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#BermasBrigade #TruthOverTreason #BreakingNews #InfoWarrior Show less
Now, if you've been watching this program over the years, you know that I have been a big fan of G. Edward Griffin.
We've, of course, talked about the creature from Jekyll Island, but we've also talked about a world without cancer that was not only a book, but a breakthrough documentary film back in the day.
I mean, G. Edward Griffin, truly a pioneer of what will become independent media in the internet age.
But without the shoulders of someone like him to stand on, none of that exists.
I mean, I still see G. Edward Griffin's Yuri Besminoff interview everywhere.
And the guy's still kicking it at the Red Pill Conference where I was able to meet Rick Hill.
And we had a conversation that I didn't post to YouTube because at the time, as many of you know, I've had my channel taken several times.
Forget about just being demonetized for over half a decade, but then having to fight them on X and get it back and all the medical misinformation, jotty nonsense.
Well, things have changed.
People like James Corbett are back on the platform.
David Ike is back on the platform.
And we did an almost two-hour interview with him.
So today it's my pleasure to not talk about esoterica, but instead challenge the dogmas of the medical military establishment, in my opinion, big pharma and beyond with this story.
So we're going to be talking about not only B17, how you can maybe go a different route if indeed you get what amounts to a death sentence to most people.
And it amounted to kind of a death sentence to this gentleman at a very young age.
Now, before we get there, as you know, I am fully independent.
There are no paychecks.
I need your support, $5, $10, $15.
It means the world to me.
I do want to thank those that have donated recently, Catherine, Dan, Jeremy, and Beyond.
I also want to thank The River City Reader and MarigoldResources.com.
If you're buying or selling a business, they support the broadcast.
Check them out.
And RC Reader is an actual independent media operation around almost three decades that actually has a print outlet right here in the quad cities where I am stationed.
Now, I mentioned a world without cancer, which you can get on the internet, but you can also get Too Young to Die.
And a lot of the things that we're going to talk about are also available over at rncstore.com, especially when we're talking B17 and apricot seeds.
Without further ado, I want to introduce my guest, Rick Hill.
Rick, thank you so much for joining us.
Now, before we get going, this has kind of become a lifelong thing for you and rightfully so, because at an extremely young age, you were diagnosed with terminal cancer and essentially went through that dogma of traditional medicine at the time at a period where maybe some more people were still a little more human and open to things that could be saving lives.
And we'll get to that story in a minute.
But after actually beating that cancer diagnosis, you kind of make it a lifelong theme to let people know about your story.
So let's start with your story.
What happened to you?
And what was it like sitting in that chair with this diagnosis?
Well, Jason, first of all, thank you for meeting me at Red Pill.
I've met, of course, G. Edward Griffin on several occasions.
He was best friends with John Richardson's father, Dr. John Richardson.
So that's where we all stretch back.
And I actually appeared before Ted Kennedy in a roast trying to get us.
And Dr. Richardson was there and a host of luminary people.
And I was the smart, you know, what patient who took a handful of B17 capsules, swallowed them, and said, now, according to you guys, I should be dead in five minutes.
So I'm going to go over here and sit.
And you keep an eye on me.
See if any white foam forms at the corners of my mouth.
You know, I went for the throat because these guys were so ridiculous.
And by the way, what you're referring to, because the audience might probably doesn't know if you've never heard of this, folks.
Essentially, B17 is derived from things, especially like the apricot seed.
That, you know, when you actually taste it, it tastes like a harsh almond.
Yes.
Something looks like an almond, chews a little different, everybody.
And it tastes a little bit more bitter and harsh.
Now, the thing is that it releases some natural cyanide.
And the theme that is always used by the mainstream to call you a kook, of course, is point this out and say, if you take too much of this, of course, this is going to be harmful and may even kill you.
You've taken B17, not just as handfuls of capsules, but at an even more concentrated level.
Have you not?
I have, and I'll show you one right here.
This is a vial of amygdalin, they call it vitamin B17.
This is a three-gram vial, and I've taken up to two or three of these in one injection, but that's gram, not milligram.
