Um I'm gonna do a wrap-up on the uh cancer ward series simply because I don't have cancer any longer, it's not an issue.
The things I'm doing are gonna preclude it uh reoccurring with any luck.
And um uh with foreknowledge.
So I won't be putting a lot of um effort into that series anymore, so I'm gonna just wrap it up and go into other stuff.
Uh this is two for Tuesday, because I'm gonna do this video and then I'm gonna do another video on a separate subject, uh, all the woo-woo shit.
Um this video is essentially to talk about health and how you need to think about it as we go forward here over this um next decade, or really up to 2041 is the official is the official dumb idea of when the ice age begins relative to all these cycles lining up, right?
We might be freezing our asses off ten years earlier, so we might think of it as the ice age starting in 2030, but officialdom says, because of the you know, this the academics because of all these cycles lining up that the uh solar cycles, etc.
etc.
will induce a um truly grand solar minimum uh reduction in temperature on the earth uh by 2041.
Now, of course, we also hear about the assholes um in Congress funding funding plan B, which is to pump more chemtrails up there to try and cool the planet, because they think our planet is heating up.
It's not the case.
Anyway, a separate issue.
Okay, so um I had cancer.
I've had it a couple of times, uh, three times that I know of.
Or that I suspect, okay.
I've had two confirmed allopathic diagnoses of cancer.
One was a big giant lump, the other was a big area in my head.
I've also had a um uh full-on radical mastectomy, but there was never any pathology done.
You know, great guys there.
And I was so out of it from all of that, I I didn't follow up and and my brother had just died, it was a terrible time, so I didn't uh didn't bother with those things.
So, but it was probably um as suspected, um, early form of um breast cancer.
Uh the reason I'm getting all the cancers or had gotten all the cancers was because I worked in the chemical industries when I was a kid.
Uh the only work I could find.
Uh was dirty, dangerous, uh the the closed environment suits weren't closed, they never really kept that crap out of it out of you, and you absorb it and it causes issues.
I don't do that anymore.
So I'm not likely to uh not likely to have any more um formative causative um trigger events.
Okay, cancer is a metabolic disease.
It's not a virus, it's not genetic, um, it's not uh uh uh evil demons, it's not uh, you know, being cursed by God, none of those.
You can see it any way you want, you can believe it to be any of those should you choose, but it is not.
It is a metabolic disease that runs by cancer, uh, runs by sugar, is is 100% dependent on sugar, and even so uh I mean finally the academics have uh keyed into this and they're now using sugar to kill the stuff, in a sense, right?
That What they do is they take a chemical and they bond it to sugar because they know the cancer just can't give, can't live without the sugar, and it'll take up that chemical, and the theory is that that chemical will then kill the cancer.
Okay, that's an anti of thinking, right?
Um, just like colloidal silver is a fragile approach to the coronavirus.
Alright, everybody's gonna get really pissed, but here's what I'll explain why it's fragile.
Colloidal silver is a fragile approach to the coronavirus or any other virus at the same level as all of the other allopathic approaches that rely on trying to dose the disease.
Okay.
So you get a tickle in your nose.
You go and you snort some colloidal silver, tickle goes away.
Presumably the bacteria, the virus, whatever it was that had irritated the little uh villi in your nose, the little hairs, um, and got trapped on it and signaled to some part of your your snout.
Oh, I got an itch, I must have caught a big baddie there.
Okay, and then you flush it all out with uh colloidal silver, and you're all good.
Now the problem is that that only works in that instant, okay.
Colloidal silver by its very nature is absorbed by the body, and as it is absorbed, it is neutralized.
Alright, it does its work on your own skin and becomes neutralized even if there's no bacteria to kill, even if there's no viruses to kill there, because it becomes involved in your body chemistry and is no longer colloidal silver in an active form.
Might be a silver oxide, might be a silver nitrate.
It's bonded and stuff happens in your skin when you apply it topically, so it works in that instant, but you have no skin protection 15 minutes later from that colloidal silver.
It's that rapid, okay.
As it as it is absorbed and interacts with your skin, it is neutralized.
That's the function of how it should work within the body.
This is why you would have to drink gallons of the shit to get it down far enough into your gut for it to do anything to a gut biome in a positive way, and then it will not do anything in a gut biome in a positive way at volume.
You can't take the stuff in volume because you will quite literally kill off major portions of the good bacteria inside your gut because colloidal silver is not biome element specific, right?
Anything that's available to be glommed on to the to the uh silver molecule as part of the process of oxidization or night or turning into nitrate is gonna become involved in whether it's a good bacteria or a bad bacteria.
So uh colloidal silver is a fragile approach.
If you were in an airplane and you were spraying your snout, you know, you thought you had coronavirus people around you, and uh and you sprayed your snout all the time with uh you know aerosolized colloidal silver, it would work in that instant.
But if you got off the airplane and you breathe a sigh of relief and you go, oh you I'm safe, then you're walking through the airport, you get into the taxi, and then you pick it up in the taxi.
If you're not spraying the colloidal silver, then you're not gonna get any protection.
So it doesn't work uh well that way.
