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Jan. 11, 2024 - David Icke
12:05
"The Indoctrinated Brain" - Dr Michael Nehls Special - Gareth Icke Tonight
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Hello and welcome to a Garethite Tonight special.
This week I have the privilege of being joined from Germany by Michael Nels, MD.
Michael is a medical doctor who also has a PhD in molecular genetics.
He's authored over 50 scientific publications and has held senior research positions at German universities and served as a vice president of genomic research.
Michael Nels' latest book is titled The Indoctrinated Brain, How to Successfully Fend Off the Global Attack On your mental freedom.
It's a pleasure to welcome him to the show.
The hippocampus essentially has the potential to grow 1-2% each year, but we have in our society a shrinkage rate of about 1.5%, which is certainly normal but absolutely unnatural.
And to stop the shrinkage and to have it grow, we have to produce certain hormones that accelerate the growth and keep it growing.
And one of these hormones, for example, is oxytocin, which is is produced when we engage in social activities.
And so a lack of social activities clearly reduces oxytocin levels and then of course reduce the production rate of these new nerve cells in the hippocampus.
And that has severe consequences.
It was actually shown in 2019, two weeks before this virus was first detected in Wuhan.
It was a publication in the New England Journal of Medicine from Eight people who were in the Antarctic as researchers.
And they did brain scans before they left and brain scans when they returned and they measured the volume of the hippocampus.
And this particular region of the hippocampus where the new nerve cells are produced was shrinking by 8% over a course of just 14 months.
Wow!
And that's just by being alone, basically, then?
They were not completely alone. There were a group of eight, actually a group of nine.
One of them was not measured, but all the eight that were measured had a decrease compared to
people who stayed at home in Europe by eight percent.
And the person who was leading this research said this is what was happening when people are isolated and have only a small number of people they communicate with.
And essentially everything was said that they could communicate, so there was nothing novel happening.
And if there's nothing really novel happening on a daily basis, then these nerve cells not only stop to grow, they actually die.
And so we have not only a lack of growth of the hippocampus of our memory center, we have a shrinkage.
And you have to imagine the smaller the hippocampus, the closer you are on getting the diagnosis of Alzheimer's.
Polls showed us that 50% of, at least in Germany, and I think it goes for everywhere in the world, that 50% of the Germans when they were asked that the primary fear they have is getting Alzheimer's when they age.
You know, lose the memory of everything, even of your own life and your family members and your kids and whatever.
It's just cruel.
So if you 50% have the fear, why is it not that we actually respond to the option of changing it?
And here already comes the problem.
If you fear you get Alzheimer's, you already might be true.
it might already be true for you, and you already have a reduced resilience,
a reduced curiosity, and a reduced stamina to actually engage in a new lifestyle.
And of course, I was asking every health insurer in Germany and Armenia
to help me to propagate this idea that with a changed lifestyle, we can save lives.
And again, it's only the tip of the iceberg.
It's not just that you get depression or Alzheimer's.
Before you even have these very severe symptoms, you already have a mind that is not working well.
That goes for the whole population.
So, I was asking these health insurances and I got no help, nothing.
It was totally ignored.
So, it's not a health system, it's a disease system already there in place.
And so when I look back, I think 2019, when the depression rates were higher ever than ever, and the publication was actually from the World Health Organization in summer 2019, it's now number one disease worldwide, it was actually a sign that now the time is right to go a step further, I guess.
It was like, now the population is right.
It's perfect.
We have a population that is So weak in its personal ego, in its self-consciousness, that we can do everything we want.
And that's what they did.
It certainly felt like that.
In 2020, it was an unbelievably lonely place, to be honest, for people that were seeing through it and going, you know, I remember looking around like, come on, everyone's gone.
Everyone had bought it all hook, line and sinker and wasn't Wasn't like you said, wasn't being curious at all.
At least, you know, ask some questions.
This is pretty weird, you know.
Is there a connection that you've seen between the shrinkage of the production of these nerve cells and victimhood?
Because I've noticed something in probably the last Probably the last 15 years, where actually being a victim became something to be sought.