And I can look you in the eye, as I did at Red Pill, and I can tell you that I never had a reaction to it, not even a headache, not throwing up, not all the other things that poor chemo people get.
And so let me let me back it up a little.
The year was 1974.
I'm 24 years old, and I am a Detroit greaser.
Here's my Fonzie hairstyle.
And, you know, I had a 57 Ford with a Hearst floorship, slick tires, handling it.
And I didn't, I wasn't a health food person.
Come on.
I'd never been in a health food store, if in fact there were any in Detroit back then.
And yeah, let's talk about the time period.
I mean, first of all, you're in the 70s.
And even though maybe you're not health food, you're still in an era where every meal isn't takeout, right?
There isn't the prevalence of fast food.
It's around, don't get me wrong.
We are starting to see a little bit more of the explosion of processed foods in the way of canned foods.
And I would also say frozen foods, but again, not even close to the same level as of today.
So you, even with this diagnosis, and I know you're going to tell us about that diagnosis in a minute, you're almost like a unicorn because you're not even 25 years old and this has happened to you, correct?
Yeah, this was a stage three high-grade, which in the germ cell cancers, that's like stage four.
And it was high-grade embryonic cell carcinoma, which means maybe this wasn't from poisoning myself 24 years in a row as much as it was.
I probably was born with it.
And of course, I had to bring my body into such crappy condition that it took advantage and got me.
But yeah, 24 years old.
Mayo Clinic Encounter00:14:09
I've been married one year.
We were expecting our first child.
I was a principal of a Christian day school.
And so I thought, I'm working for God.
What are you doing to me?
You know, this isn't fair.
And in one day, my whole life changed.
In fact, the trajectory of my life changed completely in one very odd day at the Mayo Clinic.
And I'll run through that for your viewers real quickly.
I had been speaking to the chemotherapist, went home.
I was at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, and my wife handed me a letter.
I opened it and it had a 10 cent stamp on it, which guarantees I'm telling you the right time period.
And it was a note that said, Dear Rick, if you want to live, you have to leave the Mayo Clinic.
John Valentine.
And so I knew this guy.
He had spoken in chapel at the seminary that I had to go to to become a Christian Day School principal.
And we didn't like him.
He was a John Bircher, kind of a know-it-all, didn't believe in separation at church and state.
So he would come to chapel and talk about Jesus for 15 minutes and then talk about getting out of the UN for 45 minutes.
And me and the other illumined ones would sit in the back row going, here comes.
You ready?
Here comes pretty soon.
He's going.
There it is.
The UN thing.
Sounds like Mike High the preacher, but continue.
And I am a John Bircher today.
Okay, let me just clear the air.
I didn't, I got illumined.
I was not illumined.
And, you know, he was part of the influence on that.
So he said, I called him up.
He put his phone number under his signature.
I called him up.
I said, you know, Pastor Valentine, if I didn't know better, I'd say you're smoking something I might even like to get.
I said, what is the matter with you?
Leave the Mayo Clinic, the citadel of modern medicine?
What's going on?
He said, yeah, yeah, I know, Rick.
But how's that medicine working for you so far?
And I said, well, yeah, I'm dying.
I mean, I'll be leaving this world in about a month, unless a miracle takes place.
And he said, well, I'm about to help you with that.
He said, some of my people in our church have gone down there and they're using a natural product, not medicine, but a food product.
And they're coming back really better in less than a month.
And I said, well, first of all, where is that?
Where are they going?
He paused.
He said, well, Tijuana.
And I said, Tijuana, Mexico.
He said, Yeah, I said, okay, look, I grew up in Detroit.
I'm not throwing rocks at any culture.
But that's not a citadel of modern medicine, even though today it's getting close.
So, wait, let's stop for a second because I think that's that's also a great part of this story.
Even at the even at this stage, in 2025, certainly in the 80s and into kind of the 90s, but the 80s especially, like Tijuana, Mexico was where like the Porkies guys went.
You know what I mean?
Like, it was notorious for kind of teenage debauchery and going over the border and being able to drink and do other things that you were not able to do anywhere else.