It's good in the moment, so if I were to find myself um exposed, knowingly exposed to something, I might indeed decide to uh dose with colloidal silver, but I wouldn't count on it going very far past my um esophagus in terms of being active and effective, so it's not gonna protect me by plumping up my tissues and filling them full of silver or anything.
It doesn't work that way.
This is why uh this is why I really bitch about this is why number two video.
We'll get into that in the number two video.
Okay, so colloidal silver is fragile.
Um hand wipes in hospitals are fragile.
They're fragile in a different way.
And we actually have academics in Sweden who studied the thing over a number of years and and determined that hand wipes in hospital and those little spray dispenser things where you you put on that that solution that's a gel with alcohol and crap in it.
Um it doesn't matter what is in that solution, the alcohol base is what's causing the problems.
These things turned out to be less effective in in reducing bacterial and virus exposures than merely taking all of the stainless steel door handles out and all of the stainless steel um hand rails around the halls and replacing them with copper.
When one hospital did that as a test, they discovered that every time you touched a copper door handle, you got a little tiny micro charge because of the nature of copper in conducting holding static electricity and conducting it over to your flesh.
In the process of touching you with that microcharge, any kind of bacterial biome interchange that's going on in touching that is the bacteria is reduced, it's killed.
Plus, copper is a bacteriocide and a viral side by its very nature.
So if you got bacteria or virus on your hand and you grab a copper door handle, you leave the bacteria and virus there and it dies because it's being killed by being put on a poison copper plate that we just happen to use as a door handle.
And so it was like duh, the hospitals in Sweden said, Oh, and there's a downside.
There's a huge downside to hand wipes in hospitals.
The alcohol dries out your flesh and as they think it should, and then the gel does not replace any of that necessary oil with what they think of as moisture, which are really emulsifiers and with oils that can't be absorbed.
So what happens is the alcohol dries out your hands and it cracks, and you get infections, much more prone to get a bacterial infection if you're continually using these hand wipey things or the gel stuff in hospitals than if you avoid all of that and and wash with a mild soap and water as is needed, and then have copper to touch.
Okay.
So um so anyway, so hand wipes in hospital.
They're fragile because you think they're doing you some good, they're doing some good in that instance, but they have a long-term consequence, which by the way, continual dosing of alcohol has been associated with uh and from aldehyde, and formaldehyde is in some of those damn solutions,
has been associated with uh cancer, skin cancers, in the funeral home industry for 60 plus years in the embalming, okay, because of the the stress, even with rubber gloves and the whole thing, not even uh contact exposure, but atmospheric exposure is enough to cause problems.
I know this kind of shit because I used to write software for insurance companies, and back when the back in the day when all these insurance companies were bringing their uh stuff online, I happened to work for a company that did um I moved over from an escrow business and uh where I wrote escrow software and wrote software for actuarial tables.
So I had to read this stuff to figure out what all the patterns were and how to make it all computer friendly, so to speak, right?
To translate it from these charts and graphs and their their formulae into computers and software.
And so I so I became familiar with a lot of this stuff.
Which, you know, actually has helped over time.
So anyway, so um allopaths are fragile, okay?
Alopaths are fragile in the same way that both colloidal silver and hand wipes are fragile because of the thing of the moment.
I'm not saying don't go to doctors.
If I had a gash or something, I'd certainly go get sewn up.
You know, that's a skill.
I need a surgeon, I need somebody who's not an alcoholic who's who has some grasp of what's going on and isn't uh gonna fill me full of his own infections and doing the surgery.
Uh but other than that, the the risk is relatively minimal that way because the allopaths know how to keep you alive during the surgery.
Um but they're not very good at medicine.
Okay, medicine is healing, is allowing the body to heal itself with and giving the body what it needs, system support in order to heal.
Okay, medicine and system support are anti-fragile.
Get to that in a minute.
Alipasts are fragile because they give you harsh chemicals intending to kill something inside of you, and they think leave the rest of you alone.
Doesn't work that way because they're so ignorant and they even acknowledge their ignorance because they're continually changing their protocols over time as new studies come on in that say, oh, we better not do that.
You know, look how many people died when we did that shit.
So uh so allopaths are fragile.
Uh yeah, you need them.
These days, if you um uh were in a situation where uh you thought you were exposed to a coronavirus isn't going to do you much good to go to an allopath because there's not much they can do for you.
Uh, Because they need to treat the thing in you of the moment.
That's why I fired the oncologist.
Okay.
I got the uh got so far into my cancer recovery.
Uh so I was with an oncologist from say of um uh 2018 until I cannot ass in January of 2019.
So, you know, I gave him a shot.
Uh you know, I was disgusted with him right off, but but I gave him that shot because there really wasn't much else, and you're thrashing around and your body's weak and your mind's all fucked up from the um uh the surgery, the uh anesthesia amnesia.
Um but in any event the um uh the oncologist uh was fired because his approach was I can't treat it if I can't see it.
So I'm sitting here thinking, hmm.
So you mean what you're saying explicitly is that you can't help me with nascent cancer.
You need to wait until it's a big fucking tumor and you can actually see it, regardless of how big the tumor is, before you can get in there and do something.
