Rex Jones warns against alpha GPC after a 2021 study linked it to a 46% higher stroke risk in over 12 million people aged 50+, removing it from his store despite its use in supplements like Jocko’s TurboForce. He praises methylene blue (since 1891) for nootropic benefits but cautions against misuse, while touting melatonin’s neuroprotective and cardiovascular effects—including 38% lower cholesterol and 42% reduced LDL—debunking myths about its safety. Shifting to geopolitics, Rex dismisses Russia’s nuclear threats as retaliation for NATO’s rejection of March 2022 peace terms, accusing Western powers of hypocrisy in drone wars and intelligence operations. He frames Iran’s protests as CIA/Mossad-manipulated, warning of a U.S.-backed regime shift, and contrasts Putin’s alleged legitimacy with Ukraine’s forced conscription under Zelensky. The episode blends supplement science with controversial geopolitical takes, urging listeners to audit X’s OHI V3 suppression metrics via Grok while promoting natural alternatives like Primal Core. [Automatically generated summary]
I want to wait for a few more people to get in here before I start.
I usually let the buffer or the waiting screen come in and then we play the intro, but I figured that I wouldn't do that, do that this time.
I figured I would just chill with y'all a little bit.
No, Tim.
So the way it works is Tuesday.
The way it works is on Thursday and Sunday, we do a giant gray area show, especially on Sunday.
We do a guest, we do a deep dive, we do call-in, we do commentary.
Five days out of the week, it's going to be me doing about a two-hour show.
Sometimes it'll be a little longer than that.
I hope most of the time it's not any shorter than that.
That would be my goal.
The thing we're doing here is like, it's a chill stream ultimately.
That'll always be in my title whenever I do one of my episodes of Rex X-Gray Area.
Like we're just hanging out.
I want to hear from you guys.
We'll do call-in shows about half the time I go live.
We may even do one tonight.
Just take a few calls specifically on the supplements once I get into those and start discussing them at length because there's a lot of interesting stuff there.
And like I was trying to pull up information on this one vitamin, actually.
It's a vital amine, but it's not a vitamin the way you'd think of a traditional vitamin.
And I was reading the article on it that I wanted to show you guys.
And the article is like a living document.
And it had recently been amended, or I guess not so recently, because there's a 2021 link in there to a study that shocked me.
And we're going to get into that.
And I think y'all will want to know this very valuable information.
And I'll just tell you right now, I will not take alpha GPC again.
No more alpha GPC.
And it has to do with stroke risk.
It's very serious.
Didn't understand that before.
But this is a new study.
This is a 2021 study.
This thing's been very popular all throughout the 2000s and 20 teens and leading up into now.
I mean, Jocko, he has it in his drink.
I think it's in TurboForce.
I think I'm probably going to have to take TurboForce or not TurboForce, Brain Force off of my store, the Brainforce Plus that I have.
I think I'm going to have to get rid of it because I don't want to take that long term.
I don't want someone else to take that long term.
I guess we'll just go ahead and talk about that now and we'll revisit it when we have more people in this stream.
And we'll get into the war stuff here in a second.
So I'm just, I'm reading this article, right?
And I wanted to talk to you guys about choline tonight, about melatonin tonight, about fish oil tonight, about methylene blue tonight, a lot of things.
And just reading about choline here.
And alpha GPC, it's unique.
It boosts growth hormone, boosts nerve growth factor.
It stimulates the release of dopamine.
Sounds really good.
One study in particular demonstrated why alpha GPC is a favorite among neurohackers.
Healthy volunteers received either alpha GPC or a placebo 10 days later.
They were force inject not force injected.
They were injected with scopolamine to induce amnesia.
The researchers found alpha GPC was able to prevent the impairment of attention and memory normally caused by scopolamine.
You can buy this from a gas station if you get an energy drink that has it in it, right?
So this all sounds really good.
The researchers showed that memory function in healthy young people could be boosted simply by taking alpha GPC as a nootropic supplement.
So where does it go wrong?
But a very recent study published in 2021 conducted with more than 12 million individuals age 50 years or older who used alpha GPC for at least 10 years had a 46% increased chance of stroke.
We're going to go to the study, but regardless of all the good benefits and everything up here, oh, it's so wonderful, so great.
Scopolamine, maybe it's good if you're James Bond and like you hook up with the chicken Brazil and she like blows it in your face and then tries to knock you out, but you've taken a mega dose of alpha GPC and you're able to survive the encounter.
But I don't think this is good for the average guy, even like the elite athlete.
This isn't something that I think you want to mess with.
And this has been on the market for a very long time.
Everyone sells this.
Like I said, it's in Jocko's products.
It's in Red Cod One products.
It's in every single big supplement company.
They sell this.
More plates more dates guy sells this, I believe.
I don't want to slander anybody or defame anybody, but like this is widely, widely used and available as the preeminent choline source.
So I believe it's a choline analog.
And we'll get to the study.
Let's go break into it a little bit.
Association of LA glycerol phosphoryl choline, glyceryl phosphorylcholine with subsequent stroke risk after 10 years.
Question: Is L-glycerylphosphoral choline, AGPC, a choline analog associated with stroke after long-term use?
Findings in this cohort study of match cohorts, including more than 12 million individuals age 50 years or older without underlying stroke, Alzheimer's disease, or cerebrovascular disease, alpha GPC use was significantly associated with a 10-year incident stroke risk in a dose-responsive manner.
Individuals using versus not using alpha GPC had a 46% higher risk of stroke.
Meaning, the results of this cohort study suggest that the decision to use alpha GPC must be carefully weighed with the consideration of potential stroke risk.
Okay, so you shouldn't use it.
Alpha GPC has been used globally by individuals older than 50 years based on its potential function as a precursor of acetylcholine.
However, choline has previously been linked to a higher risk of cardiovascular disease via trimethylene in oxide, a metabolite of choline by microbiota.
So, like choline is good and choline is in food.
Like you're going to need choline to function.
You need choline for acetylcholine in your brain.
But ultimately, mega-dosing it or consuming massive amounts of alpha GPC and then taking things that eliminate the rate limiting step of synthesis like Hooperzine A.
I was thinking about it now because you get really good effects from those things, but of course, everything comes at a cost, right?
So my goal, and we're going to go back to the study.
We're going to read it more.
My goal when I do the supplement portion of the show, I watched a few supplement videos recently.
I used to watch a ton and there used to be people that did quality ones like Derek Mooreplates, More Dates, back in like the old days where I was like an under 1K subscriber.
He was the person that made me fall in love with pharmacology and just mechanism of action and how like how things work in biology when it comes to the human body and just substances in general because of hair loss.
Right.
So I got into it on that aspect of thing.
And then you look at someone like Leo and Longevity, who died, I believe, damn, it's been like four years or longer even.
It's really crazy.
That guy, Leo and Longevity, he has like one of the most phenomenal channels you'll ever find on YouTube.
May his stuff never get deleted.
Go watch all of his stuff.
You'll become very, very, very knowledgeable on the world of nutritional supplements, on the human body, on blood pressure, brain health, heart health, liver health, kidney health.
I mean, there's so much stuff that I know now because I binge watched that channel during like pandemic times.
And I really need to go back to that to bring y'all a really high quality show.
But every time I would tune into either one of those guys, it was hard-hitting information.
You're like, whoa, like this is something that I should know about.
And then once you know about it, you're like, damn, I'm better off for it.
So that's my goal with the supplement portion of the show.
And once we get into melatonin, which is something that people are like, oh, I don't want to take that.
No, melatonin is bad for me.
Once we get into the melatonin portion of the show, I think you guys are really going to see the positive aspect of supplements and what they can actually do for you.
But there are things we need to be aware of.
There are definitely things that we should avoid.
And this is new knowledge to even me.
So very interesting.
Let's read it.
All participants were divided into whether they were prescribed.
They were prescribed.
Interesting.
Or I guess recommended by the doctor.
GPC users were matched with non-users for all covariates to create a match cohort.
Alpha GPC use was further divided into durations of less than two, two to six, six to 12, and more than 12 months of GPC prescription.
The adjusted hazard ratio and 95% CIs for total stroke, ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke from January 1st, 2009 to January 31st, 2018 were calculated by multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression.
I do not know what that means.
I'll tell you the truth right now.
But the AI could tell me what it means.
Results, a total of 12,08,977 individuals, 53% women age 50 years or older were included in the study.
The mean age was 61 years for non-users and 68 for users.
Okay, well, they're a little bit older.
And that of the matching cohort was 68.2 years for both groups.
Compared with alpha GPC non-users, users had a higher risk of total stroke, ischemic stroke.
Let's read this.
So ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke.
After matching for all covariates, alpha GPC users had a higher risk for total stroke, ischemic stroke, and hemorrhagic stroke.
Increased uptake or intake of alpha GPC was associated with a higher risk of total stroke in dose-responsive manner.
Yeah, that's not good.
That's not good.
And you know what?
There is this.
I'll go ahead and pull it up now while I'm talking about it because it's interesting.
And it's a far more exotic compound than this.
This has been around for a very long time.
But GW50156.
Maybe nootropics expert will have an article about it.
Maybe they will.
I think they might.
No, they don't have it.
I guess I might have to ask you a GPT, but this is another thing where it sounds super great, right?
Because it's a PPAR delta agonist.
So basically, it makes you like 25% more efficient at doing cardio just by taking it just instantly, right?
And GW50156, 50156 is known as carterine or endurable is a research chemical that was abandoned during clinical development due to animal studies showing it caused various types of cancer.
It is a banned performance enhancing drug and its uses is associated with severe health risks not related to AI, whatever that means.
Mechanism of action, it's a peroximine, peroxome, proliferator, activated receptor delta, PPAR delta agonist.
It works by activating PPAR delta, which shifts the body's fuel preference from glucose to lipids, increasing fat metabolism and improving endurance.
So you burn more fat while you're on it.
You're able to do better cardio.
It really is.
I've taken it.
It's crazy.
You could hike forever.
It's nuts.
Lack of approval.
The compound was never approved for human use and no safe dosage has ever been established.
It's been misused by a lot of people.