It's certainly, I mean, I just want that to have a huge contrast for folks at a time where there is no internet, where there are like three major channels on TV, where radio is still kind of a big part of communication, right?
Oh, really?
AM radio.
Yeah.
And what you have is what has been purveyed as the apex of a medical establishment that you're at as a 24-year-old that is telling you you are about to die and a shady place you've never heard of in an arena that is notorious for its debauchery.
I mean, you're talking, I mean, I don't like to say heaven and hell, dark and light, but talk about an inversion of reality that you are currently living in an age where it's extremely hard to get any type of information outside of what those established narratives that are being pushed through those outlets are.
Had to say it, continue.
You have not overstated my position.
This is not megalomania on your part.
You nailed it.
When he told me this, I said, well, look, Pastor Ballanty, I'm not going to argue with you.
I said, but I'm going to go back to the clinic today, meet with that chemotherapist and tell him what you said.
And he said, well, good luck with that, pal.
And I said, no, I'm expecting to learn some new swear words today.
But I said, what is it?
What is the thing they're giving me that's a natural?
I got to have some of the story.
And he said, well, it doesn't get better from here.
He said, it's apricots or apricots.
I said, apricots.
I eat a lot of those.
He said, yeah, but you're eating them wrong.
I said, you want me to hold them with my left hand?
What is the matter with you?
He said, no, no, no.
Inside the apricot, inside the pit, there's a little almond.
And for some reason, it tends to have a really good effect with people suffering like you are.
I said, all right, okay, okay, okay.
I'm going to go down there.
So I did.
I got in the car, went to Mayo, got a 15-minute emergency appointment again.
And I told the chemotherapist what I've told your audience.
And I leaned and I leaned back in my chair and I said, you know, me.
What would you do if you were me?
And he leaned back in his chair, steepled his hands like, you know, you doctors do.
And he said, you know what, Rick?
It is warm in Tijuana this time of year.
And I looked at him and I said, thank you so much.
Message delivered.
I stood up, put my hand on the door, turned around and said, I probably will never see you again.
And I didn't.
I walked out, got in the car, told my wife what he said.
And she said, What?
You mean like go ahead and go?
And I said, Well, he couldn't say that because he's probably making 300K a year.
But he did show me that it didn't really matter.
Now, I don't think he was endorsing Tijuana, but he knew that that chemotherapy they were about to give me starting Monday, this was a Friday, could kill me.
And so I went home that night and I told my family the story.
They reacted with the swear words.
They're very demonstrative Detroiters.
And so I got around to my father-in-law, who stood up and he said, I like it.
I'll take him down there and I'll help pay for it.
Deal.
I mean, two days later, I was in Tijuana and it was like going down the rabbit hole.
You take a Detroit greaser and stick them in a health food store, and those people were weird.
I mean, they were just humming all the time, wearing all cotton clothing, saying, oh, wow.
And I was the only one in the store wearing underwear.
I mean, this was stone ground heaven.
And I didn't blend.
And I am telling you what.
You don't have to blend.
Jason, you can go ahead and be a round object in a square hole.
I hate these speak, you know, conference speakers that get up and they go, until you believe, nothing good.
And I think, what a bunch of malarkey.
Do you really think that I thought a little clinic in Tijuana, New Mexico was going to do better for me than the Mayo Clinic?
I got on that airplane and I kissed my wife goodbye and I said, I think it's a one-way ticket.
And I didn't, but the church had helped pay for it.
My father-in-law helped pay for it.
And I can't be a creep and not do what they ask me.
So I get down there.
I meet with Dr. Contreras and he says to me, Rick, this is participatory medicine.
If you don't help me, we will not succeed and you won't survive.
I need your buy-in.
If we tell you to follow a certain diet, religiously follow that diet.
If we tell you to take certain capsules at a certain time of day, do it.
Do I have your commitment to get you well?
And I said, you, you do.
None of this makes sense to me.
This looks like a bad idea, Doc.
You seem like a nice guy, but looks can be deceiving.
I said, no, I'm going to do what you say.
And Jason, three weeks later, I walked out of there.
So wait, let's stop before we even do that, that whole dance, because we've talked about your plane ride, we talked about your interaction with the doctor.