That means that basically an oncologist is just somebody there to monitor you until they can get a surgeon involved.
You know, they don't do you any good.
If they're dosing you with chemicals, they're trying to kill something in you and hope to God that you're not gonna get wiped out by that same chemical.
And so far, it doesn't seem like uh there's a lot of evidence that they're good at that shit.
Uh there's a lot of anti-cancer stuff, right?
Tons of it.
I was amazed when I got into it.
It's like every time you turn around, you find out that this substance or that substance or this other thing has anti-cancer properties.
But most of these, I would say the vast majority of them, uh, and I went all the way back, I got involved with reading um uh the uh traditional Chinese medicine um manuals that go back thousands of years from the Yellow Emperor forward.
That was the longest the yellow emperor conducted the longest continuous cancer study in the human history, and it went over 200 years, and they learned a whole lot of stuff, all of which is ignored by the alipaths, or currently being rediscovered by the alipath.
Anyway, so uh so colloidal silver is is fragile, it's only good in the moment, it is good in the moment, it's only good topically, it doesn't really, it's not systemic.
Uh hand wipes are are fragile, they're only good in that moment, and they damage you long term.
Alipaths damage you long term by their thinking, only use them as a um uh uh an access into the pharmacy system if you need it, or um expert opinion, but always double check what they say.
Most of these fuckers don't know.
And also bear in mind, a couple of rules with allopaths.
Only one person graduates top in the class.
Everybody else is down.
One thing you may want to ask your your oncologist or your doctor, which I asked my oncologist, where did you graduate in your class?
And it's like, holy fuck.
He was in the bottom 25 percentile.
But I'm living out in shit, you know, in rural county, so so uh, you know, shit rolls downhill and alipaths crawl uphill.
Uh so they just don't stick around here.
If they're any good at all, you know, they get bigger bucks going uh further and further in towards the uh metropolis.
Um but anyway, so um uh so somebody's got to graduate in the middle of the damn class, be advised, right?
And then allopath knowledge stops the minute that they get out of out of uh class.
Not even graduation, because many of them stop really gaining any knowledge in that last year anyway.
Uh and they they don't know nutrition and they don't know the human body.
They know how to slice and dice it, and that's all because allopaths came up, by the way, the whole allopathic medicine comes up from war, from uh surgeons doing you know, patching people together, so that's their viewpoint of how the human body works.
Alright, so seed oils, alright?
All seed oils are drying to your system.
They extract fats.
You think of them as a fat, they're sort of a fat, but they're not really, insofar as your body is concerned.
Okay.
So when I I was a vegetarian for 35 years.
In that period of time, I was a vegan for four years.
And during that period of being a vegan, I had the worst possible sinus headaches you can imagine.
Now, I was a vegetarian, yes, because of a certain ethos, but also because I was forced that way by the undiagnosed cancer in me.
I had one of these long-term cancers that grows for over 30 fucking years, and uh, and usually they're not found, and usually you die.
And I went all the way that period and I died, and then I refused to take it and came back on that last day.
Um Friday the 13th, my lucky day.
Anyway, so uh I know from personal experience as a vegetarian for 35 years that seed oils are drying to your sinuses.
And I know that once I stopped and didn't have to deal with the cancer anymore, and I could go back to acceptable fats, and I'm using clarified butter in all my cooking.
Um instant relief from all my sinus headaches, my sinuses recovered, my skin's all plump again, uh, because see it basically dries out your entire uh skin structure using seed oils.
And you get dry, flaky skin, you get cracks on the elbow, you get cracks on your feet, um, where you need this excess amount of um fats in the skin because of the type of damage you're gonna have to do to that area of the skin.
It's like our bodies are designed a specific way, or however you want to think about it, have emerged a specific way for specific purposes here, right?
And so you need these extra fats in your system, and seed oils don't give them to you.
My bitch at the moment is that seed oils are extremely drying to the sinuses, and you need your sinuses to prevent viral infections.
Why?
Because your sinuses have all these little hairs in there, as I said earlier, that capture the viruses and the bacteria is just suck them up in the wind.
And uh then once they capture them, the little hair uh you know makes a little vibration, and that's a signaling mechanism that triggers a signaling molecule that triggers the uh ultimately all the way down into the thymus in your body and then back up into the system again to kill the bacteria or kill the virus.
And that's how you're in an extremely crude fashion, that's how your immune system works, right?
Cartoon fashion.
But the point being that if your skin is dry and your sinuses are dry, your hairs aren't going to be able to signal.
They're gonna be dry too, because these little villi are extremely small.
And so they when they capture things, the vibration aspect is entirely dependent on how moist they are.
If so, so you could have tons of good hairs in your nose, capture all kinds of bacteria and virus, and still die of coronavirus because you don't have enough moisture in your skin, or actually you don't have enough fats in your skin, not oils, but fats, uh, to allow this process to work effectively.
Plus, fats are used in the actual um destruction of the of the viruses and the bacteria.
They're a necessary part of your immune system and are controlled through the thymus and so forth, right?
And the consumption of fat, that is to say, eating fat in no way makes you fat.