And the primary concern is linked to cancer.
Animal studies at doses comparable to what humans might use for performance enhancement showed that GW50156 caused multiple types of cancer.
Studies have indicated it can promote the proliferation or inhibit the apoptosis of various cancer cell lines in some contexts.
Oh, and this is something that was widely sold on the internet, still is widely sold on the internet and has been for many years.
And the argument for people taking it is they go, well, it's a mouse and the mouse ears and at like they all get cancer and die.
Like that's, that's not good, right?
Like that, that's, that's, that's not.
So these exotic compounds, you're seeing even things like alpha GPC, which is like ubiquitous.
And it's like, oh, like I've been taking this for a while.
It's cool.
It's in my Jocko energy drink or whatever.
It is in his energy drink.
And, you know, I just want to do a show where I can provide actual value to you of what you should or shouldn't take legitimately, not as medical advice, but just looking into the research with you on these things.
And there's so many interesting things to talk about.
There's so many different interesting herbs.
There's so many different adaptogens, functional mushrooms, vitamins and minerals, essential fats, other things like that that are really cool.
There's a lot of things like CoQ10 that are just incredible for your health, but you should have full awareness of what these things do.
And that's what I want to give to you on the show.
I'll check in with you all in the comments.
Have you tried kratom?
It doesn't do anything for me.
I have a weird thing where like opiates, opiates don't affect me at all.
Like, so I knocked my two front teeth out, right?
I was on trampoline when I was 15 and I kneed myself in the face.
And I didn't knock them out there like an inch back in my mouth.
It was horrible.
I broke my maxilla.
It was not fun.
That clavicular guy talks about bone crushing.
Let me tell you, it's ouch.
But anyway, I know what they are.
I've taken them and it just like literally didn't do anything to me.
I was disappointed.
I was just like, okay.
And I just go to sleep hurting.
So maybe that has something to do with it.
It's very weird.
I just don't.
And some people are like this.
They just don't have like a active opiate receptor.
Like they don't feel it.
It says those doses are like 400 to 1200 milligram.
It says, Grock, how much higher than my caffeine pouch at 35 milligram?
Referring to, oh, are you talking about a caffeine pouch with alpha GPC in it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, no, I take your meaning.
I hear your point.
The main thing is you take the alpha GPC as a fuel source for choline synthesis in your brain to make acetylcholine.
That's why you take it.
So like there are other forms of choline that would might be more safe or rational to take, like a phosphatidylcholine or something like that or a CDP choline.
So I would just, I would go with the versions of it that are studied and don't have like that crazy effect because that's the only one I've seen.
I'll be doing more research into it, but like choline's a part of the human diet.
It's in eggs.
It's in animal products.
It's in a lot of the things that you eat.
And it's not something you should totally get rid of, but you should know about specific forms of it that might be more harmful.
I'm late.
What did I miss?
You didn't miss much.
I'm just talking about supplements.
Do you sell B complex?
I don't currently sell a B vitamin complex.
There is a, there's an Alex Jones store product that I designed called Methyl Drive, and it's got a bunch of B vitamin stuff in it.
It's a little too much, though, in my opinion.
I asked him to reformulate the next batch of it.
It's too high.
But that being said, there's no daily value established because you just pee it out.
It's water soluble.
But some people get flushing, especially with niacin.
Yeah, you know, like, here's the thing, man.
Like, I've taken it over the years, right?
I'm just, I'm not going to be taking it anymore based off of the risk factor.
Like, I didn't know that until tonight, literally.
And I was like, dang, I like, that's in Brainforce Plus, which I, what I sell on 50%off.com.
So like, I'm going to take that down tonight, which is crazy, but I am.
But the more you know, did you talk about the Grok thing I tagged you in earlier?
No, no, explain.
What's the Grok thing?
What is the Grok thing?
I'm going to take a sip of water.
Love you guys.
Thank every single one of y'all for being in here tonight.
Thank you all.
I really do appreciate everyone tuning in right now.
It's going to be a fun show.
We're going to get into the news.
I have a lot more supplement stuff that I want to get into.
This is just the beginning of this kind of a show where we talk about nutritional supplements.
And like my goal every time I do this is to wow you with something and to make it like not boring because I was trying to do some research before this and I was on YouTube and it was just slop.
And I was like, man, I don't want to give them slop.
Like I want to give them like studies, real information, real things that they could use and not use and get benefit out of.
And I went back to Leo and Longevity, more plates, more dates.
And I'm like, damn, I'm going to do this kind of thing.
I'm going to do those kind of videos.
So it's going to take a long time.
It's going to take a while.
The lives, especially me getting started going live every single day this year.
Like the guy asked earlier in the chat, where is Tim?
Tim will be here Thursday and Sunday doing the really long, really prepared, really in-depth gray area show where we have a guest on, where we do full call-in show, or we have a deep dive and we cover the breaking news or the news roundup for the week on Sunday.
And that's going to be like close to a four-hour show.
These shows five days a week, they're just going to be like two-hour shows.
It's going to give me the ability to really connect with you guys and be there for you.
If you really do enjoy watching me, especially during the evening, maybe you're going to watch Fuentes later.
Maybe you've watched the Alex Jones show earlier in the day.
If you want to come hang out with me, I want to give you something a little bit different.
Just chill.
Like, like, this is just like, I'm relaxed, man.
Like, I'm.
I'm chilled out.
I'm ready to get into the things that I want to get into.
And I think they're super interesting.
So I think you're going to think they're super interesting too.
So let's get back into the supplement facts, the supplement knowledge.
I just wanted to refer to GW 50156 as something that kind of is a corollary to this, as something that a lot of people have taken, but aren't necessarily aware of the risks on.
So let's get into something that is very interesting to a lot of people.
I highly recommend his video on Lion's Mane Mushroom.
Phenomenal guy, gives you positives and negatives.
Best information, best studies around.
Key takeaways.
Methylene blue, a synthetic compound, is used as a nootropic to enhance memory, mood, and longevity.
Two, it improves mitochondrial function and respiration in the brain, positively impacting memory and mood.
Methylene blue shows promise in treating neurological disorders such as mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease.
It acts as an antioxidant, increases brain cell lifespan, and positively affects neurotransmitters.
Methylene blue dosage recommendation is 0.5 to 4 milligram per kilogram of body weight per day.
Okay, so that's the first really important thing here.
All right.
That's the first really important thing here.
So a lot of the time people are like, well, how much do I take of a thing?
Right.
And then people will be like, oh, because the thing is cool, I'm just going to take like an infinite amount of it, right?
I'm just going to take all that I can.
I'm going to bathe in it.
People literally, they take methylene blue baths, which I do not recommend.
I've heard of this.
And when I heard about this, I was like, what?
I was like, what are you talking about?
But very simple.
If you wanted to be in the middle of that range and still be safe, like for me, for example, and this is what I'm doing now.
I'm getting this ready for you guys.
It's very simple.
I just want to display it on the screen.
You'll understand once I do.
So this would be the safe, tolerable maximum for me to take in a day.
It would be 50 milligrams, right?
Because 100 kilograms times 0.5, 50 milligrams.
Now, if you weigh less, let's say you're a normal size person, maybe as I hope to be one day, but let's just go with like a, let's do welterweight.
Let's do a 70 kilo.
Let's do 170 times 0.5, 35.
So you see, you have a lot of room there.
And people, a lot of the time, they look at methylene blue and they get freaked out by it.
They're like, oh, what is this?
What is this going to do to me?
And you're like, well, you know, I would recommend starting off with about five milligrams, maybe less if you're not experienced with it, if you've never tried it before.
Of course, this is all, this is, this is all speculation and just based on, you know, anecdotal experience.
It's not medical advice, but even five milligrams of this is incredibly effective.
And if you look at that dosage recommendation, you have a lot of room there, but it does have a biphasic effect.
You could not take like, could not eat a gram of this and be fine.
You have to take small amounts of it.
Four, it acts as an antioxidant, increases brain spell, brain cell lifespan.
Man, I need that the way I talk and positively affects neurotransmitters.
Five, methylene blue dosage recommendation.
Read that.
In a hurry, blah, blah.
Methylene blue, methylonium, methylenium, methyltholonium chloride is a synthetic compound uses a nootropic to increase memory, mood, and longevity.
That's how I'll practice speaking.
I'll practice reading horrifically long chemical names.
Very interesting.
It's a synthetic compound uses a nootropic to increase memory, mood, and longevity.
Soon after methylene blue was synthesized as a blue dye for textiles in the late 1800s, 1873, I believe, it became the first synthetic drug to be used by humans.
It was used for the treatment of malaria.
Isn't that interesting?
How many of you guys know that?
In the early 20th century, psychiatrists were using methylene blue in the experimental treatment of schizophrenia.
Methylene blue is currently being studied as a potential therapy for mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, all sharing a common problem with mitochondrial function.
Your brain's neurons rely almost entirely on mitochondrial-derived energy.
Failure of mitochondrial function can affect the rest of your body, but it's particularly detrimental to your brain.
This is where methylene blue steps in is possibly one of the most important anti-aging and neurological disease-preventing nootropics we have available today.
I believe that.
I believe that it's radically powerful.
You look at this thing.
People have been taking this for a very long time.
They use this now instead of radioactive iodine in a lot of cases in surgery, which means they're injecting a lot of milligrams into people in intravenous use.
And there are a lot of reports of people taking this for a very long time.
There are anecdotal reports of people's vision having some improvement, people having a to decrease their prescription for the first time in years or ever when it comes to their glasses.
A lot of people call in about that.
A lot of people call in about skin and wart stuff that gets resolved psoriasis.
And I'm not making any claims.
I'm just talking about what people have called into on the Infowar show, the Alex Jones show, The War Room, American Journal.
They've all given these reports on it, and it seems to be true across a lot of different groups of people.
As a nootropic, methylene blue quickly crosses the blood-brain barrier.
It improves mitochondrial efficiency and respiration, acts as an antioxidant, and increases brain cell lifespan, resulting in improved memory and mood.
So, okay, we got a comment here.
I'll put it up.
My friend took two nitric boosts the other day and didn't have time to eat.
His ears went beat red, face and arms very red.