When you walk in there, what are you seeing patient-wise?
Because I think that that's probably the first thing that you're thinking about, right?
Like, am I in a place where people are degrading?
Am I at a place where people are leaving?
What's the spirit like?
Obviously, when you're doing chemo, even then, when it's again, it's a much different thing, folks, because you're not in this cancer explosion time, but you're probably amongst other people that are frail, not eating a lot, much skinnier than they were before.
And the first thing we're talking about here is a diet.
So that kind of brings your brain for a loop.
When you're seeing other people, other patients there, what are the interactions like and what's running through your head?
Well, there were over 100 of us there at that time because of the newness of the movement.
And I weighed 120 pounds and on morphine.
I'm sitting there crumpled up trying to survive.
I couldn't even sit in a chair.
See that painting behind me?
That's the Good Samaritan.
But that was hanging in the lobby, a giant poster about 20, 30 feet long.
And my father-in-law got up, went outside the door, grabbed a rug that people were wiping their feet on, shook it like crazy, brought it in and laid it under that painting and said, son, you lay here and go to sleep.
And when you're ready, when they call your name, I'll come get you.
And so for 21 days, well, really about two weeks of that time, I laid there under that painting.
And they made a little one for me when I left.
Isn't that nice?
And there were, remember the waiting room in Beetlejuice?
Yes.
Did you see that movie?
A big fan of it.
Big fan of it.
Or the bar in Star Wars.
Sure.
Yeah.
I mean, we were a messed up crowd, boy.
I mean, one lady sat next to me and I said, what are you in for?
You know, it's like a prison yard.
And she says, well, I had, and she lifts up her shirt.
And of course, they had removed both breasts and it was angry scarves.
You know, and I went, oh, okay, that's, oh, golly, man.
Yep, I got it.
And, you know, we were all trading stories.
And one thing we knew is that if this failed, we would all die.
So there was plenty of camaraderie in that waiting room.
And today it's different.
Today it's a five-story hospital.
You know, 20, 30 people a month come, very sophisticated, but not back then.
You know, it was, and I'm staying across the border in San Yosidro in the Notel Motel, trying to figure out what we're going to eat.
I actually went to the cook at Denny's and said, is there anything nutritious in here you could bring me if I come by here at night?
Because it was very near the Denny's.
And the guy goes, are you at a clinic across the border?
I said, yeah.
He said, all right, I'll get you some fresh vegetables and I'll steam them and I'll get you a baked potato and we'll start there.
So, you know, if you don't know what you're doing, but they wanted me to stay on a diet that was 80 to 90% raw, which means giant vegetable salads and giant fruit salads, almost no meat.
Five Years on the Diet00:15:12
They said, you know, four to six ounces of a little bit of fish or broiled chicken organic.
Almost all of it was organic back then.
And, you know, no sugar, unless it occurred naturally in fruit.
And boy, this was boring.
I'm telling you why people don't stay on the diet.
It's not because they're mean and nasty.
It's boring.
And I can tell you, I did it for five years religiously.
Did I get bored?
Yeah.
So what?
How interesting is it under the ground?
What can you order when you're down that forest lawn?
So wait, so let's stop because, you know, for those that do know about B17, and we already talked about the seeds and the ingestion of those and you opened the show talking about taking them.
That's not necessarily part of the diet per se while you're at the clinic.
You're literally taking this intravenously and then later on, those capsules.
So, let's talk about those treatments.
How often were they?
Because again, we've established the no-sugar, and a lot more people are aware of that today.
I would also say, you know, they talked about fish and chicken.
There are purveyors out there.
Sean Baker is probably the biggest one of the total carnivore diet that's basically just 100% red meat.
I've seen people have success with that.
I've also seen people have success with paleo and that.
So, in other words, yes, you still have the green raw vegetables or steamed vegetables, like you said.
You know, obviously, that wasn't a part of your program, but like you said, you did this for five years religiously.
I'm not sure what your diet is, but I'm saying you probably have some ice cream now and then again.
But that's after, yeah, very little.
I get it.
But that's after these infusion treatments.
