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Welcome to the Delingpod with me, James Delingpole.
And I know I always say I'm excited about this week's special guest, but before we meet him, let's have a, let's have a word from one of our sponsors.
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they will do so for you very quickly so that's the pure gold company and And you will find the hyperlink to their website at the bottom of this podcast, because I'm part of their affiliate program.
I'm not pushing their product because I think it's dodgy.
I own gold.
I own silver.
And in the form of bullion, I think you'd be mad not to have them.
I don't know where you...
It's quite difficult storing them at home.
I tend to go for the vault option.
But yeah, if you've got a good hiding place, why not?
Especially when it all kicks off and you're going to need something tradable to buy your potatoes and rice.
Anyway, go to The Pure Gold Company using the affiliate link, hyperlink, at the bottom of this podcast.
Welcome to The Dilling Pod, Zach Cox.
I've been waiting for a while to have you on.
Well, thank you very much for having me on, James.
I love that introduction.
I'm so excited to meet my next guest.
I'm really excited to talk to you, James William.
That's good.
That's good.
I'd say you're probably Britain's, possibly the world's, most awake dentist.
Oh God, that's a bit of a big build-up.
Well, I don't know.
Zack, I don't know that the competition is that stiff.
I mean, okay, for a start, you can narrow down the field.
There are very, very few, passing few, I would say, holistic dentists.
You're an holistic dentist.
I mean, they're rare as hen's teeth.
I know from people who've gone down the rabbit hole, who've thought about things like getting their amalgam fillings removed, safely and they then start casting around for an holistic dentist and it's really quite I mean how many of you are there's about ten I think or something I mean that's how it feels.
There's not many.
I did invite a load of dentists to a seminar I was doing a few years back and I went through the list of dentists that I presume were still Working and then I thought as I was put licking the stamps and putting the envelopes together and addressing envelopes I thought I'll just check to see if they're on the register make sure I've got the right address and it was quite a shock because one after another was erased removed erased
erased and It turned out that pretty much most of the dentists who have become outspoken or outside of the box Take their have their licenses removed It's quite a scary situation for somebody who doesn't think along the mainstream lines.
Put it like that.
I didn't realise it was that bad.
So what is the licensing body?
The General Dental Council.
And the General Dental Council, what, can strike you off for Yeah, we're seeing that quite a lot now, aren't we, with the General Medical Council who instruct their doctors that they have to uphold the profession in light of what the public think of them,
and so if you then are somebody who treats patients differently to what the majority of patients I'm sorry, the majority of doctors treat in their patients, then you become an outlier and you become on their radar basically.
You're then visible to them and then if you make a slip up or if there's complaints against you then there's a good chance that you lose your license or at least get in trouble with the regulator.
It's quite difficult therefore to be a whistleblower.
So people who have discovered problems with the system or with a drug or with fluoride, for example, if they then blow the whistle, they then risk losing their license.
That's interesting.
Okay. And what are the consequences of losing your license?
Can you go on practicing?
No, you can't.
No, it's unlawful without being registered, unfortunately.
So, window cleaning or a delivery boy.
I tried being a delivery boy once.
I didn't do very well.
It was very hard work.
My hat goes off to couriers everywhere around the world.
Well done.
It's not an easy job.
It's hard work and basically it barely covers the petrol.
I must say, They seem to be given really quite onerous schedules.
Yeah. I mean, they don't have time for pee breaks, do they, or anything?
It's just like...
No. No, I used to get...
If they get lost, that's it.
I literally did it for two weeks.
A truck would turn up outside my house and fill my entire lounge with parcels and sacks, sacks and sacks of parcels.
And then I had to try and find my way around town to all these obscure addresses.
Obviously, you've never been to them before unless you're a postal.
I can't speak today unless you're a postman or if you're an experienced courier driver.
And it took a lot of effort to get these parcels out, I have to say.
I once worked for my uncle delivering and collecting nuts and bolts in the black country.
So Starbridge, Lie.
Okay. Places like that.
Right. Broil-eel.
And that was challenging.
That was in the days when we didn't have sat-nav.
I'm sure it's easier with sat-nav.
But one had to look at a map.
Oh, that would be really hard now, wouldn't it?
Well, we've lost the skills.
I couldn't use a map now, I don't think.
I'm not sponsored by Sports Direct, by the way.
I just want to point that out.
It's just a mug that I was given.
I just, all we can see is the SD, so you're safe.
Okay, as long as it's not an STD, then we're okay.
It could have been sodomites, democracy, or saline drip, or anything you could have been advertising.
So before we got distracted with that digression, so I don't want to get you in trouble, but what's to stop them striking you off?
Well, I have to be somewhat measured in what I say, so I always refer to studies or to scientific literature in order to have something to back up what I say.
Of course, they can still take your license away, even if you do have all that scientific literature on your side, even if you do have case studies, etc.
So it is a very difficult balancing act to play.
That's really frightening because as a patient, as a prospective dental patient, what I'm looking for in a dentist, well, it's obviously somebody who doesn't kind of, isn't like the guy in Marathon Man and doesn't go, is it safe and dig, you know, hit my nerve.
I mean, that's a basic prerequisite.
But then beyond that, I want somebody who's got a good Good manner and knows about teeth and stuff and gums and things.
Whether or not this person passes muster with some kind of woke big pharma sponsored bureaucratic organization is so low down on my list of priorities as to be...
Well, it's like cancer, isn't it?
If I got cancer, I'd want to be able to go wherever I wanted to get it treated, whether it was some bloke in the middle of the South American rainforest giving me ayahuasca, or whether I wanted to go the full oncology chemo route.
But I don't want the authorities deciding for me.
And it sounds like, on a smaller scale, this is what's happening in dentistry, that this horrid organization is just Removing freedom of choice from the consumer.
Yeah, exactly.
It's all about choice.
So I'm a homeopath as well.
So obviously my patients prefer to use natural supplements and homeopathy and herbs and things like that and that's their absolute right, you know, so I'm just a pro-choice.
I think I'll put it that way.
So I think people if they want to be free have to be allowed to choose Whatever treatment modality they like best or whatever works for them.
So if that's chemo fine, but if it's yeah, like you say if it's if it's what did you say ayahuasca?
I'm definitely Making up a treatment.
I don't I don't believe that ayahuasca has ever been used to treat cancer.
But anyway, I want to talk to you about fluoride a bit a bit Hooray!
Yes, I'm very glad we got onto that subject.
No, no, no, don't worry.
We will talk about fluoride.
In fact, we'll talk about fluoride now.
In the context of, so, I used to go and see this hygienist for my, you know, to have all the tartar scraped off and stuff.
They charge a fortune!
Blimey, it's expensive!
Yeah. Yeah.
Every time I went to see her, I would have this argument, insofar as one can have an argument when you've got your mouth filled with it.
You can't really.
One has a brief discussion before, at the beginning and the end, and then you're trapped.
And the argument was about fluoride.