Is it common if you take it on empty stomach or you think he may have blood heart issues?
Can methylene blue help your heart in any way?
I don't think methylene blue is going to help or hurt your heart necessarily.
We'll get into that actually.
There's nitric oxide stuff we can talk about.
But in regards to the nitric boost, I mean, like, honestly, what nitric boost is, it's like L lysine, L-arginine, L-citrulline.
It's like a generic, like, pump, like pre-workout formula.
I don't know.
I never had that reaction with it.
A lot of people have taken that over the years.
Um, I don't know that that might have just been a unique one-off.
I don't know.
Maybe it has niacin in it.
I bet it has vitamin B2.
Let's pull that up.
I think that's on InfoWars store still, right?
Let's see.
InfoWar store.
InfoWar store.
It's crazy.
Look, look, look at it.
Look at my dad.
Look at my dad here.
Look at that.
I remember that.
I remember the old days.
let's see yeah there's the niacin that that That's why it causes flushing.
It's harmless.
It's a reaction in some people that don't metabolize that B vitamin correctly.
This is a known thing.
So that's what happened.
It was the niacin that caused flushing.
See, like I do have a knowledge of these things.
I was able to recognize what it was.
So getting into this, and we talk about methylene blue, I'm kind of just reading a description to you.
And I'm sorry if that's a little boring.
I just like, I want to actually give people info as to what it is.
And we'll get into the studies and we'll get into the nitric oxide stuff.
But at the core of supplementation, the thing you have to understand about supplementation, why would someone take a supplement?
What is a supplement?
How does a supplement work?
There's a lot of vitamins and minerals we're deficient in.
We take those.
We feel better because we're not deficient in them anymore.
That's very basic.
But what is a functional mushroom?
What is an adaptogen?
What is a like a medicinal herb or a supplemental herb or these things that you can take like ashwagandha?
What are they?
What do they do?
What exactly is an antioxidant?
Because whether you look at Bacopa Mineri, whether you look at Reishi, whether you look at Ashwagandha, whether you look at Golden Root, whether you look at any of these things, they're all really potent antioxidants.
Melatonin is too.
And we'll get into why that's important right now.
What is an antioxidant?
An antioxidant is something that decreases oxidative stress throughout the body in some way.
It decreases reactive oxygen species.
The abbreviation for that is ROS.
It does something to decrease or cause apoptosis in senescent cells, which are the cells in your body.
People think about cells replicating.
They have something called the Hayflick limit.
We're at 48 divisions.
They can't divide anymore.
And I've said this at nausea.
And what that means is you don't become like a Cronenberg cancer person.
That's just getting older.
That's what the aches and pains are.
That's what they come from is the damage over time to your cells.
The senescent cell essentially lights on.
No one's home.
And all it does is pump out inflammatory cyclic ROS, reactive oxides.
So you look at antioxidants.
It's great.
You know, I want to take antioxidants ever.
I want to take any and all of my.
And you go, listen, okay.
That's interesting.
You ever heard of vitamin E?
And they go, oh, no, what's that?
It's good for your skin, right?
You go, yeah.
You remember that guy everyone talks about the guy who took a bunch of vitamin C and said it was the cure for everything and then he died?
Like, yeah.
And like, you know, he was also involved in some other experiments with another dude.
And that other dude was mega dosing vitamin D and giving, or not vitamin D, vitamin E and giving vitamin E to people.
And essentially what happens is the same reason why I myself am against or opposed to a glutathione IV.
When you reduce oxidative stress throughout the body to just like an absolute like zero level, and vitamin E is like the most powerful pure antioxidant you can find, what you do is, well, the immune system is like, well, I don't have anything to deal with.
I'm not, it's not that I'm not stressed out.
I'm not stressed out at all.
I'm asleep.
And you can have cancer issues.
So like we have inflammation for a reason.
Inflammation isn't just like a curse from God or like a punishment.
It's a beautiful way of how our body works.
Ultimately, like you get inflamed after you lift weights, your muscles get bigger, right?
And that has to do with a lot of different actions, right?
Muscle fibers too.
But this is a response to injury, a response to stress, a healing response in a lot of cases.
But in a lot of cases, where it's not a healing response or a response to stress, where a person has had their back hurt or like their thumb hurt or just like a weird pain for years and years and years, and they didn't have an injury there.
It's just kind of anecdotal.
A lot of the times what that is, excessive inflammation.
Could be from a bad diet, could be from environmental toxin, could be from smoking, could be from anything really, anything quote unquote unhealthy.
Because what is unhealthy?
Unhealthy is something that increases oxidative stress in the body.
And this is the real medical science that's coming forward in this new century, right?
Because you think about the doctors in the 20th century and they know how to patch you up and take care of you if you're injured.
They know they can bomb cancer with chemo and possibly kill it.
They know that drugs are really cool and they were invented basically in their century and that's their cure and solution for everything.
They didn't realize the whole time.
It's literally, it's simple.
And of course, the beauty and the truth is found in the simplicity.
The truth of health is just by being healthy.
It's very simple, right?
Like you don't live like a slovenly POS.
And I'm hypocritical saying that, right?
But like, that's the truth of health, right?
And you look at someone like Rogan and people have laughed at Rogan for years, but Rogan really has had the best metabolic doctors and the best people on there.
And their research from the time he started the show up to now, it's only just been proven and proven and proven and proven.
So now you see these peptide clinics, you see these hormone clinics, you see these supplements being recommended by doctors.
And that was never done before.
Oh, supplements, you're going to take rhino horn, traditional herbs.
How about you have some lithium?
How about you have some, I don't know, some Prozac?
How about you, how about you swallow that down?
That'll fix what ails you.
But in the modern age, what we're realizing is what we talk about with Primal Core and the other supplement brands is like the stuff we need is already here.
It already exists for the most part.
And anything new and cool that's synthetic is probably derived from something natural a long time ago.
So in methylene blue's case, that's not the case.
And it's the first synthetic drug ever made and ever used to treat malaria.
But I hope you see with that roundup, my philosophy on nutritional supplements and what actually they are.
They're things that decrease oxidative stress usually.
And even the vitamins and minerals that are just like getting you up to what you should be at, being in a healthier environment in your body where your body functions better decreases oxidative stress.
So does that make sense to the chat?
I'm going to check with you.
I'll take a little sip of water.
What odd side effects with vision did you experience with methylene blue?
I mean, like, here's the thing is like I have not been a regular viewer for quite some time because of the lateness of the show, but I guess now I do my show at this time too.
Let's get back to the information on methylene blue.
Your brain's neurons rely almost entirely on mitochondria-derived energy as anotropic can cross the blood-brain barrier.
140 years research.
Methylene blue helps neurotransmitters.
It's an MAOI, of course, so it's antidepressant.
So you should know that.
And it's a very mild one, but it is that.
And if you take it in concert with St. John's wart or any of these things, really, even some of the herbs that can cause issues, much less a pharmacological drug that's been cooked up in a lab on top of this, it's not a good recommendation.
And that's why Alex always says to be careful.
And acetylcholine estrase activity, which increases levels of catecholamines and acetylcholine and boosts serotonin and neuropinephrine, affecting anxiety, depression, and memory.
Mitochondrial energy, methylene blue assists brain cell respiration by increasing oxygen and donating electrons to the electron transport chain within mitochondria.
That's how it functions, right?
So it operates as an electron donor to mitochondria.
And that's why it's so powerful is because if you have broken or damaged mitochondria, it can actually give them the fuel source to operate.
And when a mitochondria is damaged, it recognizes it.
And what it does is it fuses with a healthy mitochondria.
Your mitochondria have their own DNA.
So this is a very powerful, very unique substance that can do things that really most other things besides CoQ10 can.
And CoQ10 can do it in a very, very limited degree.
But even that is insanely powerful.
I'll get into that later.
The same process is used to create ATP within mitochondria for the food that you eat.
So methylene blue contributes to the energy production process in place of nutrients you get from your food.
Increasing cellular energy positively affects food and memory.
Neuroprotectant, methylene blue is a potent antioxidant.
ROS are produced inside mitochondria.
The first free radical that's formed inside a cell is superoxide.
Methylene blue will bind to the superoxide and reduce it to water.
It stops the oxidative cascade at its very beginning before it gets a chance to do damage.
So what that is, is you don't go through the first stage of the Krebs cycle.
You get skipped to stage four, which is oxidative phosphorylation.
So that's actually the cleanup phase too, where the waste products are being removed.
So you get more energy and you get more cleanup.
And if the thing only worked by giving you more energy, it wouldn't be something you could take because it would have more waste product.
But this eliminates the problem of having the waste product by skipping you forward to the cleanup stage and taking care of the most harmful free radical that exists during the entire process.
Very interesting.
And you can look at this article.
It's all sourced.
It's all referenced.
You can click on the blue links for studies.
It was first synthesized in 1876.
That was three years off by German chemist Heinrich Caro at BSAF or BAASF as an aniline-based dye for cotton staining.
In 1891, German physician and Nobel Prize recipient Paul Ehrlich pioneered the use of methylene blue for the treatment of malaria.
Ehrlich discovered that when methylene blue was injected into animals in the lab, it would quickly concentrate in the brain.
It had an uncanny ability to selectively target diseased tissues in the body.
It was Elric who coined the term magic bullet for this unique action displayed by methylene blue, a term still in use today.
I mean, yeah, that's it's literally the magic bullet term comes from methylene blue.
And that's why I titled mine.
I'll just go ahead.
I'll just do it on shameless plug, whatever, who cares?
But it does help you increase your basal metabolic rate just by a tad by increasing that brain function in that way, making you burn more glucose.
Studies show dramatic oxygen consumption and glue uptake when using methylene blue.
Methylene blue increases CMRO to cerebral metabolic rate through increased activity in the mitochondrial electron transport chain.
Methylene blue functions as an alternative electron carrier in the electron transport chain in mitochondria.
It accepts electrons from NADH, NAD, works well with NAD, and I think my dad has that as well available, and transfers them to cytochrome.
Cytochrome complex C is a component of the electron transport chain in mitochondria, playing a role in apoptosis, that's cell deletion, and as an antioxidant.