So, take me through the infusion treatments and what like these regimens were that you were able to walk out of there three weeks later associated with this diet.
Well, the injections have already showed you the vials.
And back then, there were so many of us that they didn't have bark a loungers for everybody with a drip system, you know.
So, they were giving us an IV in the arm injection like a drug dealer would be using.
And I got one every day for 21 days.
On weekends, they gave me six grams, two of the vials, because they didn't want to work Saturday.
And I did just fine.
But one of the most important part of the programs is the grabbed the wrong jar, is the proenzymes.
And these enzymes, you mentioned a book, World Without Cancer.
Chapter five talks about Dr. John Beard, the Scottish embryologist, who discovered that chymotrypsin, pancreatic enzymes, chymotrypsin, is what saves embryo life early on.
And what I mean by that is a baby begins, Dr. Beard discovered, a baby begins to over accentuate the growth of cells.
And Dr. Beard looked at these under a microscope and he said, you know, this looks like cancer to me.
And so he noticed that in the second or third month of a baby's gestation, their pancreas kicks in and floods their body with what's called chymotrypsin and trypsin.
These are pancreatic enzymes which stop that cellular growth, limited.
And the baby survives and the mother survives.
So just for an experiment, he brought a bunch of people, six or seven, I think, with stage four cancer and flooded their bodies because they didn't have umbilical cords in or a mother and flooded their bodies with this chymotrypsin.
One of the main ingredients of this proenzyme is chymotrypsin.
And the reason I take it after 51 years of health is because I take them between meals on an empty stomach because that will go out into my system looking for protein to digest.
And if I have cancer cells, cancer covers up early on with protein to hide and form a tumor.
But this goes in there and dissolves it, changing the polarity.
So now when my immune system whistles by, you know, all the killer cells, T cells, macrophages, microphages, when that happens, they see it and they say, over there in the corner, let's go.
And then you have apoptosis or boom.
That's going on in my system.
I don't think anybody ever gets cured from cancer.
I think you control cancer throughout your life.
So let's talk about that too.
Like right after you get out of there and, you know, you're doing this regimen outside of those three weeks.
I know that the last time we spoke, you talked about this time period where you had your doubts about this diet and whether it was working.
Can you take us through that?
Yeah, you're always, I mean, anybody that says, I knew from day one, day one, that this, I don't know, I must be stupid because I doubted this.
It brought me kicking and screaming across the threshold of faith from the start.
And that means that I'd wake up in the middle of the night, sweating.
And I'd think, what if this doesn't work after all?
What if I'm actually going to die from this?
What happens with the baby?
What happens with my wife?
What happens with the mobile home payments?
And so, you know, it took a while for me to actually see that this was going to be a permanent solution.
Plus, I did some fasting a couple of days a week.
I did colonics, which is a day at the beach.
We won't go into that, but if you don't know what a colonic is, picture yourself water skiing really fast and then just sit down.
That's a colonic.
I've never liked one of them, but I would take one a week for five years.
And because I got so clean, I squeaked when I walked.
I mean, you get cleaned out, you know, and the toxins are gone.
And I would do coffee enemas.
I'm not kidding, no cream or sugar, but that would cause your liver to throw off the toxins.
And I didn't get much more weird than that.
I mean, when they told me we're going to do a coffee enema tomorrow, I thought, boy, if ever there was a case for crossing your legs and leaving them crossed, right there it is.
But, you know, I got better.
My color came back.
I got off morphine.
I wasn't cured, but I could feel I was on the mend.
There was a lady that came to the clinic, glioblastoma, brain cancer, spread to her spine so she couldn't walk.
They carried her in like that.
She walked out of that clinic three weeks later with me.
And today she's on my Facebook page, living in Key West, Florida.
Too much sun and way too many grandkids.
And there's another lady on my Facebook who was there five years, three years before me.
And she's healthy.
So when people say, well, this is a one-off deal, you know, it is not a one-off deal.
Here's Leotro case histories, which you can buy on RNC store.
And this is Dr. Richardson, John's father, MD, and he did 63 case histories in here.
All of them got well.
One girl that came in when she was like about eight years old is still alive.