And I said, well, everyone knows that fluoride is just an industrial waste product.
Surely you don't You dentist types don't still think that, you don't believe the fluoride fairy.
It doesn't do any good at all.
And she said, no, no, it does.
It does.
There's lots of, and then she would sort of talk about how all the evidence pointed to fluoride being essential in keeping your teeth, I don't know, protected and stuff.
Why do, well, tell me, give me your take on fluoride.
Well, it's, it's a really interesting, obviously it's a, Very controversial and hot topic at the moment as they're about to introduce it into the northeast of England in the water.
So they're about to fluoridate an even larger area in the northeast of England.
And the government in 2022 decided that it would fluoridate the whole of our country.
Now they can't fluoridate Scotland, so the UK government is not able to fluoridate Scotland because of a court ruling.
I think it was Remember this one, Strathclyde versus McColl, or McColl versus Strathclyde, and Lord Jaunty, who is the judge, said in essence that fluoride is a medicine and therefore you can't force people to have medicine.
I think dentists nowadays should be aware, and doctors and public health officials and everyone, that you have the perfect right to refuse medicine if you don't want to, and you have the perfect right to accept it if you do.
So mass medication through the water supply doesn't give you that choice.
So it must be on just that one basic level, it must be wrong.
And the recent Montgomery ruling, I'm sure you're aware of that one, where a lovely lady who was having a child and was not told that because of her diabetes that the child might have larger shoulders than normal and might therefore have to be I think?
be delivered by caesarean section.
They didn't inform her because they said that they thought it would be too complicated for her to understand and the risk was about 10%.
It turned out this woman was a biochemist and had perfect understanding of that simple premise that her child might have large shoulders and unfortunately the child was damaged at birth.
I'm not quite sure what injuries it sustained but presumably brain damage.
And since then the courts have ruled that And quite rightly, and I don't know why it even needs to go to court, it's a sort of matter of common sense, isn't it?
Can we have some common sense back?
That doctors and dentists need to inform their patients what the risks are.
And so with fluoride, there's a lot of risk and very little, if any, benefit.
Okay, so what are the risks?
Well, let me talk about the benefits first.
Oh yes, do, do.
Because they tell us that it saves your teeth.
You don't get tooth decay or it reduces tooth decay.
I think the latest study was called the Catfish Study, which was done in Manchester, sponsored by the British government.
And it showed that it did not, it did not reduce tooth decay.
By the time the children get to 12, no difference in tooth decay levels.
between fluoridated water areas and unfluoridated water areas.
So there's a minuscule amount of good evidence that it works.
It doesn't in my...
the studies I've looked at shows that the effect is very, very minimal.
But the risks are quite high.
When you say very, very minimal, Is that a kind of cautious way of saying actually non-existent?
Yeah, I mean if we're talking you and me in the pub, if I was in court, I would not be being so adventurous to say it doesn't work at all.
But in a pub, I might just say, that doesn't really work much, let's say.
Put it that way.
Not much.
Or maybe not even at all, you know, because the water, drinking water with fluoride in it, it obviously goes into your body.
It's not like you're brushing your teeth with the water.
So it's not, I mean, I think there are some studies which show that fluoridated toothpaste reduce tooth decay, but that's brushed directly onto the teeth.
It's different to drinking it.
Right. No, I just want to find out what the actual facts are.
And I want to caveat that as well with just personal experience.
A lot of my patients don't use fluoride toothpaste, and a lot do.
And I don't see any difference in the tooth decay rates.
They seem to have pretty much similar tooth decay.
So, does it work?
I would say the evidence is slim and a European Commission report on that, I think in 2011, said exactly that.
There doesn't seem to be much evidence that fluoride actually works in reducing tooth decay when it's put into your water supply.
Right. So...
Have I confused things?
Unlike you, I don't need to pull any of my punches at all.
I can just Because they can't strike me off.
I'm not going to practice as a dentist ever.
It's not going to happen.
People will be relieved to hear that.
Because I would be like, is it safe?
That would be my dentist brief.
Is it safe?
Such a great film.
It is.
It is.
So it's a different...
You know, if I didn't have a license, and I was like you, I would say, No, it does not work.
That's what I would say.
Putting fluoride in the water has so little benefit that you would not notice if you stopped it.
In fact, there are studies showing exactly that, where they did stop the fluoride in Finland, Germany, I think, maybe Iceland, and there was no difference in a tooth decay once they turned the fluoride off.
So, We have cessation studies, they call it, where they actually turn the fluoride off and it makes no difference.
I think it's very important that we truth seekers never mince our words and always pursue the truth in its purest form and not sort of fudge the issue or engage in what I call the dogshit yogurt fallacy, which I'll explain to you sometime.
No, you need to name dog shit yogurt now.
I mean, Peach Melba?
Yeah, maybe.
Okay. Some people, quite a lot of people actually, like fruit in their yogurt.
But some people prefer to have dog shit put in their yogurt.
So is it acceptable To keep everyone happy.
As well as to put fruit in the yogurt.
To put a tiny, tiny amount of dog shit.
Just a small amount.
Just to satisfy those who like the dog shit.
Because even though we know that the majority of people like, like, um, fruit.
Nevertheless, we shouldn't, in the interests of fairness, we shouldn't leave out those who prefer the dog shit.
It's just a tiny amount.
The point is that the people who want dog shit in their yogurt, Are wrong.
It's not a matter of taste.
It's not a matter of, well, some people think this.
Those people are away with the fairies.
They should not be catered to.
And it's actually a version of the Hegelian dialectic.
What you end up with is a bit of dog shit in the yogurt, even though there is absolutely no reason for it whatsoever.
So, in the same way, this is going on with Fauci, I'm sorry, with RFK Jr. at the moment.
RFK Jr. is playing a game which some people think is canny and political, but I think is just completely dishonest, which is, he's saying, look, I'm not saying all vaccines are bad.
No, vaccines are great, you know, potentially a great medical technology, but just some of them, bad vaccines are bad.
I'm against bad vaccines.
No, Any honest person who's looked into this, any honest intelligent person who's looked into this and got rid of all their biases knows that all vaccines, always, in the past and in the future, vaccines are bad.
They do not work.
We are not meant to be vaccines.
It's a made-up shit that bad people invented to kill us and harm us.
Actually, I'm going to be contrary there and just say that the original Salk vaccine for polio actually did work.
No, I don't believe that.
I'm not saying that any of the vaccines these days are off that standard, because I don't think they are, but perhaps, I mean, it is quite...
That perhaps would be a lot of work then.
You know, the idea of it, the idea of it could be good.
But I don't think we execute it in a way which doesn't harm people to some extent.
So there's always, at the moment, the mindset I believe is wrong because we have this mindset that if you help 98% of the population, say, and 2% get injured or 1% gets injured, then that's okay.
That's an acceptable risk.
Well, it's not if it's your child, is it?
If it's your child that gets injured, that's totally not an acceptable risk.
You know, I always refer people to the daughter test.