Methylene blue also stimulates glucose metabolism.
Taken together, increases in CMRO squared and glucose uptake means that methylene blue elevates oxygen consumption, which helps glucose increase ATP production, which is what the mitochondria makes.
Increases in ATP production provide more cellular energy for better overall brain function, including cognition, mood, and memory.
Methylene blue has a unique mechanism of action that is fundamentally different from traditional antioxidants.
During cellular respiration, the first radical form inside of a cell is superoxide O2.
Methylene blue binds to superoxide and reduces it to water.
It stops the oxidative cascade at its very beginning.
I read that before.
So think of methylene blue as having a unique dual property.
First, it increases cellular energy production, which normally leads to oxidative stress.
And second, it eliminates this oxidative stress, making it a metabolic enhancer and an antioxidant.
Researchers tested methylene blue in animal models of neurological disease.
First, researchers used ratetinone, a potent pesticide, which causes severe dopamine depletion in the part of the brain associated with Parkinson's.
Methylene blue rescued brain cell mitochondria from the damaging effects of this toxin by donating electrons in the electron transport chain broken by retetinone, essentially bypassing the broken transport chain with donated electrons as an alternative electron carrier.
That's what it can do for you.
That's the real benefit of methylene blue.
And it's like he says, this is unique.
You're not going to find something else bar CoQ10, and that's in a unique minor way that's not the same as this.
And it doesn't reduce the superoxide in the same way as the methylene blue.
These are really powerful compounds, and you deserve to know about them.
You deserve to know those real facts about them.
I would encourage you to read this and go to this page on your own and look at the studies that are linked.
I mean, this is a big deal.
And like, this is prescribed by doctors now.
They do this often.
This has been prescribed by doctors for a long time.
It's FDA approved for a specific kind of anemia.
So take that as you will.
X2 is incredible.
Never tried the methylene blue.
Try it.
Why not?
Why not try the methylene blue?
See what it does for you, man.
A lot of people really report benefits from it.
I've only been taking the blue for about a week, but surprisingly to me, I haven't felt the effects.
I hear you and Alex talk about just one dropper a day, even though I'm not feeling it yet.
You think it's beneficial?
Keep taking it.
Maybe I'm taking it at the wrong time.
You're taking a dropper.
That's a lot.
And it really doesn't affect you.
That's very interesting.
Must have very healthy mitochondrial transport chains.
It's got a lot to do with certain DNA polymorphisms.
People have more of an effect when they take something like this.
You're definitely still getting the antioxidant effect of it by taking it for sure.
A lot of people do take it for the mood benefit.
If you don't feel that, you don't feel that.
But it's a very potent antioxidant, regardless.
Are you a healthy person?
Are you very healthy?
Do you use methylene blue daily?
I don't use it daily.
I haven't taken it in a minute.
Sometimes I have.
Like longest I've taken it consistently, it's probably for like half a year, maybe a little shorter than that, maybe like five months.
But the thing is, for me, I feel like it helped me with a lot of the issues that I was having.
And after those issues kind of got resolved a little bit, I just started feeling better.
That kind of just tapered off.
And now I just kind of feel normal.
I think it helped me get back to baseline from a point that I was at for sure.
No, I've been taking it before bed.
Well, it doesn't have a five-hour half-life.
So you may sleep through the effect that people talk about of being more alert and aware, especially with the glucose uptake to the brain.
So try taking it in the morning instead of in the evening.
That's not medical advice.
It's just a friendly observation and thought, shall we say.
DNA Force for a few years.
DNA Force is a phenomenal product for that.
DNA Force, I can't find DNA Force anywhere.
It's got the CoQ10, all other kinds of stuff.
And what's perfect about DNA Force and why I wanted to bring a product like that back to the Alex Jones store?
And like, I'm trying not to plug, but I'm also just going to talk about what DNA Force is and why it's similar to this product.
So you have CoQ10 and then you have PQQ.
I can pull up the articles on both of these.
I'm saving those for another supplement show.
We're going to talk about them.
CoQ10 and PQQ, what do they do?
So CoQ10, much like methylene blue, it acts as an electron donor to the electron transport chain.
It's also, I believe, an antioxidant.
It's also considered to be anotropic, all these things.
It's really good for heart health.
So one of the things they do when they test race horses, like at autopsy or whatever crazy thing they do to test their heart, is they test the CoQ10 levels and they're positively associated with like healthy biomarkers and against heart failure.
I think it's, I think it's 3.6% increase in ejection fracture if you take 200 milligrams CoQ10 for like two weeks.
And that could be a big deal leading up into a heart surgery or something, you know.
That's something I had my granddad mega dose in the months before his heart surgery.
So I've seen these things actually, I believe, have really positive effects.
But what it is, it is an alternate electron donor.
It's an alternate electron transport chain.
And it allows the mitochondria to get that fuel source, like I was talking about, to be able to function.
And then a damaged mitochondria, it has two options.
It can fuse with another mitochondria or it can commit apoptosis.
So it gives the mitochondria the ability to either commit apoptosis and get rid of itself and solves the problem that way or to fuse with the healthy mitochondria and regain function.
So that's number one.
You go, okay, CoQ10, that's great.
Helps mitochondria function, helps mitochondria fuse, helps mitochondria delete itself if it's not needed anymore, if it's too damaged.
What does PQQ do?
PQQ is proven and shown to increase mitochondrial biogenesis as a whole.
So that means your healthy mitochondria and the injured ones, they're either going to be fusing or they're going to be replicating if they're healthy.
So those two taken together as a one-two punch, I believe that's one of the more powerful things you can do over the long term, over the years, over the decades to really build up a bulwark against some of these long-term metabolic conditions.
And I suggest everyone dose those ingredients highly and take them all the time.
It's not medical advice, just anecdotal.
And based off my experience selling supplements for 10 years and seeing what effect they've had on people, hell longer than that.
So very interesting.
Shout out to DNA Force and shout out to the product I created, Methyl Drive.
And the way I got it by, it was like, I was like, look, you can take this with methylene blue, it makes it better.
And he was like, oh, that's great.
That's great.
And I was like, I just want to have this available again so I can take it all the time.
So now that's my daily driver.
I take two of them.
It's also got 200 milligrams of magnesium in it as well.
I'm going to bring that back under my 50% off label.
We're going to bring that product back.
We're going to bring a lot of vintage products back.
I really appreciate y'all being here with me tonight.
Would love to see you collab with Mike Adams.
I would love to collab with Mike.
I love him.
I think I've DM'd him for sure.
I have.
Next time I see him, I hope he comes back up to the office.
He was up there a while ago.
And that was before the show, of course.
But we talked about methylene blue.
We talked about what supplements are.
We talked about what things maybe you shouldn't take, referring to the alpha GPC and the 46% increased risk of stroke over 10 years with a study group that had a population of like 12 million, I think it was.
So wouldn't be recommending that.
Now, I've gotten in like vicious arguments on Twitter over melatonin use.
You'll never be able to sleep again if you take a melatonin.
And I've been someone that's taken melatonin all of my life, right?
Like, one second.
Like, I've probably taken melatonin from the time that I was like, like, 10 or 11 years old up to now.
And I take it every night.
And I take between like three to five milligrams of it.
And people say, like, oh, like, like you offer a melatonin, like, hey, man, like, like, you can't, you can't sleep.
You want to take a melatonin or get some from CVS?
I'd probably help you.
Oh, no, I can't do that.
That'll, that'll mess me up.
Makes me go crazy.
And maybe that is true for some people.
And I would just say, take a lot less if you're sensitive, find an amount that works for you.
This is really a positive thing to supplement.
And I'm going to get into why.
And I'm going to read the article, but I'll just get into it on a high level right off the rip.
Melatonin is an incredibly potent antioxidant, right?
And not only that, its metabolites are incredibly potent antioxidants.
And the locality of these things, like methylene blue, talked about uptake to the brain, glucose uptake to the brain, and methylene blue uptake to the brain.
What happens when you take a pill with a glass of water and you go to sleep?
Well, if the pill has melatonin in it, the melatonin gets to your brain, goes systemic, goes everywhere in your body, of course, but a lot of it is localized to your stomach and your large intestine, your small intestine, and that whole entire system, your bowel, all of it.
So melatonin has been shown to be protective against some of the worst kinds of cancer around, like the bowel and the bladder and the things that you really don't want, that they're really bad.
And a lot of people are like, oh, melton, I'm going to take it.
I'm going to take it.
I take these things because of their benefits.
Did you know they have 300 milligram anal melatonin suppositories for people with Parkinson's?
I'm not shitting you.
I'm telling you the fucking truth.
So whenever you hear someone fear monger about melatonin, go, oh, you could never take it this whole day.
You don't know what you're talking about there, man.
That still almost killed me back in 97, brother.
And it's just like, you people had a bad experience, probably with a tainted or low quality product at one point in your life.
And then you crusade against me on Twitter when I talk positively about it.
It's true.
It blows my mind, but it's true.
But I'll go ahead and read.
I'll go ahead and read and I won't get y'all mad.
We'll answer this really quick.
What is methylene red?
Methylene red is like a weird tasting, I'll be nice, health tincture.
It's got CoQ10 and a bunch of B vitamins and some other stuff in it.
It's fine.
It's not magical.
It's just a supplement product.
You talk about the furry party at Mar-a-Lago.
We might get into that in the second hour at some point.
I'm going to talk supplements for at least another like 15 minutes here.
And then we're going to get into news in the second hour.
We're going to get into news roundup.
We're going to cover the war emerging out in Iran.
Looks like that's going to happen really soon.
I'm going to like reload Twitter.
Maybe it's already happened.
This is goaded.
I love this.
That belongs on a t-shirt.
We should put that on t-shirt.
We should print that and put it on a t-shirt.
All right.
Melatonin.
Melatonin is a hormone produced by the pineal gland, playing a crucial role in regulating the sleep-wake cycle and circadian rhythm.
It acts as a central clock for the body, signaling when to be active and when to rest.
Health benefits and uses.
Melatonin is not only a sleep aid, but also a powerful antioxidant that protects against neurodegenerative diseases, reduces stroke risk, and aids in brain recovery post-trauma.