You can get as much fat as you want.
It's carbs that make you fat.
100% guaranteed.
Uh, I'm on a basically a uh carnivore diet and uh losing fat like mad, and finally starting to get at some of the fat under my eyes uh that was a residual of the cancer.
When you have cancer, you eat lots of sugar, you have to eat sugar in order for that cancer not to continually rebel on you and cause you pain.
And um and you pack on fat all over the any place your body can do it during that process.
So in the last year that I was dying of uh the cancer, I my body weight didn't change, but I lost all kinds of muscle mass and was unaware of it because I was substitute uh the cancer and the vast consumption of carbs was um uh uh causing me to gain uh fat weight that as the muscle mass went away.
And then in the last couple of weeks of the cancer uh there when I was just uh you know a shaking wreck, all of a sudden, I mean, within like three weeks I lost 20 plus pounds as as everything just kind of broke apart.
It was probably a little longer than that.
Maybe it was um maybe it was a little over a month.
Um the last nine days I lost uh 11 pounds.
So uh, you know, so it's a it's a masking process.
And then when I had the surgery, and uh a month or two later, my mind starts coming back, I examine my body, and I realize that my muscles have wasted away, just thoroughly wasted away in the process of the past three, probably four years of the cancer uh directing everything for me.
So, anyway, so you have to be um uh cognizant, uh aware of all of these various different factors uh as you go forward.
And so uh being a vegan, there I can go into why that's not good for the planet, I'm not gonna do it.
We can debate some other vegans at uh some other time because I was a vegan for four years, so hey fuckers, I've been there.
Only I'm not political about it, right?
I'm not trying to force that kind of shit on you.
But a vegan by its very nature dries you out, okay.
You don't have the kinds of fats you get from eating meats, and so you have a different kind of oil in you.
Also, vegans, by the way, think they're being very healthy, but a lot of the vitamins are not bioavailable through through um grains and stuff because of the form in which they're locked up.
Okay, so so being a vegan is fragile within the coronavirus, within a pandemic, within any kind of stuff.
We'll talk about coronavirus very briefly in a second.
Okay, so vaccines for the coronavirus, for any fucking thing, are fragile, okay.
Yes, they're they indeed may work.
The introduction uh in order to build up antibodies of the critter is actually homeopathy.
Okay, so anytime someone says take a vaccine, you're gonna say, What?
Are you a homeopath?
Because what they're saying is it's extremely dilute, you put it in there and your body reacts to it just like uh the German fellow with homeopathy.
So, you know, the alipath beat out all the other kinds of medicine, and they're always bitching at them, but look at how many of the other kinds of medicine they actually end up adopting.
So a vaccine is a reasonably good idea for some specific illnesses for some specific people.
It is not a good idea for as a general panacea for all people because of the uh vaccination of the herd approach that causes the herd to become generally weaker because the nature of vaccines is such that it is fragile, it only does stuff of the moment, and if you fuck around and you put shit in that vaccine that then cause you long-term damage, then you're not only getting a brief momentary pop at the expense of long-term degradation.
The reason I don't like modern vaccines is because of the crap they put in them, and so I won't have it.
No, you know, I'd rather take a syringe of uh straight stuff out of um uh pigory and inject that than these um uh chemical combinations within vaccines, especially for the vaccines that are of the moment and specific because they make one fragile.
Alright, so now on the other side, here's the things you can do.
Okay, so you can make yourself anti-fragile, you just have to have a different mental approach to this.
The anti-fragile person recognizes that they need systemic support, unlike David Wilcock, uh who refuses to take vitamins uh because he's afraid of being coming addicted to them, um somebody who's anti-fragile knows they need system support and recognized that in this time we can't be sure unless we take extra steps that
we're getting the base level of material that our body needs to meet the challenges that we face every day.
So an anti-fragile person with system support says to himself, what is the minimum required?
What is the optimal level for me, and how do I achieve that?
Okay, and so the first thing you do is you go through and you look at the minimum daily requirements and you see all this stuff that you might need.
And then you realize that the minimum daily requirements are for a generalized overview of the population and do not reflect me.
They don't have a clue as to what my fucking body is when they make up these RDAs.
So I have different needs entirely, but I know I need these various different elements That have been identified within the RDA structure.
I just don't listen to them about any of the amounts or where I'm going to get them.
So I've come up with this solution, a system, okay.
And the system is called B deck.
Alright.
We're going to B deck ourselves with lots of vitamins.
And this relates entirely to vitamins.
Vitamins, whoops, what's up, hang on, hang on.
Vitamins are vita minerals, basically minerals.
There's a mineral element in a lot of them, but they're vital vital elements, life elements that you don't make in your body or don't make adequate amounts.
So we're now we're we've altered the USA understanding of vitamins to allow for those elements that we do make some of, but our ability to make them over time decreases, and so they become more of a vitamin later in life than in when we're young, right?
And so there's various different kinds of vitamins.
And I didn't put all of them in here, right?
You can actually do this.
A bidec, but it got a little bit complicated to do it that way.