So when you talk to doctors and surgeons and say, would you do that procedure on your own daughter?
And then there's a sort of look that comes across their face if they're doing something a bit risqué, which, you know, it's the great leveller, I think, are families.
So when you consider that you wouldn't harm your own daughter, then you might consider what medical practice you carry out and what dental practice you carry out, or whatever you do in life.
Would you do that to your daughter?
I think it's a great question to ask any doctor.
I agree with that bit, but I'm afraid I'm going to have to demote you from the most awake dentist.
Yeah, it was only that one.
I certainly would.
I've spotted the flaw.
I've spotted your weakness.
Under interrogation, Dr. Cox, I have found your weakness.
And you know what?
I think I was using my marathon man dentist techniques to extract this information from you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I agree.
I agree.
I mean, as you well know, You know, I was involved in organising a legal action which resulted basically in healthcare workers from keeping their jobs despite being threatened to take the Covid vaccine back in the lockdown days.
You did well there!
Because you've been doing legal training as well, haven't you?
Yeah, yeah.
We sued, I don't know, we had about 1,200 doctors and nurses on our books at the time, you know, the doctors and nurses, dentists, physios, whatever, care home workers were threatened with a sack if they didn't take the Covid vaccine.
And obviously there's no long-term safety data on that jab, as they say, or whatever you want to call it these days.
Death shot.
You can say that.
And there were literally thousands of doctors who didn't want to take the vaccine.
Very educated people.
We had consultants and professors of medicine who didn't want to take the vaccine and yet were being threatened with the sack.
And I started getting phone calls from colleagues and they were just saying, Zac, what are we going to do?
I happen to know a couple of lawyers, so Put together a small legal team, we started holding Zooms, which I thought we might get maybe 50 people to, so again thousands of people coming to our Zooms.
In the end we had about 1,200 doctors and nurses that we wrote letters to the hospitals for and started litigation and I think we put enough pressure on the system to make Sajid Javid back down and drop that mandate to force healthcare workers to take the vaccine.
It was a colossal effort.
I'll take my hat off to the barristers and lawyers involved.
It was an amazing effort.
And I think they changed history.
And I don't know if people will ever recognize what we did, but that's okay.
We didn't do it for the glory or the fame.
We did it for the gin and tonic.
And there was a lot of gin and tonic.
Yes. What's that?
Success has many authors.
Failure has...
Yeah, hasn't done or something like that.
Yeah, but let everyone change.
Well, I would like to use this podcast to Record this your achievement So that for posterity so that people do know it was you and are there any particular?
Barristers you lawyers you'd like to name or is it was it too many to name?
too many to name but Right now we're involved in the Fluoride Challenge, so we're putting together a group action to try and stop the water fluoridation, which has been threatened by our government to be put in the water very soon.
It's already in about 10% of the population's water in England.
Like I said, they can't put it in Scotland because there's already a court ruling there basically prohibiting them from doing it.
Why that doesn't count in English courts is beyond me, but it should do, obviously.
Obviously, and you'll see that most of Europe has already rejected water fluoridation.
It's been mass medication.
They dropped it in the 70s.
They also dropped it because it wasn't effective.
So now we're putting together a group action.
We're having a big Zoom call tonight.
I sent you the link earlier.
I hope we can shout it out if we can.
And the idea is get as many claimants as we possibly can.
You can contact Joy Warren through her organization.
Have you interviewed Joy Warren?
Have you had her on there?
Not yet.
Not yet?
Have you not spoken to her?
I better leave in a while.
No? Yeah.
Flora, it gets a bit boring, doesn't it?
Well, no.
I think that...
Obviously, if I do Joy Warren, I will have to leave a gap between this and her podcast.
But... I got involved in 2011.
I found an old newspaper clipping in Southampton.
They tried to put the fluoride in the water to fluoridate the lovely people down there and I was living in the New Forest at the time and there was a small group called Hampshire Against Fluoride.
I think I did a couple of talks with them.
I don't remember exactly and they managed to bring the case to the High Court.
and eventually stopped the authority, the quango, from putting the fluoride in the water.
So I've been involved in fluoride for quite some time.
Can I just go back briefly to a couple of points?
One, when I was talking about how I believe the truth was the most important thing, I read a book that came out a few years ago.
Yeah. blew the whistle on how fluoridisation came about.
And that fluoride was an industrial waste product of, I can't remember what process, perhaps you can film it.
Uranium mining.
Uranium. Yeah.
So when they refine gypsum, they dig up gypsum rock, predominantly in California, I think.
And in the gypsum rock, which is your plaster of Paris you have on your walls, there is uranium, small amounts of uranium, and also fluoride.
So a by-product of the uranium refinery process is fluoride.
And you've read the story about the Manhattan Project, I presume.
The Manhattan Project was dumping this fluoride on the land.
Yeah, I think it was.
killed about 200 cows in a nearby farm and the vet did his pathological tests on the cows and came up with fluoride poisoning and at that point DuPont became involved and they basically sponsored all research in all dental schools around the world on fluoride.
Right. All the dental hospitals around the globe all suddenly became suddenly get their pockets lined with fluoride money from DuPont and before you know it everyone's using fluoride.
You're presumably aware that the DuPonts are one of the 13 satanic bloodline families?
No, but I know from Dark Waters the film about Teflon who that they're involved in or have been involved in in major pollution scandals that they are next level evil um and their surname DuPont is believed to have the same root derivation as the word pontiff meaning pope
but yeah it seems to go it seems to refer to something that sort of predates The Catholic Church, for example, and it's to do with some...
the bridge is some kind of bridge between spiritual realms.
So the DuPonts probably go back to maybe Babylonian times, or they can trace their lineage.
So they serve...
I don't know how into this, the kind of spiritual stuff you're You are.
But essentially, they serve Satan.
I mean, that's the deal.
So of course they're going to be into fluoride.
But what I wanted to pin you down on...
Okay, so I get that the Manhattan Project was poisoning the cattle with this industrial waste product, fluoride.
What I want to know is, was it purely a marketing exercise whereby this toxic waste was suddenly rebranded thanks to DuPont's buying up the dental establishment.
Was it simply a complete lie?
Or was there any evidence at all that fluoride did actually have qualities which would enable it to benefit your teeth?
Yeah, good question.
I don't really know the answer to that.
I know originally they said it would reduce teeth decay by 60%.
60% and clearly that's not true.
Not 66%?
Oh yeah, 66.6% no doubt.
Yeah, so that's, yeah, originally the original claims, because everything started after World War II, didn't it?
The chemical industry basically sprung up from the military industry.
So DuPont with their non-stick surface Teflon was, they used it on military vehicles to Keep them clean, basically.
And then presumably they thought, well that's a good idea, but how can we monetize this?
We'll stick it in frying pans and God knows what else.
So it'll go on clothing and who knows what else it goes on.
So, and also I presume fluoride as a byproduct of refining the gypsum rock to get uranium and then sprung up as just one of those industrial pollutants.