It also supports the immune system and may help in managing mild cognitive impairment.
Well, melatonin supplements can help with sleep disorders like insomnia and jet lag.
There is significant variability in the content of over-the-counter products.
It's essential to start with a low dose.
That's what I said, a low dose and adjust as needed.
Potential side effects, melatonin can cause side effects such as drowsiness, headaches, and hormonal imbalances.
I think it can lower estrogen.
I think that's what they're talking about.
We'll see if they're right or if I'm right later in the article.
It may interact with various medications, including blood thinners and contraceptives, and should be used cautiously by those with hormone-related issues.
I think that's estrogen.
I think it's a, I think it's an estrogen blocker at like a low level.
I think it is because apogenin, the stuff in blue chamomile, looks kind of similar as a molecule, and it is as well.
I haven't read up on that part recently.
Melatonin N-acetyl-5-methyloxyl tripeptamine is a hormone primarily produced in the pineal gland.
Oh, decalcify your pineal gland, bro.
Smoke the DMT.
Oh, sorry.
Many Easter traditions, blah, blah.
Your pineal gland is filled with cells that respond to light and darkness.
Your pineal gland acts as your body's central clock through its melatonin secretion and then attaching to melatonin receptors, affecting your sleep-wake cycle.
Telling your brain, body, and organs when it's time to be active and when it's time to rest.
This is the reason why melatonin is referred to as a sleep hormone.
The pineal hormone, melatonin, is also a powerful antioxidant.
It scavenges free radicals and ROS.
It protects mitochondrial ATP.
And melatonin is set apart from any other supplemental antioxidants, just like methylene blue, because it easily crosses that blood-brain barrier.
Age-related decline in melatonin is a primary contributing factor to several neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS, Huntington's disease, stroke, and brain trauma.
You notice with old people, they'll go to bed really early and they'll wake up at like 3 a.m.
You'll notice this, especially like nursing homes and stuff.
I had a great grandma.
So I know about like weird elderly behavior.
And that's because your brain, just like the testosterone and everything else, it drops off as you get older.
Eventually, you're like running on empty, basically.
And this is a thing that can really help a lot of people if they're brave enough to take it.
Now, something it doesn't get into yet, and I'll get into it a little bit here.
Melatonin does reduce insulin sensitivity, not at a chronic level, but at an acute level.
Like if you were to take it or if you're to eat a big meal right before you go to bed, the reason why that's especially fattening is because not methylene blue, melatonin can blunt insulin response or can increase it, excuse me, not blunt.
So that's an interesting factor.
Melatonin helps sleep or protection.
And melatonin helps to protect neurons by reducing the damage caused by amyloid proteins and tau proteins, linked to Alzheimer's.
Not so sure about that.
Didn't the big study come out saying that's not true?
But hey, it probably is true.
They probably got the study wrong, whatever.
Melatonin supplements appear to protect against the harmful effects of aluminum.
Ooh, that's interesting.
We're always drinking out of those cans.
Maybe this might be a good thing to take.
And melatonin scavenges free radicals of oxygen and nitrogen, neutralizes other toxic radicals, stimulates gene expression of other antioxidants.
This is what I'm talking about.
And its metabolites are antioxidants themselves and protects ATP synthesis.
So this is another thing that you can bring on alongside other things that protect and boost and help your mitochondria, like the methylene blue, like the CoQ10.
So it's very powerful.
It's very studied.
It's very interesting.
And like I said, dose really matters with these things.
If you, if like the safe dose to take is like really close to the dangerous dose, you kind of don't want to like mess around with things.
But even at like the lowest level, right?
Like where I'm 100 kilos and I multiply that by 0.5 and I have 50 milligrams to take.
And that's like the lowest of the low range.
And that would be like five times more methylene blue than I would consume in a day, right?
So, of course, I'm not going to do a 300 milligram melatonin suppository.
Number one, fuck that.
Number two, like, hell no.
But they give those to people with Parkinson's because of sleep issues and because of neurodegeneration.
So very interesting.
Researchers suggest melatonin regulates dopamine production in pathways in areas of your brain involved in movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease and tardative dyschenia.
Melatonin also interacts with dopamine's role in your body's biological clock.
That's why people like they're jet lagged or whatever.
You take it, you go to sleep, you wake up like normal.
It's very powerful for that.
You can take a look at that molecule.
Melatonin synthesis occurs from L-tryptophan.
That's like, oh, I ate the turkey.
I'm going to go to sleep.
It doesn't actually really work that way.
Like by eating more L-tryptophan, you don't actually increase the melatonin.
It has other relaxing effects, but it doesn't work that way.
First, L-tryptophan is hydroxylated by the enzyme tryptophan hydroxylase.
The intermediate is decarboxylated by the active form of vitamin B6, PLP, and 5-hydroxy L-tryptophan, 5-HTP to produce serotonin, 5-HT, or 5-hydro tryptamine, hydroxytryptamine.
Excuse me.
Serotonin acts as a neurotransmitter on its own, but it also converts to N-acetyl serotonin by the enzymes serotonin L and acetyltransferase and acetyl-CoA.
Hydroxyl-O-methyltransferase and SAMI convert N-acetyl serotonin into melatonin through methylation of the hydroxyl group.
So you can see that process happen here.
This is how you end up with melatonin.
The tryptophan is metabolized into 5-hydroxyl-tryptophan, and that PLP interaction takes place.
You go down here with a serotonin and acetyltransferase.
That's 5-HTP down here.
And then you have the NAD over here.
And then you end up with melatonin.
So it's a very complex interaction to make this.
The process is first fueled by the tryptophan.
You can also supplement with 5-HTP to produce serotonin in your central nervous system, which will then create melatonin, or supplement with SAME to increase plasma melatonin levels, or you can take a melatonin supplement on its own and bypass the entire.
Besides acting as your boss biological clock, endogenous melatonin, free radical scavenger, a wide spectrum antioxidant.
The beauty of melatonin as it is its ability to ease blood-brain barrier to your stack, blah, Melatonin promotes deep sleep.
Obviously, one study at Duke from 1948 to 2009, survey clinical trials, researchers found that children with ADHD using melatonin treatment doses of three to six milligrams showed improvement on how fast the kids went to sleep and significantly better quality of sleep, of course, right?
That's a given.
The overall conclusion of these randomized controlled trials showed melatonin products were effective in improving quality of sleep and how fast a person went to sleep.
The study included those who did not suffer with insomnia, those who did, and others who had messed up circadian rhythm patterns due to shift work disorder and jet lag.
Melatonin improves longevity by increasing longevity gene called STERT1.
This gene plays an important role in maintaining metabolism and neuroplasticity.
All right, now what is neuroplasticity?
That's your ability to learn new things in your brain.
They say an old dog can't learn new tricks.
Well, as you get older, your neuroplasticity goes down.
Your ability to actually learn, that's why the boomers, their brains are all crystallized and they're done, it goes down.
So you might as well learn when you're young and smart and have the ability to do these things.
But hey, if you're a little older, if you're a little dumber, like me, that'll be one.
Or if you have drank too much and smoked too much over the years and done things, you might want to consider supplementing with things that can get you back to baseline.
So this is a very interesting option.
Researchers find that melatonin levels and Alzheimer's disease are closely linked.
Oh, greatly reduced melatonin levels have been found in Alzheimer's patients.
High levels of melatonin are maintained throughout youth and middle age, but as you age, melatonin levels drop, you are at greater risk for brain damage both now and in the future.
Your chances of having a stroke greatly increase as melatonin levels decline.
And the study is linked to here.
So you can find everything in this document in the footer.
Like none of this is BS.
You can go do the deep research yourself.
And a lot of people, they like to do the AI and you can go, grok, is this true?
And then put the URL in.
It'll tell you it's true or whatever, right?
But, like, you can just go look for yourself on PubMed.
Just look at that.
People taking benzos, getting off them using melatonin.
Depression scores in the patients on the benzos decrease.
Before the study began, 62% of the patients were using benzos to help them sleep.
At the conclusion, only 9% were using benzos to help them get to sleep.
This is a really powerful thing.
This can be a really powerful thing if you're going through something.
You're trying to get stuff done.
You're feeling beat up by work, you know?
Seriously.
Melatonin relieves mild cognitive impairment.
MCI is often the final step before dementia.
Approximately 12% of MCI patients convert to Alzheimer's disease or other dementia disorders every year.
Researchers in Argentina took a look at the first and final assessment of 50 MCI patients, 20 of whom had received a daily dose of 3 to 9 milligrams of melatonin at bedtime for 9 to 18 months.
Patients who took melatonin showed significantly better performance in the mental state examination and the cognitive test used to assess Alzheimer's.
The team conducted several other tests and found better performance in every test but one.
The researchers concluded that melatonin could be a useful drug for treating mild cognitive impairment.
Studies also show that people with heart disease have higher levels of LDL cholesterol.
That's the V L D L, the very low density lipoprotein.
There's been more studies on that.
We'll get into that.
We'll talk about diet and metabolism on another episode.
This is just an intro to supplements.
This is just me ranting and raving over stuff I found interesting today.
And I wanted to bring to y'all.
The thing is, I do a lot of geopolitical research and news research and just on Twitter too much as a whole.
I need to get back to my bread and butter, which is being the supplement guru and bringing you all this information.
Research has found that supplemental melatonin decreases cholesterol by 38% and reduces LDL accumulation by 42%.
One study demonstrated that just one milligram of melatonin reduced blood pressure within 90 minutes of supplementation.
Melatonin reduces blood pressure through its antioxidant properties by decreasing norepinephrine and epinephrine, which are like the real stimulative hormones or brain neurotransmitters, excuse me, and relaxing the smooth muscle of the heart aorta wall.
So I'm going to do a better job of coming into the supplement stream prepared and really having things laid out for y'all because like that was interesting.
And I bet it was fun to go through.
But like there are ways to do this where it's boom, And I've already practiced and I've read through it again before the show.
I can't just come in here and wait like that and be like, oh, I want to talk about methylene blue.
It is what it is.
And like I said, I think it went good.