But these are vitamins, but there's this interesting way to think about these vitamins in this particular arrangement, okay, especially when you're looking at the idea of dealing with um elements of the moment, you know, momentary fears of you know pandemic or health issues or whatever, right?
And so here is uh the way that you want to think about these things.
This is vitamin K over here, and we look at these things from longer term into shorter term effects going this way.
Okay, so K is a very great level system support for bones, for all different kinds of um signaling systems and so on.
You don't need a ton of it, but you need it, okay, and you need to get it from a good bioavailable source.
And it's usually bound with D3 because they're uh symbiotic and they do things together.
You'll find that D3, the D molecule or the D vitamins are uh performing as signaling molecules for bunches of other things, okay, and they're very key in lots of different uh aspects of your body, especially in uh reacting to pathogens, you know, uh attacks by viruses and stuff.
So K, but here's the real kicker, alright?
K is K is the kicker, but C is the absolute center.
Okay, you've got to have enough C in you for any of these others to be really effective.
If you don't have enough C vitamin in you, none of the others are going to aid you in any significant amount because C is so uh essential all the way through in all these other systems, and it acts on its own as an antioxidant, as its own form of signaling molecule, it's part of your gut system, it actually helps form some of the uh intercellular uh cement with uh hyaluronic acid.
So there's all different kinds of things that C does for you.
So C is at the center, you get your C levels up, and then you worry about all the others.
It is said that C should be consumed at the rate of 30 milligrams per kilogram of body weight.
Okay, so for me, just to make sure that, but you have to understand something.
Unless, okay, so liposomal is absorbed at the rate of 80%.
So liposomal vitamin C gets absorbed at the rate of 80%, so that's what you need.
You can get it a liquid, stay away from the soy-based ones, uh, you can get it capsul, okay.
Also, never also something else down here that is deadly is soy.
Don't ever fuck around with soy.
Uh destroys the brain, the soy oil uh over time and all different and it it compounds many of the other problems you get with seed oils.
Okay, so liposomal uh vitamin C gets absorbed at 80%.
All of the others, you can only figure 20%.
So if you're dealing with just some regular old ascorbic acid, you're gonna have to take enough.
You're gonna have to take about five times what you need, so you'll be flushing your bowels out because that level is a laxative.
If you ever need a laxative, vitamin C is the route to go.
It's extremely gentle, it doesn't hurt anything, it repairs your gut as it does it, and um uh it doesn't cause any water displacement problems or any of that kind of stuff, just to let you know.
Because what you do is you take vitamin C to saturate yourself, you take it to the level that it causes diarrhea over the course of a couple of days, you gradually increase how much you're taking, and then you know you've flushed your system with vitamin C at that level.
You've reached bowel tolerance from then on, you can ratchet down to whatever you really need.
Okay, so you get your C levels uh set, and in the process of getting C, you eat a good diet that has bone broth in it or or meat or something to get vitamin K, or take a vitamin K and D3 supplement, and that's the base on which you build that, those are like the foundation of your deck here.
We're gonna bedeck you with vitamins, and we're gonna bedeck you with vitamins at an optimal level.
So then you can get C E and E is good for your veins, for your arteries, for all of the signaling mechanisms that allow cross blood lymph system interactions.
Uh, it's good for the skin, it's good for the brain, all different kinds of stuff.
It's essential, you know, it's uh good for the uh genitals and the reproduction system, good for the uh gut for the liver, and it's an essential requirement, and you can take a lot more of it.
Now, here's the thing.
I used to have some very large varicose veins.
I I tripled my vitamin E take for four months, and varicose veins went away.
Just not there anymore.
Okay, so now D, you've got to get with your K. You get your D to boost your immune system because vitamin D comes from the sun, you don't get the sun in the winter, or if you're living in big cities all the time and never go outside, you don't get any sun, you don't make any vitamin D. D is essential for the thymus to be able to coordinate your immune system.
So you've got to get your vitamin D. And then uh B and A. A is for eyes, and the whole B complex is for emotions and mood.
Okay, so um so this is why we move this way for longer to short term, because if your mood's going down, look to your B vitamin levels, right?
Uh 3, 12, 6, there's a whole shitload of vitamin B, right.
I I take niacin at the level of one gram a day, and I get a flush out of it, and I really like that.
I know I'm getting my my vitamin B all flushed all through me.
So I don't have a problem with that.
A lot of people do, they just they just can't um can't deal with the uh with the flushing, but you can get non-flushing niacin.
That only gives you one out of the the complex that you need, so you need to look into others as well.
But it's over here on this end, it's necessary for health and so on, but uh it's over here on this end because it affects emotions, which are much more ephemeral, and so it's down here in the shorter term.
Now, quickly you gotta get through the rest of this.
I got a lot of stuff.
So I have I have um uh material, machinery, all different kinds of shit sewing up showing up here for my uh Boskowitz UFO challenge.
And so we're gonna get up to our next level.
Have to spend several days setting it up, and I have other things I've got to do, but um, so I'll be delayed a number of days on that.
Okay, so now C60.
Alright, so C60, uh, insofar as the bacteria, viruses, and all of that kind of stuff is very good because of the nature of it as an antioxidant.