And it then sprung into the aluminium industry, and then the steel industry, and the ceramic industry, and refrigerator coolants, and pesticides, and of course the pharmaceutical industry.
So we have a lot of this industrial waste product being produced by many industries now.
So I think it's going to get worse if we don't do something about it now.
We need to stop the fluoride and I think a group action is a great way.
So I'm very hopeful that our group action will get some traction.
We've talked about the benefits which are negligible.
Slim. What are the bad things that fluoride does?
No doubt you would have seen that court victory fairly recently in the States where a group of mums essentially took on the Environmental Protection Agency and won and demonstrated in court that fluoride reduces IQ.
Also causes ADHD.
What else did it do?
It causes, they didn't prove this in court, but hip fractures and thyroid problems.
It has been linked to cancers.
The list is quite long of the health effects that it has, but I think the strong evidence is for IQ loss and ADHD, for thyroid problems, for hip fractures.
Hip fractures in particular are, I mean, a lot of people say a hip fracture, well, big deal, but 10% of people who get a hip fracture if they're over 60 die within one month.
And within a year one third to one quarter so maybe 25% die within a year of a hip fracture if you're elderly and it's got a very high morbidity rate so that means a lot of people end up in care homes because they never recover their mobility so it's really really toxic dangerous I'm sorry I'm a hip fracture is really dangerous in the elderly really dangerous Does it it weakens the bones or why hip?
It was originally fluoride was originally given to increase bone density in women with osteoporosis So it was used as a treatment for quite some time Unfortunately, although it increased the bone density It didn't make the bone stronger and there was an increase increase in hip fractures interesting hmm Really interesting.
Yeah. So anyone who's got a grandma out there, you should be, or anyone who's approaching that kind of age, I know you're at least 10 decades away from being 60. I'm 60 this year.
Are you?
Okay. Well, yeah, we're very soon in the elderly category of if we get a hip fracture, we might cark it.
Well, luckily I don't do any dangerous activities that might give me Broken limbs, so that's alright.
Yeah, well, I don't think most of these people do.
It's just a slip and a trip and a broken hip.
That's really depressing and horrid to think that...
They presumably don't still treat people with fluoride, do they?
No, they abandoned it because it didn't work.
When was that?
It was a mainstream medical treatment.
It sounds a bit like, well not quite like, but you know the story about AZT or AZT as the Americans call it?
No, go on, tell me.
AZT was originally developed to treat cancer and it proved to be so toxic, it killed so many people so quickly that even It wasn't even recommended for cancer patients and extremists as a kind of last resort.
Well, we've tried everything else, at least AZT might work.
So, the cancer doctor stopped using it.
So, what did they do?
They rebadged it as the anti-AIDS drug.
Oh, that's the HIV drug?
Bouchy! Bouchy!
Before he became the hero of COVID.
He was doing good work, saving AIDS patients through the medium of killing them.
Yeah. With AZT.
So all the people who supposedly died of AIDS, not that it actually exists, all those people who died of AIDS were actually being killed by the treatment.
Anyway, so here you've got this I think that's very likely true.
I do have a couple of patients who take that AZT.
One sticks in mind.
He said he had to go to bed for the whole day.
Take a dose and then go to bed for the whole day.
Wiped out.
Completely wiped out.
So it doesn't surprise me that that drug is dangerous.
No, it's not.
So what's going to happen to Tony Fauci then?
Nothing. Nothing?
Do you mean he's going to get off the hook?
Yeah, he's a made man.
You don't think Bobby Kennedy's going to have him up in court or anything?
The problem is, Zach, that I've now established that I'm way, way further down the rabbit hole than you are.
You're there, but you've still got these normie tendencies whereby you imagine that there are going to be these white hats.
They're all in it together.
Trump pretends to be the sparring partner of Fauci, and yep, sure, Bobby Kennedy's written a book saying the real Anthony Fauci, but that doesn't mean to say that they're not part of the same overarching evil.
I hear the cynicism in your voice, but I still have great hope that what comes around goes around.
You live by the sword, you die by the sword, so I have great hope that he will face justice in one form or another.
Yeah, from God.
That's the deal.
These people, the horrors that await them are, I mean, one shouldn't wish these things on anyone because they're going to get judged, but it's going to happen in the afterlife.
It ain't going to happen in this one because they're all in it together.
I'm afraid.
My fingers and toes are still crossed for Bobby Kennedy and to see some justice in the States.
I'm still holding out hope.
I'm not abandoning hope for shit.
Say again?
People at this point are spitting, you know, some of the audience are spitting with fury at James Dellingpole and how dare he?
He's just, he's just so cynical and nice Zach.
Nice Zach is reasonable.
Zach believes that some vaccines actually work.
No, no, no.
Only one.
He's read some bollocks about Jonas Salk.
Jonas Salk was just one of the worst con men in history.
Yeah, I don't know about him very much at all.
No, I can tell.
The very original polio vaccine had some efficacy.
No! Yeah.
Jonas Salk is a monster.
May well be.
He was a monster.
I can't comment.
He's burning in hell.
No, he's dead.
You're safe.
You can comment.
Anyway, people can argue about this in their spare time.
We're not going to argue about it here, because I love you.
I mean, obviously in a friendly way, not in a sexual way.
I leave that up to you, Will.
So, just to establish, so we have you and your barristers to thank for the fact that all those, the savid, jabid, was not able to force medical personnel to take the death jab.
It was thanks to you, basically.
Well, we can't take all of the glory.
Of course not.
No, but we definitely put our size 11 boots in there, that's for sure.
I tell you what I found interesting.
You mentioned briefly that you had senior consultants quietly approaching you saying, I don't want to get the jab.
One never heard much of these senior consultants.
They didn't really stick their head about the parapet, did they?
No, they didn't, unfortunately.
I wish they had done, and I wish they would do now.
It's not easy to get traction in the press, of course, not now, particularly with most of the press being owned by various industrialists.
But if it could get some news out there, some of the stories would be shocking.
I remember one particular consultant telling us that he actually was an expert in vaccines, has appeared in court as an expert in vaccines.
He told all of his hospital colleagues and staff members that he would not be taking the COVID vaccine.
And he was treated like a leper.
I believe he was made to work from the toilet block.
So he had to do paperwork from the toilet block.
I mean, That's a way to treat our educated and lovely consultant NHS doctors, particularly at a time when they're struggling to reduce their waiting lists.
It's like they were treated like a fascist regime had taken control.
Perhaps it had.
I would suspect that a consultant is on something like 300,000 a year plus when he gets to that kind of level.
I don't think quite that much, but maybe.
200? I'm not sure.
I think like 100, 120.
GPs get an awful lot.
Okay. Often more than consultants.
Well, I suppose what I'm saying is that When you reach that level of career eminence, you've got the wife, the mortgage, the school fees, the daughter's pony's vet bills.
It's very, very hard to do anything which is going to kill the golden goose.
Go kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.