So when I was a kid, it was very much, you know, you'd have someone like, my dad's car's bigger than yours, my dad could have you in a fight, you know, that sort of nonsense.
But at the same time, it was very much coming from a position of, whereas now, the position is, well, my dad's ill, my dad's in a wheelchair, my dad, everyone's looking for, to be a victim, people to feel sorry for them.
Which I find strange.
And I can see that happening in COVID, where people almost wanted to have COVID.
They wanted to have long COVID.
They want to be able to not be at work and look at me, look how much I've had to fight and battle.
And that desire to go, well, no, I'm not having it, is gone.
Is there a connection there?
Or am I just kind of finding something?
I mean, yes, certainly psychologically you can win.
If you are sick, you have a There are certain advantages going along with that.
One advantage is you don't have to work.
The other is you get a lot of attention.
But to be perfectly honest, I doubt the existence of a free will, meaning that we decide completely for ourselves what's happening to ourselves.
And the hippocampus is actually showing me that this might be correct, this assumption, because If your psychological resilience is down based on the non-production
of these nerve cells, based on a cultural lifestyle that you have not selected
for yourself.
I mean, we don't select where we live and how we live.
It's based on our cultural inheritance.
And so we stumble as babies in this world and live a lifestyle that reduces the production
of these nerve cells so that our resilience is down, our curiosity is down from beginning
on maybe, or even later when we change our lifestyle, it becomes worse.
Far away from our natural needs.
And in such a situation, saying these people on will choose, you know, their destiny, I don't think so.
Actually, we are less able to choose our destiny with the reduction of these nerve cells.
So, these nerve cells are essentially our destiny makers.
They allow us to be curious.
They allow us to have the resilience to live out this curiosity.
Because you know, being curious means you do something new and A new is always better safe than sorry.
You try to avoid it unless you have a resilience that goes along with the curiosity and interestingly, these nerve cells provide both.
So, if you live a lifestyle that reduces by accident, I mean it happens.
to you not on purpose, you know, you're not selecting this lifestyle actively, you live it because that's your cultural inheritance, then I don't believe really it's free will.
And that's also important, actually, to understand, from my point of view, because we have to solve this cultural problem, we have to solve this war against our brain.
Because if we don't solve it, we all lose.
Not only the ones who don't understand, but also the ones who understand.
So we have to get these who don't understand yet, we have to make them our allies.
And that's why we should actually overcome this fence that is now between us.
And I think there's a chance that we can do it.
What happens if you force the hippocampus to memorize things even if these cells are not available?
Well, the only logical explanation is you have to overwrite pre-existing memories in order to essentially create new ones.
And the hippocampus is a small thumb-like structure here on both sides of your temporal lobe, and it has only a limited capacity.
That's why it actually has to grow.
Our wealth of experience over a lifetime grows with the hippocampus.
It grows hand-in-hand.
Now, if it's not growing but shrinking, It has to decide what it actually memorizes and what not.
And the key for memorizing anything in the hippocampus is its importance for life.
And importance for life is essentially expressed by emotions.
If something that you experience elicits an emotion, that's essentially the trigger for the hippocampus to memorize.
So everything that we learned in the last four years, all the narratives that essentially dictate the news screen, is all with emotions.
I mean, it's always life-threatening.
It's a life-threatening pandemic.
It's a life-threatening climate change.
It's a life-threatening war over certain borders.
Everywhere in the world there is a war over borders and every of these wars can essentially create a third world war with atomic bombs and whatever.
So everything is life-threatening, life-threatening, life-threatening.
It comes with emotions and these narratives will find their way in the hippocampus even if it shrinks.
So, the only way it can actually enter the hippocampus and being memorized is that it overwrites pre-existing memories.
So, essentially, you reduce personality.
At one hand, individuality, you reduce it, and at the same time, you create a new personality with less individuality, and they're all the same.
Wow.
And you also then delete their point of reference from the past.
You know, where you would have a, you know, you can look back and go, well, hang on a minute.
I don't like where this is going because we used to be able to do X, Y, and Z. Now all of a sudden, once you've lost that, yeah.
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