Okay, and here's it here's another thing about C60.
C60 rehabilitates itself as an individual molecule after it's done its job of removing oxidative uh or retical oxidative uh oxygen stress uh waste from your cells.
So it's sort of like is a garbage man, it picks it up, takes it to where it needs to get dumped, and then it goes back looking for more.
Unlike vitamin C. Vitamin C does the same job, or glutathione, which basically is actually a form of vitamin C. Uh, or it has the same essential uh actions.
Um, those get used up.
So a molecule of vitamin C bites the dust when it gets rid of that bad guy out of your system, unlike C60.
So C60, to an extent, will uh relieve the pressure on the rest of your stuff and provide system support for the antioxidants, which makes it easier for vitamin C to be used in the other aspects of what it's needed for in your body.
So you need vitamin C as intercellular uh glue to glue all your cells together.
Inadequate vitamin C means that cancer can come on in and find its way in through one of the cellular linings, the intercellular areas, and establish itself, and that's what happens, right?
And so, and then it does that to get its own blood supply, and then you're off and sucking sugar and craving sugar, and you just can't help it, and then the next thing you know, you wake up one day and uh and you know you died of cancer.
And it is not pleasant.
Believe me, there's a lot of different ways to die, and cancer is the is way down on my list.
Uh so C60 um helps you uh helps all the other systems by taking over a major uh level of load within your antioxidants.
Now C60 also does some other stuff, it causes apoptosis.
Apoptosis is where senescent cells that are not really contributing to your well-being are told, hey, you know, your time's done, step off.
And uh they do.
And uh so you get this weird effect after you've had C60 for a while, and at least I noticed it, that um sort of a thinning, a leaning effect of um of the cell structure.
It feels good, you don't feel as polluted.
Um, and I'm old, I felt pretty polluted.
I had a lot of years in me here, right?
So, anyway, so uh C60 is good at that level.
It's also really good for macular degeneration.
And I'm wearing glasses now, but they have no, it's like a 1.25, and that the only reason I'm wearing them is because of the blue blocker to aid my eyes and and you know, reduce the stress on the and reduction of uh vitamin A in dealing with the uh blue radiation that we're exposed to so much.
Uh anyway, so now on to the next one.
The next one here is peptides.
This is really for old people, okay?
And this is peptides, let's say, feel 25 again.
And I don't know if I feel 25 again.
I know I feel young, I don't ache, I don't have problems.
Uh you know, I get up in the morning, I have energy.
Uh I actually have to still work at maintaining an early night, and I'll get into that in a second.
Um, and it's it's probably because of the peptides, so I have a have a big energy here.
Peptides are signaling molecules, they're short chain little molecules, you know, five or ten of them clumped together, nothing really big, and they're used as signaling molecules in your body.
And you may have, you know, uh a particular system in your brain, all right.
And let's just say that you've got a particular system in your brain and it's just sort of working maybe sometimes a little bit.
And uh what's going on may be that you don't have enough peptides, enough signaling molecules to tell that system to turn on 100% or at all sometimes.
And as soon as you get enough of those those signaling molecules, you get these signals that rush through your body, the systems turn on and you feel a shitload better, tons better, okay.
And all of a sudden, stuff starts reacting a lot differently, other systems themselves turn on because it's a cascade effect, and as you become older and you become beset with disease, maybe one of your your aspects of disease might uh uh might shut down five or ten of your systems.
And so now peptides are not used to treat disease, they don't treat disease.
That's not the point.
They're a system support, okay, without the level of net and peptides decrease once you're in your like hormones, or actually they used to call peptides hormones, but all hormones basically for women start decreasing at 29 for men at 36, and you just go.
Now, women bitch and moan about that, but men decrease very much more rapidly after 40, that's why we die earlier, is because our rate of uh decrease in hormonal uh output and and uh the signaling molecules, peptides, etc.
Uh, we decrease in some of these things at almost twice the rate of women over time.
So not fair, you know.
Um anyway, though.
Uh so uh peptides may make you feel 25 again if it's if you're not feeling 25 uh simply because of the lack of the signaling molecules, all right.
Um uh but they're not a disease Treatment, I don't want you to understand them that way.
There are some diseases that do, in fact, respond because you're making your whole system better, not because of the individual peptide is reacting on that individual disease.
So it's not an allopathic approach, okay?
Much more holistic.
Peptides originate and are refined and are understood today because of the work of the Russians.
The Soviet Union was restricted from getting because of sanctions, getting medicines of all different kinds that the alipaths in our country were working on, so they had to come up with something, so they they came up with this approach of peptides.
Now I buy all of my anything that I want to make sure is non-GMO, especially something that's going to be a supplement or a medicine, I get from Russia because they their laws are so strict, you know, and um they're non-GMO and they're the best fucking quality you can buy.
Uh you know, and I really like my Ruski friends, and they're doing uh very good for the rest of us humans.
So now here's the thing about peptides, okay?
They're a support system molecule, so you don't take them continuously.
It's not like allopaths where they want you to take that fucking chemical every damn day so they can get that money from you over and over and over again year in and year out, and they don't care what happens to you.