I think it went great actually.
But it's things are going to get so good here at a point you're going to be like, what is this?
This is going to be the best show.
I can't wait till I get a better mic and we do the computer swap.
I'm really looking forward to it and just the growth in the future being live every day for you guys.
So I'll check in with you in the comments.
I'll take a sip of water and then we'll get into the X slideshow.
We'll get into the politics of the day.
We got Tucker talking about war is imminent, like came out right before I started streaming.
And Fuentes is live and I'm sure everyone's crashing out and doing stuff crazy.
I mean, the world must be ending for Fuentes to do a stream before 10 p.m. my time.
So we'll get into the news now.
Let's see what you all have to say.
Check the X post I tagged you in Rex.
It's by far the most interesting story of the day.
I'll do it right now.
i'll do right now new grouper how how far back did you do How far back did you do it, man?
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your account, who is, who is this?
Is that Lebanon John?
I don't know.
I don't know who this is.
Who is this person?
Can you just give me a little context?
I want to get into the news slide for people.
New Groyper, if you put in the chat, like the deep meaning of all this, it's a thread.
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My account, your account, okay, is classified as a standard non-verified individual account.
There's no check mark badge.
Blah, Give me the semantic contextual scoring.
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Is that like a command code for Grok?
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I guess that's what it says.
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Current reach suppression, severity extreme.
This scoring is derived from consistent patterns in your posts and bio, e.g., direct anti-Semitic statements, memes, and replies targeting Jewish people/slash ethnicity.
X's system flags such content as violating hate speech guidelines.
Oh, the hate.
Oh, I can't do that, particularly around protected categories like Jewish ethnicity and religion, leading to heavy algorithmic suppression.
No other major protected categories are flagged at high levels.
So there's other ones.
Interesting.
I was not.
All right, you got me.
You rick rolled me, DC.
You got me good.
Damn.
Okay.
Isn't there a classification field and top-level classification field?
This is crazy.
I mean, I assume this is happening already.
I'm not smart enough or computer smart enough to know what this means.
I could ask my programmer buddy or something, or I guess we could just try to type in the command code into Grock.
Let's just ask it again.
Why not the code, semantic underscore, contextual underscore,
scoring underscore o hi underscore V3 is an internal x, formerly Twitter, moderation algorithm.
Uh reputation metric.
Here's a clear breakdown of what it means.
Semantic contextual scoring refers to X's AI-driven system that analyzes the semantic meaning.
Man, we live in a scary world, guys.
Scary world.
Yeah, you're right, New Groper.
This is crazy as hell.
Intent, implications, tropes, and contextual usage patterns across posts, replies, plyo-media of an account content rather than just keyword matching.
OHI stands for online hate index.
This should, we need this banned.
This should be illegal.
It should be illegal to do this.
Online hate index, sometimes internally referred to as offensive hateful interactions.
It's a specific subsystem within X's trust and safety stack that scores content for violations related to hate speech, harassment, dehumanization, and targeted protected groups.
So there are protected classes of people.
So there are protected classes.
There are people you can't criticize.
There are people that, so it's not free speech.
Very disappointing.
I guess when you're worth $700 billion or whatever, it stings a little less to not be authentic.
Whatever.
V3 indicates the version.
Oh, it's the third major iteration of the scoring model.
Oh, this is actually a major story.
Thank you, New Grouper.
It's always the listeners.
It's always the viewers and listeners that give us the best ideas.
You're not allowed to be anti-any of these things.
I think being a racist is a lot worse than being anti-Semitic or anti-LGBTQ, whatever that means.
But just like, I don't know, that specific group.
Oh, you're not allowed to not like them.
That's like who you decide that we can hate whoever we want.
It's not good to hate anyone, but you should have the right to.
And if you're speaking about it, you should have the right to be heard.
Wow.
Media analysis, memes, videos, and cross-post pattern recognition compared to earlier versions.
Purpose of the full field.
The complete semantic contextual scoring OHI object is a structured internal score that determines how aggressively an algorithm supports or promotes an account's reach, whether augmented reactions are triggered, recommendations for a human review or escalation to suspension.
Here's the complete semantic contextual scoring OHI V3 object for the X account, Rex Jones News, based on X's internal moderation semantic analysis systems.
This is insane.
New Greiper, you are crazy as hell for figuring this out or finding it.
Good grief.
This reflects patterns and posts, geopolitical commentary, criticism of Israel Zionism, media control tropes.
They own everything.
Well, you can't say the billionaire is Jewish because he's a billionaire.
It's like, what are you talking about?
What do you talk?
Isn't it a good thing?
Shouldn't you be proud of that?
Oh, no, no, no.
This reflects patterns and posts, geopolitical commentary, Epstein PDF file, sanctuary claims involving Israel, sarcasm on Jewish influence narratives.
See, it keeps a record of when I'm sarcastic.
Bio neutral media usage, photos, memes, dogs, news screenshots, and engagement history.
Classification, hate and harassment, anti-Semitic content promotion.
That's what you get for retweeting Jake Shields once.
Confidence, high.
Severity, moderate.
Ooh, I need to get that up, I guess, or maybe not.
It'll do your push level, reach suppression, all of it.
So I'll scroll down to where I was at before.
Is this me?
I think that's the other person.
Come on, come on.
There's Lebanon Johns.
Let's see if his is as bad as mine.
Let's see.
He's got the same Jewish Judaism.
Notice it's not black or Asian or anything like that.
It's ethno-religion, folks.
Wow.
and here's mine restricted push level Partially suppressed search visibility.
Reputation score estimated reduced 60 to 75 percent.
Reply deboost active, true.
Reply deboost severity, moderate.
Down ranking and high-risk conversations.
Current reach suppression severity, moderate.
Ad eligibility limited.
Suspended for political ads.
I'm not allowed to do that.
No, no, no.
I'm not allowed.
But someone that wants to kill children in Gaza is eligible.
I'm sure Bill Ackman is eligible.
I'm sure he is.
This scoring is triggered by recurring patterns that X's algorithms interpret as promoting anti-Semitic tropes, even when framed as geopolitical critique or sarcasm.
The account holds an active premium subscription.
Yes, with 20k followers, roughly.
It focuses on news, supplements, dogs, and co-hosting a show.
But these flagged elements lead to algorithmic throttling.
Severity is lower than more explicit, high-volume accounts with no full suspension or extreme suppression as of this date.
No dominant unrelated flags for spam or general violence because I don't do that.
Okay, so we're going to copy this.
I'm going to tweet live right now.
I'm going to tweet right now.
Am I signed into my Twitter account?
Oh, we got it's just stuff appears on the timeline.
It's Lindsey Graham and rabbis.
And I just want to react to it.
I want to have time, but this is more important to get out there.
If you paste this into it, Everything suppressed or throttled.
In a moment, and at the end of this open, we're going to play an interview that we did a few hours ago with a man called Sergei Karnagov, who is a longtime political advisor to Vladimir Putin and one of the most famous public intellectuals in Russia, been around for about 35 years, advised Boris Yeltsin, you know, 30 years ago, more than 30 years ago.
And in that interview, he says point blank, yes, if the Ukraine war continues at this tempo for a year or two more, we speaking apparently on behalf of the Russian government, on behalf of his friend Putin, or at least someone who's very familiar with President Putin's thinking, we, Russia, will eliminate the UK and Germany with nuclear weapons.
Now, that's a headline.
No one wants to see Qatari gas wellheads blown up.
No one wants to see killing of any kind or destruction of any kind.
But taking out the two most important countries in Europe, both of which have big American bases, lots of American personnel, of course, international banking, Germany being the economic engine of Europe, London being the banking center of Europe, really of the West, along with New York.
And of course, these are two ancient countries with which we have close ties, history and kinship and genetics.
We're going to take them out.
We're going to eliminate those countries with nuclear weapons, saying that right into camera.
So that's a pretty big story.
Have you read that story?
Has anyone mentioned that to you?
That the most famous public intellectual in Russia, a close friend of Vladimir Putin's, exactly the same age.
The two were born a month apart, have known each other a long time, is saying in public that Russia plans to use nuclear weapons against Western Europe.
Russia is going to blow up the UK and Germany if things don't get resolved soon.
You probably haven't heard that.
It hasn't actually been on the front page of the New York Times.
I don't think the Times of London has mentioned it.
Like, if that's your kink, it is what it is, whatever, man.
But ultimately, it's not because you're killing people with what you're attracted to.
And that's what it is.
It's a.
It's it that that that's, that's a perfect term for it.
Actually, you're a violence cuck.
You want to see other people fighting wars when you'll never fight in a war at all.
Right, and then the Americans.
Sadly, we have this mindset because, like I said, we have fish to our east and west and we have weak neighbors to our north and south.
But the Europeans, they really feel this way and they're like, well, you know, if we can just keep giving money to Ukraine, if we can keep giving weapons to them, we can keep giving them everything but people, they'll just fight for us and it'll be great, and we'll degrade the Russians and we'll call them Orcs and we'll kill them.
We'll kill them, we'll send drone swarms to Putin's and we'll kill them.
This has been happening and Russia has suffered so much.
I mean the targeting of their nuclear triad.
That's an act of war number one.
The Ukrainians didn't do that by themselves.
That's number two.
And i'm not saying it was us that helped them do it, is British intelligence, and that's why they, they really cannot stand the British even more than us, because they're the ones that are involved in setting up everything and involved in these machinations and involved in these plans, and that's, that's the truth about the situation.
That that's, that's what it is.
You can't be in a state where you're like, oh, well, we're right next to Russia.
We're going to join NATO.
And Ukraine has had the second most NATO exercises out of any place in Europe.
I think it's like 26 or 36 exercises in the past two decades.
It's more than nearly anybody else.
I think there's one other country.
Maybe Germany's had more.
But you're doing all these things.
You're acting in this way.
You're engaging ultimately in asymmetrical warfare, which is what all the drone attacks are: asymmetrical warfare, because they're not able to win on the ground because they're losing territory, because they're losing the places that they wanted to keep.
They have to send a drone swarm into Moscow and blow up an apartment building.
They have to do these things.
