me, this is criminal.
Because if you write to Hills Packing Company that makes five-shot dogs, they're right over here in Topeka, Kansas.
I don't know if I'm pointing west, but that way, okay.
They're all saying that way.
Speak of Kansas, they manufacture science diet dog food and other science diet products, high-tech food for animals.
If you write them and say, how many minerals exactly is in science diet for dog food?
They'll write you back and say there's 40 minerals.
You write Checkerboard Square in St.
Louis, Ralston Creek and say, just how many minerals are in your rat pellets for laboratory rats?
And they'll say there's 28 minerals.
I'll give anybody in this room a crisp new $100 bill if you can find me a human infant formula in a grocery store that has more than 11.
So our dogs get 40 minerals.
Now this is what Mike Murphy was saying.
A dog never seems to get sick.
When he's getting his canned dog food with all these vitamins and minerals in there.
So our dogs get 40 minerals, our rats get 28 minerals, and our human infants get 11.
Is that fair?
No!
That's called drugs!
Doesn't matter if you're talking about SMA, Shimilac, Isomil, ProSoyB.
In fact, that's what they call Shimilac, Shimilac, because it lacks everything.
Okay, if I've convinced you that you have to consciously take in all the minerals yourself,
that you can't depend on your food, and certainly can't depend on anything that's boxed or packaged or bottled,
There are three types of minerals you have to be concerned about.
One is metallic minerals.
Metallic minerals are essentially ground-up rocks.
Metallic minerals are things like oyster shell, egg shell, dolomite, limestone, calcium carbonate, clays of various kinds, Mount Merulinate clay, seabed minerals.
They're all atoms.
They're only 8 to 12 percent absorbable.
When you reach age 35 to 40, it drops down to 3 to 5 percent.
And I have to tell you a story here.
Some of you heard this on the show today.
I ran into a guy at a meeting like this up at Grand Rapids, Michigan, and this fellow owns a port-a-potty business.
You know, that's that green or blue colored outhouse.
Man, if we'd only had one of those back when I was a kid.
We had these ones with splinters, you know, in the wood.
At any rate, he says, I see something that describes that in my port-a-potty business.
I said, what's that?
He says, well, we take those things back to the shop to clean them out with a pressure hose.
He says, we put a quarter-inch grid underneath them because kids throw rocks and sticks and toys in there.
And if we don't put a grid there, it blocks up the sewer system.
It costs us thousands of dollars to fix it.
He says, every time we clean one of those out, we find hundreds of vitamin tablets.
I said, well, how do you know they're vitamin tablets?
He said, well, that's really easy.
He says, right on the coating it says, Theragram M, one a day, Centrum.
He says, come here.
He takes me out in the back of the shop, and there's this literal mountain of all these vitamin pills he got out of his port-a-potties.
That's because you can't absorb metallic minerals.
If you read the labels on those multiples, they say your iron comes in the form of iron oxide.
What is iron oxide?
Rust!
You might as well just go out to an old railroad track and take your butter knife and scrape some of that rust off and lick it, and you're going to get your iron supplement.
That's what they're giving you.
Well, I'll show you how bad it is if you take something like calcium laxate, which is a common metallic mineral.
Let's say it's a calcium tablet, calcium laxate, a thousand milligrams.
If you take two of those, you're not getting 2,000 milligrams of calcium.
In fact, I have people all the time say, Well, I took lots of calcium, Doc.
I hear you on the radio talking about calcium and arthritis, and I took 2,000 milligrams of calcium a day.
It didn't help my arthritis.
In fact, it got worse.
I said, what kind of calcium are you taking?
They said calcium laxate.
Well, there's your problem, because only 250 milligrams of that is metallic calcium.
So let's say you absorb 10% of that.
Then the other 750 milligrams is lactose or milk sugar.
So 10% of 250, It's 25.
So if you take two of those tablets, you're not getting 2,000.
You're getting 50 milligrams.
So to get what you need, you need to take 90 of those tablets a day.
You need to take 30 with each meal and you got 59 more minerals to go.
And there's those people who want to do things naturally.
Let's see if you can do anything good with 10 pounds of spinach.
Let's be fair, let's see if you can get a thousand milligrams of magnesium.
I picked magnesium because in green leafy vegetables you have a lot of magnesium because of the chlorophyll, right?
Part of the chlorophyll molecule.
In any pound of anything you got 454 grams.
In 10 pounds of spinach you got 4540 grams of which most of that 97% is water.
4540 grams of which most of that 97% is water.
Unless they have one gram of chlorophyll and that's 10 pounds of spinach and 50 milligrams of magnesium.
You've got to divide that into the thousand you want.
You get a factor of 20, which you multiply times a 10.
You have to eat 200 pounds of spinach.
You've got 58 more minerals to go.
Okay?
So, you've got to be a pretty big person to accomplish all this.
Even as big as I am, you can't get it done.
So, I prefer to supplement rather than do those things.
Then, of course, during the 60s, the agricultural industry came up with chelated minerals.
Chelated minerals.
Because farmers aren't dumb enough to pay for a dollar if something goes into an animal's mouth and have 99 cents come out in the manure.
So, I have to really thank farmers for being that clever.
And chelated minerals are just metallic minerals with an amino acid or protein or enzyme wrapped around a metal atom and increase the absorbability of 40%.
And the health food industry jumped on that right away because it was a major improvement in absorbability of minerals.
The most efficient way to absorb minerals is the colloidal form.
Colloidal minerals are 98% absorbable.
Two and a half times more available than chelated minerals and ten times more available than metallic minerals.
And they're very interesting.
They're liquid.
They can only be liquid.
Can't be pills, powders, or capsules.
They're very small particle size.
They are 7,000 times smaller than a red blood cell.
And they're negatively charged.
Every particle is negatively charged.
Your intestinal lining is positively charged.
So you actually have an electrical or magnetic gradient that concentrates these minerals around the lining of your intestine.
These three things together give you the 98% absorbability.
Now plants have a very interesting part to play in colloidal minerals.
Remember we said that plants cannot create minerals.
They're not in the soil.
Plants can't make them.
Remember that U.S.
Senate Document 264 says they're not in the soil anymore.
At any rate, metallic minerals are taken up by plants when they're in the soil.
Plants convert them in their tissues to colloidal minerals.
And this is how we store minerals in our body.
This is how we use minerals in our body.
This is how we transport minerals from their storage place to their site of use in the colloidal farm.
Alrighty, folks.
I hope this really helps you all open your eyes and look at your own health and your loved ones also.
I want to thank you for tuning in tonight and I hope you will tune in tomorrow night.
I will back this up five minutes so we don't get too lost where we left off.
like i said thank you for tuning in and i will see you tomorrow
i'm a woman baby, oh, and i ain't gonna lie, if i said i'm a woman baby, baby you can't go wrong.
We ain't playin', hold on, baby, come on.
When I say come on over, baby, we got chicken in the mornin'.
Woo, huh?
Come on, baby, baby, got to move that horn.
We're shaking, oh, shaking, oh, oh, oh.
Yeah, let's shake, baby, shake.
Let's shake, baby, shake.
Let's shake it, baby, shake it.
Let's shake, baby, shake.
Come on over.
Oh, shake it, oh, oh, oh.
Let's go.
Oh, shake it, oh, oh, oh.
Wee.
Come on.
I want to thank you folks again and I will return you to 101.1FN to the oldies but the
Wee.
I want to thank you folks again.
And I will return you to 101.1FN, to the oldies but the goodies.
goodies.
Thank you.
Shake, baby, shake.
All you gotta do, honey, is kinda stand in one spot.