Peptides work this way.
They come in these little come in little boxes.
This one is for cartilage, okay.
Um it's all in Russian, there's a couple of little uh bits and pieces, and you can get these on Amazon and get them on live stream, get them on a number of different places.
They're expensive because they're worth it.
Alright, but here's how they work, just to save you some money.
Alright, so this one here is for cartilage.
I'm taking it because I have to build up the cartilage in my hands because my goal by the end of the year is an upside-down muscle up.
Okay, so I'm gonna have to do some twisting action, and I want to make sure that all my ligaments and and my cartilage ligaments and tendons and the cartilage system can take this, and and my knees and stuff, right?
I'm 67, you gotta build these things up.
I'm using peptides as body um rebuilding after cancer.
So I've gone through a number of them.
And peptides, uh, you can get, I'm gonna go into how they work in a second, but you can get them for uh brain, that would be serolutin.
Forgive the spelling, um, and get them for uh um adrenal, that would be gland accort, glandochort, get them for stomach, blood, uh liver, and these are just the ones I know of heart, um, eyes, uh just all different kinds of things.
They're they're sliced and diced by category of system you want to support, okay.
So if you want to support your eyes, you get visualutin.
Uh, if you want to support your brain, you get serolutin, um, and and so on and so on and so on, right?
Uh, and so they have them for all the different kinds of systems.
Uh now you use them this way, it's called 10 days sample.
Okay, and so what you do, and this is where some people get this why I'm going into it, is because some people get um uh don't have an appropriate understanding.
These boxes here, this is a month's supply.
These boxes have three of these guys.
That's a 10-day supply.
You take two a day.
Now, you can buy little tiny boxes that only have one of these and don't have all three.
The reason you do that is twofold, because A, you may not need that system.
You may say, Oh, I need you know, cartilage support, and you take a couple and nothing changes.
I mean, you take it for 10 days.
If you take it for 10 days and nothing changes, you're totally unaware of any positive response, you probably did not need that material in you.
Your systems are all functioning, you know, as best they can in whatever you're you think may be the issue, is may not relate to these underlying subsystems, and it may be some other thing that's intruding, and so you get at it a different way.
So you buy the 10-day pack, if you don't get any benefit, you don't take any more.
Now, if you do get benefit from it, you then buy a 30-day pack, take the other, take two out of that 30-day pack and reserve one of these for three months later.
Because the idea is that you will you will, if it does work for you, you need to take for 30 days or tolerance.
I'll get to that in a second, and then every three months, you take for 10 days for 10 days.
Okay, so um, and then it just keeps you going at that same level throughout the year.
Now I say tolerance because you can get to the situation where you get saturated with it in 20 days.
And by the time you get to the end of that 30 days, you may have had some, well, I won't say adverse, or it's a it's an it would be an extra reaction.
Okay, so for instance, uh, some people report that if they um uh take 30 days initially loading on some of these things, like um the ones for bones, maybe, right?
For bone marrow or something, very very deep systemic things, and they didn't need it, that they may develop a couple of little hive reactions by the time they get to the end of the 30 days.
But if you notice any of those coming on them, you just stop.
Some of the the um peptides are extremely powerful and have to be um understood as that.
Okay, so serulutin is good for the brain.
There's also others, including uh endolutin and a few others that work on like the pineal gland.
But be advised if you're in the woo-woo world and you want to uh you know decrystallize or defy your pineal gland and get it all cleaned up and stuff, and you were to take endulutin, you may really fuck up your sleep because you you may just be uh under that impression that you need to do this,
and you don't really, and you take a endolutin for a couple of days, you might not sleep effectively for two weeks simply because it is um that powerful of a stimulant on the pineal gland and the rest of the body, and this is gonna be an unpleasant period of time.
So you really have to approach these with some adult sense of responsibility, right?
Anyway, uh they do, there's a lot of people out there that are reporting that they make them feel 25 again.
I don't know how old those people are when they say this.
I don't necessarily feel 25, but I sure fuck don't feel 67.
Uh and I've taken the peptides, and I'll continue to take them.
As I say, I'm taking the cartilage ones now for uh building up for this um uh upside down muscle up.
A muscle up is where you pull up on like a um chin-up bar and then you go the rest of the way, so to not do stuff like this, and you force yourself up.
I'm gonna do it on the rings from upside down.
Uh just my goal at the end of the year, right?
I just like to set one of these kind of things at the end of the year.
Anyway, so that's uh this is the end of video one.
Uh, this is all about this sort of thing.
Always do your exercise.
That's also anti-fragile.
Uh so this is how I think about it, right?
Before I would do any of the thing, you know, allopaths or any of that, I make sure that I've got my system support and all this other stuff set up.
It's just, in my opinion, just seems a little uh wise to approach it that way.
And there you go, guys.
Uh, this is an overview of the uh stuff.
Oh, coronavirus.
Okay, so um the coronavirus is not if it if it turns out to be true that what I've read um that there's a 2% death rate, then that's staggering, okay.
That's like a huge, huge, huge, huge that's worse than the Spanish um flu in 1918, right?
Uh that would be 195 million people globally that would die from it.