It requires extreme moral courage and and also a Certain amount of almost callousness because then you it's not just you you're you're making the this principle move for it's also Your family are going to suffer as a consequence.
So in a while, I'm sort of answering the question about why people Wouldn't speak out.
Yeah, but at the same time It was wrong.
It was morally wrong what was happening.
And if doctors and the experts couldn't tell us that these jabs were deadly, who should have done?
I mean, it was kind of their job, don't you think?
Yeah, I think when you get in a position of responsibility, you have to grow a spine.
Simple as that.
So I think a lot of those doctors should, could and still should speak out.
You know, they should have done.
They of course suffer the usual, the usual thing that happens to whistleblowers.
First it's vehemently denied, isn't it?
And then you're ridiculed and then it becomes bloody obvious that what you're saying is true.
So I think we can...
I'm sure your viewers don't need to hear the death rate is still higher than before the vaccines were introduced.
So something has changed and I don't think it's mankind that's changed, it's what's been done to them that's changed.
Well, because of your job, you must have loads of anecdotal evidence of people who've suffered, because I can't imagine all your patients have managed to resist.
No, I've had several menopausal ladies who've begun their periods again.
Yeah, several younger ladies who've had periods which have lasted for months.
A total disruption of the normal cycle.
So, not quite sure what's happened to the birth rates.
You probably know more than me about birth rates.
I expect they're going to be suffering somewhat.
Yes. Yeah.
Yeah. Because it wasn't just a kill shot.
It was also a sort of general depop sterilization shot.
I think we're beginning to realise.
I do know of one consultant doctor, his wife didn't take, she's a doctor as well, she didn't take the vaccine but he did and he had a heart attack very shortly afterwards.
Essentially dropped dead on the spot and the coroner's report was it may have been related to the vaccine.
Ouch! May have been related to the vaccine.
Yeah, so I think everyone knows somebody who's suffered as a result of these vaccines, haven't they?
Whether it's been fatigue or Hair loss or skin rashes.
Lots of people seem to be suffering from eczema and things like that since.
Yeah, whether it's a mild disruption to quite a severe problem with strokes and yeah, the clock shot as everyone knows it as.
Yes, it's ridiculous that it's not removed from the market now really, but I guess that will happen.
I wish I shared your faith.
I think that we're allowed, or rather the norm is, the generality of the public, are given little snippets of information.
It's a sort of controlled release.
So, I mean, if it was completely hidden, then there would be the sort of the waters would accumulate on the wall of the dam and until eventually the dam will burst.
What they do is they open a hole in the dam wall like in a reservoir and they let out some of the water and so people are assuaged and calmed.
So going back to the fluoride thing, which I, because we, I mean, obviously we could talk all day about vaccine injuries, but I think that's a separate podcast.
Yeah. Um, the, the, What do you say to your punters who use fluoride toothpaste?
Presumably there's more fluoride in the toothpaste than there is in the water supply.
Mostly it's not too much of an issue with most of my patients.
People often ask me what toothpaste I use and I just tell them I like a particular brand.
Are we allowed to say brand names or not really?
Yeah, of course you are.
Well, I just like the Walida toothpaste because they make homeopathic preparation, so I guess they have...
That's the one I've used!
Yeah, I guess they have some ethos or ethics to their business.
Maybe not.
You can't really tell, can you, these days?
But like I said to you before, I don't see a difference between patients who use fluoride and those who don't use fluoride.
There's still decay amongst them.
In fact, I would say Because I started being a dentist in 92 so I started training in the 80s So at that point it was about 80% of people had tooth decay 8 out of 10 And 2 out of 10 did not have tooth decay.
Now it's the other way around now It's 2 out of 10 have tooth decay and 8 out of 10 do not have tooth decay.
Now what's changed?
What do you think?
Any guesses?
So tooth decay is really really Diminished.
There was hardly any around.
Before it was like everyone who walked in the door basically had holes in their teeth.
Now it's hardly any.
I'm stunned.
I'm going to say passive smoking has been the main cause of tooth decay and lead.
So the removal of lead paint, leaded petrol, had a massive effect on tooth decay, as did passive smoking.
So I think that is the The weirdest thing I think I've ever heard on a podcast.
You've completely sideswiped me there.
I had no idea of this.
Yeah, well, tobacco contains lead and it's been shown, there's published studies showing that tiny, a minute exposure to lead causes tooth decay.
So you get enough from lead pipes, as I say, passive smoking, third-hand smoking.
Vapes now of course.
Vapes are a massive cause of tooth decay.
I'm seeing lots of tooth decay and gum disease and early cancerous changes in people's mouths who use vapes.
Do you think vapes are worse than cigarettes?
It looks that way, yeah.
It really does because you'd normally see somebody who'd been smoking for maybe 30, 40 years and then they might get cancerous changes in their mouths or bad tooth decay and gum disease.
Now it seems to happen very rapidly.
People have been vaping for a couple of years and they've got really bad tooth decay problems and really bad gum disease problems and what looks like early cancerous changes in their skin inside their mouth.
So yeah, I think the vapes are dangerous, of course.
There's no secret there, I don't think, apart from the UK government who say they are safe, aren't they?
Safe and effective.
Everything is safe and effective, have you noticed that?
Or, if it's a post office computer system, it's robust.
So, none of those post office workers were honest that their computer system was robust.
And they sent them to jail on the basis that their system was robust.
Basically safe and effective.
It's a line they roll out time and time again, isn't it?
So yeah, 2K has virtually diminished to virtually...
Well, it's not gone completely, but it's gone a lot.
Yeah. A lot.
So what they say for flora is that people who get tooth decay predominantly are in socially deprived areas and unfortunately generally smoke, generally drink a lot of fizzy drinks and generally eat a lot of sweets.
That is a generalisation.
Some don't, obviously.
Some have just been exposed to pesticides or lead, I suspect.
How? What would you say to somebody who's got amalgam fillings?
Do you think that water's clear?
Do I need to change...?
This is slightly cloudy, will you not say?
That's not clear.
That's got some...
No, I've got some berberis in it, I'm just...
Oh, yes, I ordered some berberis on your recommendation.
Ah, great!
Are you a new man?
I'm not saying I'm a new man.
I quite like it.
Oh, I like the taste of it.
Yeah, it's nice.
Yeah, no, it's good.
Yeah. Yeah, it's very gentle.
I've had a lot of patients that have dropped their blood pressure, the diabetes has levelled off.
Yeah, various things have really improved dramatically using perbris.
Kidney problems particularly.
People with like kidney infections, kidney pain, malfunctioning kidneys.
Maybe I should get some...
I feel I need to...
In fact, I need to pee anyway because I'm looking at how much time we've got left and it's more time than I can bear to not go for a pee.
Okay. Because at the moment I'm doing this kidney cleanse, oddly enough, by coincidence.