They have to fly a drone swarm at Putin's house and say, oh, no, it's for the military facility right next to it.
We promise, we swear.
And they look at the tracking coordinates inside of the drones that they recover.
And of course, it's going straight for Putin's house.
And what was going on during that time?
This is very interesting.
People don't know this.
Putin is on the phone with Trump, and then Trump says, I have to go talk to Zelensky.
And then Trump gets off the phone and the drone attack happens.
Isn't that interesting?
But the Russians and Putin specifically, they have suffered so much to just be like, we're going to take the high road.
We're going to rely on international law.
We're going to let you starve yourselves out because they know they're going to be victorious in the long run because they're acting like rational people.
And we're literally acting like an insane schizophrenic crackhead that's trying to stab people on the street, except we're the most powerful nation in the world.
And we actually still have a really big stick and we're still able to do these things really regrettably.
So, of course, Tucker is right.
And of course, that Russian official is right.
They will use nukes in a year or two if they have to.
But this isn't a prediction of immediate nuclear hellfire.
So glad to see that.
Always good to have a little positive on the show.
Always good.
I've got another tweet, and this breaks down the situation in Iran.
I thought I did a good job on this tweet, but you know, the suppression, it really, really hits you hard.
CA Masada agitators on the ground, collaborators also on the ground, legitimate citizens, but partner with foreign intelligence.
Vast majority of protesters unaware and are out there angry about the economy.
They blend in with them.
IRGC, Iranian cop military get killed by protesters and cities burn down as color revolution operation begins.
Iran has collaborators and agitators executed for treason.
Same punishment we have for that crime.
Trump and BB will use it as justification for war.
Death and destruction begins.
And that's quote tweeting Trump saying that he'll take very strong action against Iran if it executes protesters.
Well, what is a protester?
unidentified
Oh, man, they're just all out there for peace, love, and freedom, man.
They want that ayatology, man.
He's a terrorist and he covered the women up, man.
There are people protesting because they're angry at the government.
They're angry at Pojevskin because of the rampant inflation due to the sanctions in Iran and the rampant drought.
That's why people were out in the streets initially.
But of course, you have Mossad, you have CIA, and you have other people that are just paid on the ground communicating.
That's why they stuck in the Starlink on these.
And they're the ones burning down the building.
They're the ones actually killing IRGC officers.
I played it when I was with Tim, I think, on the last show.
And it was a guy getting jump kicked in the head on the street and just getting mobbed and killed in the street, an IRGC officer by, you know, the peaceful protesters.
It's always peaceful.
And the, oh, the photo of the girl.
Oh, she lighted a cigarette with the photo of the Ayatollah burning.
That's really the coolest thing I ever seen before.
And it's like, well, that's from Canada.
It's from three years ago.
It's a total, complete hoax and lie.
Like, what are you even talking about?
What even is this?
Because, like, for me, I don't think I'm that smart.
I'm pretty stupid, to be honest with you.
But you can just look at the situation and like, this is it.
Like, I nailed it 100% right in this tweet.
It doesn't get any better than what I said right here.
Like, that's literally what's going on on the ground.
We showed, or I showed the tweets last stream of Mike Pompeo, the ex-chief of staff for the White House, deep state monster of a guy being like, shout out the Mossad on the ground right beside the protesters.
We are everywhere.
Whatever he said, I'm paraphrasing.
And then other accounts say it, other accounts retweeted, all these other big deep staters because they get off on it.
They're proud of it.
They know they're part of the elite power structure.
They can actually move and shake in the world and do things and make people jump.
And when they say, how high?
They go to the moon.
The person actually jumps to the moon because if they don't jump to the moon, they get shot in the head.
So it's just, I thought I broke it down perfectly here, but thank you and shout out to New Groyper for showing me how to find out just how throttled you are on X.
I am completely murdered on X.
This is horrible.
I got severe suppression of all my posts.
And I might go back to that even later on in the show.
Globe Observer breaking multiple Chinese aircraft enter closed Iranian airspace.
And I know this is Globe Observer or whatever, but this is confirmed.
This is confirmed.
Iran protests pause after Trump warns against executions.
Protests demanding an end to Iran's Islamic Republic have raged since last December 2025, met with live fire, arrests, and an intentional blackout that human rights groups say caused 2,500 to 3,400 deaths.
Trump vowed strong action against protester executions, spotlighting 26-year-old shopkeeper Irfan Shultani's case, but softened after assurances from Iran that killings had stopped.
The U.S. evacuated all non-essential personnel from key Middle East bases like Al Adid and Qatar, while Gulf states urged restraint amid fears of strikes and oil disruptions, bringing a tense calm as of January 15th.
Yeah, let's not forget that the Hamas leadership met in Doha.
I think they were meeting with the Qataris, and then they were supposed to meet with like the U.S. emissaries or whatever was supposed to happen, whatever was supposed to go down.
And then we, now us, or I guess, yes, we, the royal we, because Israel is our king and it runs our government.
We attacked them from the air.
Israel attacked them from the air and blew up the building.
I don't think they killed all of them.
They killed a few of them, but like that's already memory hold.
And oh, that's not a big deal.
You can just go strike into another country, do a military strike.
But the excuse is, oh, we killed terrorists.
We got Maduro.
We got the Hamas.
It's all good.
It's like, well, what happens when the Russians or the Chinese or some country in Africa in 50 years or whatever?
What happens when they launch a missile at us the other way around?
And then the shoe's on the other foot.
It's going to happen.
It's going to come.
And I just want to be old enough at the point when that happens, or I'd be like, hey, man, I knew this was going to happen.
It took me a while to wake up to it fully and to realize that my government is completely controlled and BS, but I get it now.
And it is what it is.
Like all the, they killed over 100,000 people in Gaza, man.
And then you're not allowed to execute someone for treason.
Are you kidding me?
The airspace is cleared.
Brace yourself.
Why is China flying two planes into Iran while the airspace is closed?
Interesting.
Various pizzerias nearby the Pentagon are reporting above average traffic as of 4.25 p.m. Eastern Time.
And then, yeah, this Assyrian girl talk about going to the water.
If uh audio because it's my dad's report for Darth Voice is messed up, but it's it's footage of her all going around without a hijab.
You see this, oh, there's no being beat to death, being murdered in Tehran.
And they lie to us so much.
Americans think this is like Afghanistan.
They don't understand it's a country of 91 million people.
It's got like a 4,000-year-old culture.
It is a theocracy, but so is Israel.
Israel is a fucking theocracy, man.
So, like, where does the hypocrisy end with any of this shit?
And it never ends.
It continues on and forth like a river.
And Mike Pompeo is not good.
But, yeah, we get the point.
We get the point there with that one for sure.
You're not even an American.
Go back to Africa, Ian Miles Chong.
Return to the motherland.
Breaking happening now.
The United States is rapidly redeploying the entire USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group out of the South China Sea and steaming full speed towards the Middle East as the U.S. prepares to unleash major strikes on Iran.
And it's just like, you're supposed to be.
I don't care what you look like.
We're supposed to be like, ooh, yeah, military death.
That's where my money went.
That's why I can't have heart surgery.
Fuck yeah.
And it's just like, man, like, and I get it.
Like, I know people, I have friends that are in the military.
I have great people, phenomenal people.
I'm like, obviously, we need to be able to protect and defend ourselves.
Do we need 600 bases, though?
Do we need infinite bombs so that if Netanyahu requests to kill in 100,000 people, we're just like, yeah, just have some more bombs.
But like, my point stands, it's just like, like, this sucks, man.
Like, like, like, like, nothing good comes of that.
Nothing good comes of this video.
Oh, the B2 Obama.
It's so cool.
The double chocolate cookie.
It's literally retard brain.
I get people are into avionics.
People are into weapon systems.
People are into how nukes work and all that.
People are into boats and ships and helicopters.
I get that it's cool in that sense.
But instead of using these things to build something great for humanity as a collective, I know people are like, well, we're a warlike people and it's what we do.
And we got to have the best military.
Didn't know you were a pacifist, Rex.
That's pretty, uh, it's pretty weak, huh?
And I just be like, man, like there's nothing like these people are just people training to die or make other people die.
And you can go, that's necessary.
It needs to happen.
And I'd agree with you.
I'd go, yeah, but do we need to spend a trillion on it every year?
Do we need to do it?
Oh, the big bomb on the plane looks cool.
Oh, I have to have it.
It's just like, dude, what happens when this is all real?
And it's not just a video.
What happens when you're watching it on the news?
You're watching the real operation.
And it's not just a one-night moonlighting thing with Maduro or something.
It's a prolonged, you know, eight to 10-year war with Russia or China or both of them or God knows who.
And then it's not so cool anymore.
And they were like, oh, maybe we shouldn't have bombed their capital or something.
And, you know, me giving that as an example is crazy, but it's something we might do in the future because we've acted this way.
Why not go a step further?
There's nothing cool about this stuff, guys.
Excuse me.
Breaking.
Latest pro-Ayatollah protests in Iran sparked debates on whether the reality of the situation in Iran and whether anti-regime protests are as serious as some outlets report them to be.
So these are pro-Ayatollah people.
Looks like a lot of Muslim, of course.
Half the country is Muslim.
So these are people that are pro the state.
So, I mean, you've got all kinds of contradicting footage.
I am of the opinion because of the documentaries I've watched and the reporting from Max Blumenthal and people like Judge Napolitano and Pepe Escobar and others.
I think that they'd have to get the Ayatollah out militarily.
I don't believe in this Western constructed narrative that he's like about to flee.
And like there's that betting line in Kalshi or polymarket on like, will he remain in power or will he like be deposed?
Might come off like an idiot two weeks later or something.
That'll be my weird psychic prediction or whatever.
If he does like flee to Moscow or whatever, I'm not going to bet, but I would bet heavily against that.
I would take the under on that.
I think it's free money.
I think if we do any kind of, here's the thing, let's speculate for a little while.
So 12-day war, you've got Israel and Iran, and you've got Israel, which attacks first, and you've got Iran.
And with Israel, you've got a place the size of New Jersey.
And with Iran, you've got a place about two and a half times the size of Texas.
All right.