Now, they make these projections based on little tiny samples at the beginning, and so you get a nursing home, you get the flu in there, and you know, you get 2% of the people in the nursing home that die, and they say, Oh my god, the flu's got a uh 2% fatality rate, which is not the case, not in the general population in any event.
Plus, you also what I always watch is the um uh average death age.
So right now it's around 70 or 72, depending on which Chinese site you're you're reading.
So it has yet to, the flu has yet, at least insofar as it's being reported, and they could be lying, who knows?
Um, it has yet to reach down into infants and all of those sorts of things, right?
Into the younger population, and that's usually what lowers the average death age is that the flus have a tendency to kill off old people and young people, and so it makes that average death age come down towards the middle of the population density, and it may never ever really be a danger to anybody in that middle population density, it's just gonna be you know uh effective on either end of the range.
We don't know.
The Spanish uh flu was was interesting because that was not the case.
Yes, it did kill old people, and yes, it killed lots of young people, but it also really maintained its um persistence of of uh fatality percentage-wise through the population, no matter what the relative age was, and that that's what made it so remarkable in all of our minds, um, even to this day, you know, even over a hundred years later.
Uh, if if coronavirus ever got to that level, then you know we're basically in deep shit, and uh you need to get really serious about this because there you're dealing with something that is um extremely opportunistic.
So if you have any weaknesses in your system, you may be very, very, very vulnerable to it in a way that we had not anticipated.
But there's all kinds of things you can do, and also, by the way, there's peptides for immune system for the um thymus.
Then one last thing that's anti-fragile, okay, and that is our old friends, which I always go on about, so optimal vitamins, right?
Uh uh C60, uh but okay, C60.
All right.
C60 is expensive because it's expensive to make the C60.
Then you have to buy the highest quality oils, then you have to have a little bit of scientific gear, some really good lab uh and you know, cleanliness kind of facilities, and then you have to spend weeks getting the C60 mixed into the oil.
So C60 is expensive.
I don't see the price ever really coming down in a significant way, not for years and years and years.
Um you you don't have to go that approach if it's a money issue.
Okay.
I think it's good.
I think it aids and and will maybe extend people's lifespan.
It certainly aids the whole system in a lot of different ways, but in the moment, right now, dealing with the influenza issues and so on.
You can if you if money is an issue, you can buy the most potent, powerful, anti-fragile substances on this planet.
Get your vitamins first, they're a lot cheaper.
Okay, get your vitamins first.
But after you've done your vitamins, you can buy mushrooms.
And I'm gonna I'm gonna give a shout out to Paul Stametz at Fungi Perfect Perfecti.
Okay, and so he has very quality products.
He's convinced me that my initial opinion was wrong based on the um my understanding of the uh components of fruiting bodies versus the mycelial um extraction uh process that he's got.
His his extraction process is actually superior to fruiting bodies, it yields more active ingredients in the mix in a wider range and in a greater depth.
Okay, and I was I was wrong, I was inaccurate about my understanding of that.
So now I have no problem with uh Paul Stametz.
And and I sorry, I don't know that I've got some of them around here, but they're it they're in the house.
I don't know the name of all of his products.
Um I I would I buy them at my health food store, I'd get them in um uh you know, the food co-op or have them sent by Amazon, and they're you know, they're they're um but the ones you're gonna want to deal with are uh host defense, I think it is.
I think it's I think it's host defense, and his his whole thing here is back up to our system support.
Now, I happen to like mushroom teas, so I I buy the high quality uh four and ten level concentrations of turkey tail for immune system, rishi for all different kinds of things, uh, you know, cordyceps and various different teas or Various different powders, and then I'll just simply have them as tea.
Okay, so uh, but I also have all of the host defense stuff as capsules, just so you don't have to worry about it.
If you got a heavy day ahead of you and you know you're not gonna have that cup of Rishi tea, uh and you want that extra boost to your immune system and stuff, then you can get your host defense caps and pop them in.
All different kinds of people producing um mushroom products.
I only speak about what I know.
There's a few brands I use, but uh I've known Paul since 1998.
Uh so you know I used to provide lab support for him.
So when he was uh doing his um master's or PhD study, forget which.
Uh I don't maybe it's not a PhD, but but his his um uh work there.
Anyway, so uh I'm familiar with his products, I I've used them for years.
He and he does really quality work, and it's local to my state, so I'm aware of it.
But wherever you can get them, you should find that the mushrooms are gonna be uh far less expensive than C60.
Although C60 is good, they're gonna be more expensive than vitamins if you buy the right kind of vitamins.
You don't want to spend great chunks of money for vitamins because the idea, for instance, is to get enough vitamin C so that you're peeing out the excess, and then you know your system is is saturated.
Vitamin C and these kind of things are not expensive.
So, but the the mushrooms are are like the middle tier there.
You just you just don't do any better as a uh immune system support than going that route, especially Chinese medicine uh understanding of it all.
So, okay, so I don't think there's anything else I wanted to say about this shit, and I've got another video to make here.
So anyway, uh I think that's it.
So everybody be healthy, take personal responsibility, government ain't gonna save your ass.