Yeah. And part of the regimen is the first thing you drink is a pint of warm water.
with a pinch of stag's horn in it and what's it called sumac and the juice of a lemon and you never know when it's going to hit you um and it's hit you well also you have to hide yeah you also have to do stuff like drink parsley water um hot water with parsley yeah it suddenly hit me i'm just going to get that and we come back give me a minute i got Jealous,
so I got some, I put in more Berberis than...
Can I tell a tale of caution or a tale of woe about lemon juice and water?
Oh yeah.
You know, I see a lot of patients who drink it daily.
Of course it's a great detoxifier, I'm not disputing that, but it absolutely wrecks your teeth.
Does it?
I'm only doing it for a week.
Yeah, fine for a week.
That's it.
But that's the point.
I think people then tend to carry on for months and years of doing it.
And they come to me and go, I've got all these holes, normally along the gum line, close to the edges of the gums.
And I go, what's caused that?
And they say, I go through everything they eat and drink.
And it's virtually always lemon juice in water.
That's really useful to know.
But I'm curious.
Just to repeat, I'm okay doing it for a week.
No, for a week is fine, but I just say to anyone else who watches this, don't do it for a long long term.
I think better if you're going to do it long term to get the benefits of the lemon, you can get essential oils of lemon and put some essential oil into your water instead.
I think that eliminates the acid.
So that would be better to do if you were going to do it longer term.
You get a good quality oil like doTERRA or one of those.
Types of oils.
You know doTERRA?
No, I don't know what doTERRA is.
Oh, it's an essential oil company which makes food grade essential oils.
Because otherwise, if they're not food grade, the oils are generally they concentrate the toxins, the pesticides and whatnot.
Okay. Yeah.
Top tip for your viewers.
Well, I know that you're a fond of top tips, so you swear by the Berberis, which is what you just drink, you mix with water.
Yep. Berberis is Barbary, it's Bilberry, isn't it?
Yeah, Berberis vulgaris.
It's been used for hundreds of years as a kidney tonic, but it's also a good tonic for the pancreas, the liver, the gallbladder as well.
Oh, okay.
Yep. I was asking you the mercury question.
Oh, yes, mercury.
Now I'm really up for the ice here, aren't I?
Well, mercury fillings, interesting enough, are being phased out, aren't they?
I was just thinking about this the other day.
I talk to dentists quite a bit and they say to me, well, they're safe, aren't they?
And I say, well, just look at your own rules now that the English regulator gives you.
You can't put them into under 16 year old children.
You can't put them into pregnant mums and you can't put them into breastfeeding mums.
And they go, yeah, but that's for environmental reasons.
And I say to them, well, if it's for environmental reasons, you can't put them into anyone.
And they go, oh yeah, that's a point.
Wonder why they don't let us put them in pregnant women and breastfeeding women and into children.
Answer on a postcard to I have two brain cells and can't rub them together.
There's literally no joined up thinking at all.
You want to shake with rage sometimes at the lack of joined up thinking amongst the professions.
All professions apart from maybe the oldest profession.
They've probably got the joint, I think.
There's going to be people watching this who've got, you know, who are kind of awake and they're starting to question all the orthodoxies that they formerly took for granted.
Yeah. And one of the things they're bound to have considered is their amalgam fillings and they're going to be thinking, well, is it worth it?
Is it?
Are we going to see any benefits?
Is it?
Yeah. What would you say to them?
It's always a really difficult question to answer because you can never guarantee that anyone's going to see any benefit from having them removed.
That being said, anecdotally I have seen lots of people recover from all kinds of problems.
You can see I'm hedging my bets here, can't you?
One lady in particular springs to mind.
She had terrible psoriasis on her face.
And yeah, after she'd had her amalgams removed, she came to see me and she walked in.
And to be fair, I hadn't really noticed the cirrhosis that much because I'm a bloke and I don't, you know, men don't notice women's eye colours and hair colours and things like this, do they?
And she was just, she was over the moon.
She tried everything to get rid of this psoriasis, every detox, every this, that and the other, every cream, anything you can imagine she had tried and it was simply a reaction to those fillings.
I also had a naturopath, naturopath's wife, I hope you'll forgive me if he gets to see this, you might be mad at me, but he'd been treating her for decades, literally decades for psoriasis, again, and she'd had Terrible skin problems and nothing had touched it.
I removed her mercury fillings and no more psoriasis.
Can you imagine how she took it, James?
Have you got one of those wife things?
Well, I have yeah, yeah, how would your wife react if you've been treating her for years and just had a mercury detox?
She'd have yet another excuse to tell me how crap I was.
Yeah. And you know what?
It would give her so much pleasure because I think that's what makes wives really happy.
I think so.
It's not flowers.
It's not holidays.
It's not handbags.
It's having an opportunity to To be reminded how crap her husband is.
Yeah, to give you a little poke.
God bless her.
I bet she's an absolute angel, really.
She's alright.
I often say to her that the only time I hear real joy in her, just unbridled joy in her voice, just natural laughter, is when I'm suffering some misfortune.
yeah Yeah, I like it.
Couldn't survive without them though, could we?
Let's face it.
Totally not.
I feel very, very sorry for men that don't have one of these appendages.
They are as important as the other appendage, in fact, I'd say.
You're talking about a pen, I presume.
This is one I get asked a lot.
Root canals.
Yeah, there's a problem which most holistic dentists recognise is that because the inside of the tooth, if you look at it under an electron microscope, It's like Swiss cheese.
It's like a honeycomb.
So it's got lots and lots and lots of little holes.
I think if you stretch them out, they're like a mile long in a single rooted tooth and a couple of miles long in a double rooted tooth.
So you have these dentine tubules, they're called, if you want to get a little bit technical.
I don't like being technical, as you can tell.
So although the root canal may initially work and get rid of the infection, because you've got these microscopic tubes which bacteria can live in, they can become reinfected.
And it's a bone of contention, particularly amongst root canal specialists, because nobody has done the research as far as I know.
Weston Price was a dentist back in, well, maybe a hundred years ago in Chicago.
And he employed about 60 of the world's leading doctors and scientists at the time, and they looked at root canals and found that 8 out of 10 were infected.
That was 100 years ago, so things have improved for sure.
What root canal specialists don't do at the moment, and they're starting to, certainly with my patients if they go for a root canal, is that they take a 3D scan Every three or four years after they've done the root canal, to ensure that their work has been a success.
Because when dentists take an x-ray, if it's not a 3D x-ray, very often you don't see the infection.
The x-rays are quite insensitive.
They don't often show up the infection.
So now we have these 3D x-rays, which have largely come about as because of the implant dentists.
We're seeing that an awful lot of root canal teeth are infected.
That infection is obviously directly in your jawbone, part of your skeleton, and the blood supply is surging through your jaws, through all of your bones, all of the time.
And so if you have an infection running through your blood supply, in essence, then you run a risk of diseases elsewhere in the body.
In essence.
Are there occasions where root canal is the only option?
It's a really difficult choice because the other option is extraction of the tooth and that's not particularly pleasant.