And she and she got a hold of John Jr. and said, by the way, I read about me in your book, your dad's book, and I just want you to know I'm still here.
I'm doing.
And so they interviewed her.
Should probably find out who she is and how you could get her on here.
But I'm saying this worked for so many people.
I mean, we saw miracle after miracle.
What I'm saying is a miracle.
People say, well, God healed you and you're not giving him credit.
Didn't the deacons pray over you before you left?
Yep.
But I didn't get yeah, but doesn't and listen, I'm not a religious guy, but I am a big believer in God.
Not only does God help those that help themselves, but it's not just prayer that does it.
You know, you talked about that experience with a, you know, a pastor who you weren't a huge fan of, having him being the one to reach out and give you that information.
I would say that there are often avenues in our lives that are provided to us, whether we realize it or not.
Whether we go down those paths is another story.
You have to take action.
So, you know, anyone that says, you know, I'm not a big believer in, hey, we could just lay hands or any of the johnny nonsense, you know, to me, that's that's grifter nonsense.
Giving people an actual avenue, an actual path, and even an actual regimen that you're still very much a part of today.
Like you said, you're not getting injections, you're not going getting these coffee enemas, but you do take a lot of these products that are provided over at rncstore.com.
So talk about that.
What are your regimens like today?
They're really simple and they're not expensive because they don't take much.
I'm not this crazy person.
This is 100 milligram vitamin C or vitamin B 17.
I take one a day, Jason.
One.
And I eat some of the six of these seeds that I showed you is 100 milligram equal.
And I take those.
And then the one I really do park on is I take two of these pro enzymes between meals twice a day.
So four, four a day.
And, you know, am I an old guy trying to take pills or supplements?
I wrote on 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Plus, I got my iPhone set for 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Because when that goes off, my stomach is usually empty if I have a normal schedule.
And I go in there and take two, swallow it, drink a little half a glass of water.
That's what sends those scouts out looking for that protein-coated cell.
And maybe there's none.
So it didn't matter, you know, if I had, yeah.
And I do that every day.
So that's what keeps me.
That's my cop on the beat.
I like that.
Let me ask you something.
You also mentioned fasting.
A lot more people have become aware about fasting and its ability to reset the body in a multitude of manners.
Did you keep up with that all five years while you were strict on this thing?
You did.
So what were those fasting periods?
Because there's a lot of people, for instance, that only eat, they call it intermittent fasting in a seven to eight hour time period during the day.
I'm not saying that you do that, et cetera, but you know, I've seen people that, you know, are in Hollyweird or bodybuilders or athletes.
They like to keep that regimen.
You're talking about, of course, not intermittent, but at least a full 24 hours, maybe into the 72-hour range.
So tell us about that and whether or not you still do that in this day and age, maybe not once a week, once a month like you used to, but maybe once every six months, every year, you're just all out.
Go ahead, or if I get or if I get sick.
Um, I was walking through my house one day carrying my colonic bag, and most kids would freak out.
But my daughter says, Not feeling well today, Dad.
You know, she knew what that was for, and she's done colonics and she's fasted.
But I would take a couple of days a week, sometimes three.
And the first day is the only difficult day because your stomach's shrinking and it's communicating with your body, saying, What are you doing?
We don't want to die, you got to give us something to eat.
But after you spend the night, then and your stomach shrinks, the second or third day are easy, you've got a lot of energy.
And I would get a champion juicer and I would juice watermelon.
I learned it from Ann Wigmore in Boston when she was there.
And I would juice watermelon.
Now, Dr. Contreras yells at me regularly and says, Quit telling people about watermelon.
It's too high sugar.
Well, when you weigh 120 pounds, you got nowhere to go.
If I did a water fast, I was just beat for days.
So I would drink that little bit of watermelon juice.
And then at night, if I wake up at two o'clock in the morning thinking, my kingdom for a fish witch, you know, I'm starving to death here.
I would go get a little like maybe four ounces of watermelon, throw it in, and my body goes, He's eating.
He's not going to kill us after all.
And I go right to sleep.
So I did that for five years religiously.