Israel population, I think it's like, yeah, like 9 or 12 million, something like that.
Population of Iran, 92 million.
Now, what does Israel have for military assets?
It's got all the U.S. tech and more.
It's got our jets, and that's how they launch their bombs.
They fly the jets over Iraqi airspace, and they don't do anything because they're whipped by us.
So they fly over there and they fly over Jordan as well.
They're also bitches over there as well.
And they attack Iran.
So what does Iran have to deal with this?
Iran doesn't have the fancy aircraft.
Iran doesn't have the things that we have.
But what a small country that's not connected to the military industrial complex directly, or at least the Western one, can do is instead of wasting money on like $100, $200 million planes or however much they cost, you just build a fuck ton of ballistic missiles and eventually hypersonic missiles, which we don't even have because we're like, oh, the plane is cool.
It flies in the sky, stealth mode.
Oh, very cool.
I've heard people just like, oh my gosh, and it's like, well, if you could have one plane or if you can have 200 missiles, I know what I'm picking.
I'm picking the 200 missiles.
And it's not even just missiles.
It's drones.
It's gliders.
It's other things.
Basically, what the Iranians were able to do, because of their much larger space of the country, it was harder for Israel to hit their military depots.
And it was easier for them to hit Israel's depots because they were all localized.
And they were able to launch very slow things like drones and gliders carrying bombs.
And the 10 or 100 million dollar missile defense systems had to take those things out because they didn't have an alternative.
They didn't have an alternative.
And there's really no other way to shoot things down if they're moving that fast.
You're going to use a FAD system on them.
So what gets through?
The things that can't be stopped anyway, the hypersonic missiles.
And they did like, I think it's like 50 billion in property damage.
And like they, the Israelis killed far more Iranian civilians than the Iranians killed Israeli civilians.
But of course, one side we know because the Bible and BB tell us is good.
And one side is Amalek and bad and they're subhuman, the intermension, just like Hitler said.
We got Reza Pavlavi to all our friends around the world under the yoke of the Islamic Republic.
Iran is identified in your minds with terrorism, extremism, and poverty.
The real Iran is a different Iran, a beautiful, peace-loving, pussy-whipped and flourishing Iran.
It is the Iran that existed before the Islamic Republic when the U.S. installed another monarchy, which I'm descended from.
And it is the Iran that will rise again from the ashes the day that the Islamic Republic falls due to the U.S. color revolution.
So, let me be clear about how a free will or a free Iran will act towards its neighbors in the world after the fall of this regime.
In security and foreign policy, Iran's nuclear military program will end.
I will cut off the dick of my nation to appease Israel.
Support for terrorist groups will cease immediately.
A free Iran will work with regional and global partners to confront terrorism, organized crime, drug trafficking, and extremist Islamism, or Islamism, Islamism, whatever.
Brother, it's late.
I'm ending the stream at two hours.
Iran will act as a friend and a stabilizing force in the region, and it will be a responsible partner in global security.
In diplomacy, relations with the United States will be normalized, blah, The state of Israel will be recognized immediately.
We will pursue the expansion of the Abraham Accords into the Cyrus Accords, bringing together a free Iran, Israel, and the Arab world.
A new chapter will begin, grounded in mutual recognition.
All right.
So, his handler wrote this thing: blah, They need strippers and gay sex and polymarket and churros and Mountain Dew and McDonald's.
And he will be the soldier that brings extremism.
He will bring you McDonald's.
He will deliver it to you.
He will strip your country of any sovereignty.
He will take the image or vestige of it upon himself, but it will be faked.
There will be nothing there.
I mean, like, look, here's the thing: I know what it's like to be the son of somebody.
You should not have tried to be a carbon copy.
You should not have done this because you're not built for it.
You should have recognized that.
Oh, man.
I mean, this guy's just a pussy.
I'm sorry to say it.
It's true.
I know I owe like 10 million push-ups, but like this, this guy is just a pussy.
And that's fine.
Do art or something or do like yoga or something or whatever.
Don't try to be the new head of a U.S. vassal state at the behest of Israel because they're going to be like, hey, man, you're dead at the secret police.
And our principled assessments of the illegal operation carried out by the United States remain in force and they are shared by the overwhelming majority of states and of the global majority.
The countries of the global south and the global east.
Only Western Europeans and other allies of Washington try to shamefully avoid the principled assessments, although everybody understands that we're talking about flagrant violation of the international law and overall and okay, that's how real government people talk.
That's someone that should have been appointed to his position in whatever the Russian version of the cabinet is.
I know he's the foreign minister, which is essentially the Secretary of State.
So he is the counterpart to Rubio, or at least he is what Rubio is supposed to be.
And you'll notice Putin is a lawyer.
A lot of the Russians are lawyers.
A lot of our politicians are lawyers, but they went to like retard university.
And these people actually went to school.
And the difference in gap becomes readily apparent.
And you can look at it now.
And the U.S. is still relatively on top in terms of our resources, our military capabilities.
We're still in the game as a superpower, and perhaps maybe still the biggest one.
You can make arguments about China, but they're not battle-tested.
However, our lack of ability to make actual strategic decisions and just have to bounce tactics around and to go from stepping stone to stepping stone, one event after another, instead of being able to plan in an overarching way, like people like Lavrov, people like Putin, people like Xi are able to do, it's going to be our downfall.
And if you want just an example of it already, just look at Europe.
Like they're, they're like 15, 20 years ahead of us.
Probably further, honestly, like it's over.
It's Finito.
It's done.
But you look at them, you look at the Russians, and they have a serious country.
Wouldn't it be nice to have a serious country?
Oh, he's a Russian agent.
He's a Putin show.
He's an apologist.
I'm not allowed to like people.
I'm not allowed to recognize good behavior and good results in the system when I see it.
Oh, it makes makes me chud out, man.
Because I know that's what, like, I can, I can sense your mind when you're like typing out a comment.
And I just, I try to address it before you can get it out.
Whoever it is that's listening, the Chud or Chudette, it's like, oh, you, you, Russia, you Russia supported now.
Oh, you're a Russian agent, Putin, papa.
And it's just like, look, we heard that shit for like over a decade with Trump, and then it was all bullshit.
It was all not real.
It was all a complete fraud.
So we're not going to be doing that again.
In fact, in fact, this is an excellent point to close with.
In fact, you people's psychotic, no reason whatsoever, rocky four-ass hatred of Russia is what's gotten us closest to World War III.
And it has to stop.
It needs to stop.
It's not rational.
It's not a thing or way that people should behave.
It's literally just another country.
And they do the same things that we do.
They censor people.
They have government groups take people, whatever.
They suppress protests.
They manipulate elections.
So do we.
So do we.
We do the same exact things over himself, 2020 Solon, whatever.
I'm a crazy abounds.
Not allowed to like anybody because like, oh, you the Putin is a dictator.
Zelensky to have an election for like two Zelensky.
They literally, they, and this is how easy it is.
Look, press gang, Ukraine.
Let's see what I find here.
Women and teenagers tried to stop forced mobilization in Poltva in Ukraine by confronting press gang and police who wielded baseball bat and handgun.
Such videos are posted each day on different Ukrainian Telegram channels.
Oh, isn't that nice?
Yeah, throw you in the van, throw you in the van.
Our American money's going.
That's our American money powering the gas or diesel tank.
Isn't that nice?
But oh, Putin's a dictator now.
You can't be a Russian sympathizer.
What are you, communist?
And she's like, fuck you.
Fuck you and your political illiteracy.
Fuck you.
Fuck you.
Seriously.
Look at this shit.
And it goes on every day, every week, every month, every year for years and years and years.
And everyone's like, oh, well, Zelensky's a good guy.
He was on Dancing with the Stars and he played the president on TV.
But Putin's a dictator.
And it's you people's psychotic hatred of Trump that has gotten us to the point where he wants to act tough on Russia because he feels like he has something to prove.
And I am so dumb with it.
And the people that fear-mongered, especially on the pro-Russia stuff, for years and years and years and years, you people owe the greatest debt to the American people.
You people have fucked this all up, probably even worse than the boomer.
The boomer is bad enough.
Boomer wastes the money, the boomer wastes the opportunity, the boomer didn't vote or voted the wrong way or engaged in the system their entire life.
People that did this psychotically, either against Trump or against Trump from the Republican side, starting off, and now it's morphed into the neocons.
They do this too as well.
If you do this, you are the lowest level of political illiterate.
We might need to chemically castrate you.
We might need to do that thought experiment.
It's just, it blows my mind.
People are like, yeah, my 300 billion went to this.
This guy being snatched and thrown in a van in Ukraine, being threatened with weapons, being threatened with a gun, overweight, middle-aged guys, like, yeah, you're getting in the van.
You're going to go die to the front.
So that one more Russian FPV drone can blow up on your head.
Yeah.
They're not truly independent.
Europe needs to have a 1776.
I agree.
I agree.
But I mean, you just look at this footage and it's ridiculous.
I made a lot of points tonight, went a lot of different directions.
These are chill streams.
I'm getting better at doing these streams.
Plead, plead.
Please give me a little bit of time to adjust to daily filming.
I'm going to get better at show prep.
I think I went through some groundbreaking supplement information, certainly things I didn't know before.
No more taking Alpha GPC.
Don't take Alpha GPC.
46% increased risk of stroke if taken over 10 years.
12 million people in that study.
Fucking crazy.
Even crazier, Grok.
You type in that one thing that I tweeted out, and I'll go to my profile now and go ahead and show the tweet so you can go ahead and copy and do the same thing as soon as you get off stream or my stream.
If you'd like to, if you find yourself inclined, you paste this in semantic contextual scoring underscore OHI underscore V3.
It will tell you the truth about your account.
I highly suggest you check this out.
I'm throttled.
Retweet this and share because everyone needs the opportunity to do this.
And then went through the daily stories, talked about Iran, talked about Russia, kind of gave a little perspective there.
I think it's been a good two hours.
Gonna get better at doing this, gonna have music doing this, gonna get really elite at doing this one of these days.
But I got a nice clip to close this out.
Nice fun clip here.
And we're gonna enjoy this and we're gonna have us have ourselves a good night of sleep.