Lots of my patients don't do it so I think roughly half of my patients get a root canal done by a specialist but only on the proviso that they have it scanned Every three or four years to ensure it doesn't get infected again.
and the other half opts for an extraction and usually an implant these days.
Implants, they always seem quite scary, is it?
I used to think that implants could be suspect.
I'm more inclined now to recommend an implant than not.
Excuse me.
Because when you have a tooth pulled, you can often end up with a dead area of bone in your jawbone.
That's called a cavitation.
I presume you've heard of these cavitation things.
So you end up with...
So the jawbone is very slow in healing.
I think that's partly due to the local anesthetic that we use with adrenaline in.
I tend not to use adrenaline ones, just to emphasise that point.
And partly just because, for some reason, the jawbone doesn't heal that well after a tooth's been pulled.
So you can end up with a dead area of bone inside your jawbone, which then is as dangerous as an infected root canal tooth.
So when you do an implant, you drill a dirty great drill I don't So
that's synthetic diamond, zirconia.
They seem to be very compatible with the jawbone and apparently with meridian lines, because there's energy lines, as the acupuncturists recognise now, which flow through the jaw.
Why without titanium?
Is that titanium bad?
Well, I don't think titanium is bad.
For some people, they're sensitive to the metal.
So there's a group called Melissa.
I think is their website a Scandinavian doctor developed this test for titanium Sensitivity, so I don't know about you, but my my daughters can't wear cheap jewelry That's what they tell me anyway because they get rashes.
They can only have the expensive stuff So a lot of people are sensitive to metals and I think sensitivity to titanium is getting more and more common so Melisa on their website they say it's about 6% of people are sensitive to titanium and you presume then that the titanium implant is not going to work so well if you're allergic to it and secondly it may give you health problems if you're allergic to that metal and it stays in your body.
I've got a titanium plate which is why I'm asking.
It's only a problem if you're allergic to the metal essentially or sensitive to the metal.
I don't think there's a true allergy.
Yeah, you can get a blood test.
Unfortunately, they've started putting titanium dioxide in foods and in cosmetic products.
I don't know why, but there we are.
It's in there and that's going to increase the number of people over time who will be sensitive to the metal.
You've recommended those gummy things that that English doctor woman in America...
Yes. What are they called?
Zellies. The Xylitol.
She's a great lady.
What's her last name?
I can't remember.
Dr. Ellie, anyway.
If you look up her website, zellies.com.
I don't get a kickback.
I should do.
Because we should get a cut from the app.
We don't get anything.
But yeah, she told me that she's an English lady.
She trained in England.
She worked in Switzerland and then in the States and In that whole time she couldn't find a decent xylitol product which actually worked and I couldn't find one either.
The studies mostly from Sweden and Scandinavian countries show that xylitol, which is an extract from birch trees, stops tooth decay.
It also prevents urinary tract infections amongst other things and gum disease.
So it's quite an unusual product.
Unfortunately there's no real Gold standard for the xylitol so she couldn't find a decent xylitol so she made her own and set up a company in the States and so far I think that's the only xylitol I've seen that actually actually works the one that's the one that actually works and will reduce gum disease and tooth decay all from a tree.
When do you need to use it?
The xylitol has to be Only her teeth!
probably be on record now but off record that she does not brush her teeth anymore she just uses xanitol five times a day but only her one I want to emphasize that only her one seems to work because I Because she's controlled the quality of it, you see, so I think most of the commercially available ones are not, the quality is not great.
I'm just looking at Xylitol Dental Gum.
Yeah, Zellies.com, Z-E.
I'm looking at her site now.
Yeah, she's got gum and sweets, but she used to have bags of sugar.
I don't think they're on her website anymore.
Yeah. Yeah, so I'm gonna have to incorporate that I think into yeah That's something you don't hear the dentist really talking about is it you can only have fluoride to prevent tooth decay According to the dentist.
I think there's loads more causes tooth decay There was a couple of scientists in the 70s called Steinman and Leonora in I think it's a Loma Linda or Linda Loma University in California who published loads of research showing That the teeth have self-cleansing mechanisms a bit like the kidneys, or a bit like a garden sprinkler.
If you could imagine that, liquid from the blood goes from the roots of the teeth up to the surface of the teeth and is expelled outwards.
So they showed that If they experimented on rats mostly, unfortunately, they showed that if they gave the rat sugar, then instead of the liquid going from the inside of the tooth outwards, it went from the outside of the tooth inwards, and it sucked liquid into the tooth, and therefore sucked bacteria in as well, and that's when decay happens.
And they showed that occurred with sugar, refined flour, with lack of exercise, with stress, With lack of copper, magnesium and zinc and with thyroid problems.
And to that I would add lead exposure and probably pesticide exposure now as well.
Oh, and hydration.
Hydration was the number one cause of tooth decay.
So they found that they could feed these rats as much sugar as they wanted if they gave them enough copper, magnesium and zinc, they did not get tooth decay.
What is missing from our soils now?
What's missing from our foods?
Copper, magnesium and zinc.
Correct. Drink that Berberis.
We're missing these essential nutrients.
So they propose a completely different model of tooth decay from the bacteria which cause acid on the surface of the tooth.
OK. Here's a conundrum for you.
Every day I take These drops of pure, well, liquid zinc and liquid magnesium.
Yeah. But they're acidic.
So am I simultaneously destroying my teeth while saving them?
Depends how acidic they are.
They're very acidic.
Pretty acidic.
Put a drop on your clothes, it will eat through the cloth.
Wow! I mean, I drink it with water, obviously.
Okay, I was going to say, it sounds like battery acid.
But if I'm mixing it with, you know, it sounds like the lemon juice thing.
Yeah, it does sound a bit like the lemon juice thing, yeah.
You might have to be careful with that.
I don't really have a solution other than, I normally use seaweed.
Daily because seaweed's got the iodine in it that we need for all of our functions of our bodies.
Particularly the thyroid obviously, but also muscle contraction, skin growth, hair, nails, everything you can think of.
Stomach acid production is all related to iodine.
That's particularly why fluoride I think is dangerous because it does interfere with so many functions of the body.
Particularly knocks out the thyroid gland.
So yeah, I take seaweed because it's full of these minerals, it's full of these trace elements.
So yeah, that's why I take it rather than take a chemicalized version because Mother Nature definitely knows best, right?
God knows best how to make the best nutrition for us.
And that's why I favor seaweed.
I tend to use the sea greens because that They batch test it and they pick it in the Outer Hebrides and the Norwegian fjords.
So that's the brand that I use.
Overseas brands tend to get irradiated on the way into the country and tend not to be very good.
They get irradiated?
Yeah, I think most herbs and most seaweeds and things like that, supplements get irradiated.
Where? At the border.
To eliminate any disease.
So, yeah, a good herbalist friend of mine used to always import his herbs from the States and various countries around the world.
He doesn't anymore.
He only uses UK herbs.
You're a mine of obscure information.
It is because if they're irradiated, are they effectively neutralised?