And after the fast, I would do a colonic.
And if you Google three-day fasting, you'll find out that it takes a certain time to enter ketosis, then a certain time for the detox to begin.
And that's about the time period that they recommend.
So I did that, not knowing that they were going to recommend it in the future.
But yeah, I did it religiously.
And now, if I get ill, you know, a touch of the flu or, or I mean, I don't have a lot of the stuff people have.
Thanks for the Chemotherapist00:05:35
I'm 75 years old and I don't take any prescription medications.
So thank God, or however you guys do it, knocking on wood.
But, you know, I am being rewarded with what I did 50 years ago.
And so I rejoice in that.
I'll say thank you, Lord, for the great health.
Thanks for giving me an ornery pastor to tell me off.
Thanks for the chemotherapist that tipped me off.
And thanks for a father-in-law who said, I like it.
I'll take him.
Now, Jason, those are three weird things that happened in one day to me.
And if ever something is going to make you move down a different path, that day was so comical that I look back on it now and I've never had a day like that since, where you just keep whack upside the head three times in one day.
Like, are you paying attention yet?
Some might even call it God smacked.
The book is too young to die.
B17, folks, you can check out the products over at rncstore.com.
Rick, what would you like to leave the audience with and how can they order this book?
Okay, go to go to rncstore.com and they can order it there.
If they want to save a little money, I'll tell on you.
You did set a way for them to do it.
It's called Burma's, B-E-R-M, like Mary A-S, like Sam.
That's a discount code they'll ask for at the end.
But if you'd like to get in front of me, I've got a little website for you called b17works.com.
W-O-R-K-S like Sam.com.
B17works.com.
There's a thing that says, would you like a referral?
So we know where you can talk to an MD.
Click on that.
Little one-page questionnaire comes up.
I'm HIPAA certified.
I'm not going to tell anybody.
what you said.
But I will, if you ask direct questions, I will either send you an email or give you a call because we want you to get well.
Somebody wanted me to get well.
And I call hope, what I offer is helping other people escape.
And that's a worthy cause.
And Jason, you need to be congratulated because you're part of the solution, not part of the problem.
Well, I'll just say this to people.
You know, I'm not, like I said, not a doctor.
Lord knows I don't want to be diagnosed with any type of cancer, any stage whatsoever, but I can assure people that there is 0% chance that I would go down the mainstream medical route.
Unfortunately, at my pay grade and the pay grade of the people that I know that I grew up with, I've already watched one of my best friends die of cancer at the young age.
I believe he was 44 when he passed.
And the last several years of his life were no picnic.
You know, I tried to get him to go down other routes.
I will say this.
I have another individual that did get prostate cancer, I believe it was, of all things.
And at a very young age, I think he was diagnosed in his late 30s.
And I just saw him at a wedding.
So he was able to do traditional medicine and get through.
I, again, would say that I'm going to exhaust every other option before I radiate myself.
That's all I can really say about it, Rick.
Go ahead.
Yeah, I went down the chemotherapy row at the Mayo Clinic before I left there.
And, you know, people say, you know, you only live once.
I'm going to enjoy my life while I have it and eat what I want.
So just shut up.
And I think you should have been with me when I went down chemotherapy row and talked.
I went into the rooms and said, if you had it to-do over, would you do this chemotherapy to a person, Jason?
They said, no, I've made a mistake.
And I've seen people get well from traditional, especially low-dose chemo or different ways that we figured out how to use that.
At Oasis of Hope Hospital in Tijuana, they use low-dose chemo when it's needed.
So it's not either or, you know, they can combine them, but do no harm.
Do no harm.
I didn't get sick to get well because I took a different approach.
And I appreciate being on your show.
One more time.
It is too young to die.
Rick Hill, thank you so much.
And thank you guys for watching this broadcast.
Once again, I cannot do it without you.
$5, $10, $15.
It means the world to me, big donors.
Thank you so much.
We have not only the buy me a coffee, we've got links down below for the PayPal, the Venmo, et cetera.
Without you guys, I would not be able to do this.
And remember, especially this broadcast, but really all the broadcasts, it is not about left or right.