It does something to them, yeah.
They don't seem to work so well, yeah, or at all.
Yeah. *crash* Yeah. It's a bit like microwave ovens, isn't it?
I hope you don't use a microwave, do you?
You don't use a microwave.
I have a microwave, and I hate it.
Put it in the bin.
I only use it for warming plates.
Yeah. You know that I think they can still set a pacemaker off at about...
I don't know, three metres or something like that.
Not that you've got a pacemaker, but they certainly leak like hell.
I remember testing my dad's microwave oven with one of those radio frequency things, and you could detect it in every room of the house.
He's got quite a big house.
It didn't matter how far away, you could pick up the microwaves from the microwave oven.
They leak like sieves.
Yeah. That's...
Yeah, nobody should eat microwave food at all.
I think it's one of the most dangerous things you can do for your health.
Really? A plate's probably fine, but I don't know.
That's bad, isn't it?
Yeah. Have you got any sort of...
Oh yes, I've been wanting to ask you.
I occasionally read that researchers are finding new ways of kind of letting teeth regrow and and and things like that that this sort of new technology is coming on yeah I mean it was on the news recently I think some I think it was in California they were saying they were growing new teeth using pig stem cells Yeah,
it seems to hit the news every so often that they can regrow teeth or they can cure tooth decay with an electronic device.
King's College in London had a device on the 9 o'clock news, on the BBC News, which they claimed would stop tooth decay and rebuild decayed teeth using a sort of little TENS machine, a little electronic current, a microcurrent through the teeth.
They just never get on the market.
We haven't seen it yet, have we?
Is there a reason for that?
It would be so nice to not drill people's teeth.
You know, everyone asks me about the local anaesthetics.
No doubt everyone asks you about local anaesthetics, don't they?
No, tell me.
Oh, people are concerned about graphene oxide being in the...
Oh yeah, so what do we do?
Well, I test my local anaesthetic against my heart flame.
Now, in the old Catholic pictures of Jesus and Mary, they're depicted with a flame in their heart.
Everyone does have one.
They hide things in plain sight right under your nose.
So, I test them against my heart flame, and we have three different types of anesthetic in our surgery.
One tests really good, and it feels good.
That's the one I use 99% of the time.
One test's okay.
I use it only occasionally.
And one test's really bad.
The one that's tested good, some of my patients have taken it away and looked from the magnification to look for these graphene things and haven't found anything yet.
So I'm quite happy with the one I use.
So it's a plain low-crown anesthetic with no adrenaline called Scanderness.
So that's the one I use at the moment.
You hope they don't put stuff in there.
I mean...
How do you test it against your heart flame?
How do you find your heart flame?
Well, in your left atrium of your heart, there is a spot.
Do you meditate or do Qigong or anything like that?
I have done.
Yeah. Well, you know that feeling of Qi, when you do Qigong, you can feel that sort of magnetism, that energy field, perhaps.
Hmm. Hmm.
Well if you feel inside, it's actually in the left atrium of your heart, you'll feel a little spot of which is pure bliss.
Absolute bliss.
And that blissful spot is a small tiny flame.
And as I say, all the Catholic churches show Jesus and Mary having flames in their hearts, right?
You've seen the old pictures of Jesus and Mary?
Yeah. Yeah, and they hide it right under our noses because they know, I'm sure.
And that flame is your true divinity.
Your physical body is not you.
You're not your thoughts, you're not your feelings.
You are that spark of divinity, traveling around in this human body.
It's a bit like with Pilates, when you try and train yourself to isolate particular muscles, so that you're not recruiting the wrong muscles and things.
In the same way you've obviously trained yourself to be able to identify this particular spot in your left aorta, did you say?
Atrium. Atrium, left atrium.
Yeah. Yeah, it's a beautiful spot.
It's pink, gold and blue.
And it gives you a feeling of utter bliss.
Because that's what it is.
That's what you really are.
That's what everybody is.
Pure bliss.
That's good.
And you are connected through your crown chakra to your higher self via this flame.
Okay. Yeah.
The crown chakra is presumably there.
Yeah. Have you got any other hacks?
I mean, I think I mentioned to you before that I do the Mouth the coconut oil rinsing which you which you didn't think makes much difference.
Oh Well, it does help.
It's just it's not very easy to fit into a daily rate regime If you're heading to the office or you've got little children's look after you walk around the house Yeah, what should I do for ten minutes you do?
Yeah. Yeah I Tell you I do what I do.
I combine it with my I do skin brushing Okay So I combine the mouth thing with skin brushing and then I do lymphatic massage.
Oh nice!
And I do thymus thumping.
Thymus thumping?
And I also do a tae daeum while I'm...
just the tae daeum and I do No, you're going to have to tell me about Fimus Thumping and then Te Deum, whatever Te Deum is.
Right, well, the Te Deum is just part of the sort of prayer rituals.
It's quite a long one.
Is it Buddhist?
Praise thee, O God.
We acknowledge thee to be the Lord.
All the earth doth worship thee, the Father everlasting.
To thee, all angels, cry aloud, the heavens and all the powers therein.
To thee, cherubim and seraphim, continually do cry, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Sabaoth, It's one of those rare occasions where you get to use the word Sabaoth.
What is Sabaoth?
Is that Sabbath?
I don't know.
But it's quite an old part of the Christian...
That's old Christianity, OK, yeah.
So, I do that one.
Anyway, so this is how I can do it for ten minutes, and then I split it out into the garden, because you can't split it into the...
Oh, and simultaneously while I'm doing these, I'm standing on the stone flags in order to be able to get my grounding.
Wow. So yeah, so tell me, so am I doing good by doing the...
What's the thymus thumping?
Is that what you see all the swimmers doing before they go into the swimming pool?
It's what you see gorillas doing.
Yeah. Your thymus is here.
Yeah, yeah.
And by thumping it for about, for about 60 seconds.
Yeah. You, I mean, on a sort of Base level it builds up your sort of courage if you're nervous about say say you have to go and give a speech Yeah, it'd be quite good to do some thymus dumping just before you came on.
Uh-huh.
I mean, there's a reason why gorillas do it Yeah, you see the swimmers do it now don't you at the Olympics who do and rugby players and whatnot?
Yeah, they often they're beating each other up before they go on stage on they basically get the adrenaline going and Okay.
Yeah. Yeah.
Well, so that's that's that's thymus thumping.
And you do that before you face the wife in the morning.
Is that what you're saying?
No, no, no, no.
She's upstairs doing doing the various stretches that we also do.
I have quite an elaborate morning routine.
It probably takes about two hours including the sort of walking the dog and when I go through about I'd say 20 of my daily psalms I'd cover while I'm running the dog.
So it's quite a packed sort of spiritual and health schedule that I go through.
Yeah, me too.
I don't do that, obviously, but I have breathing exercises I do to try and connect me to...
I mean, I don't know, what's your belief?
Is Jesus in your heart, or is the Christ flame in your heart?
Mine is the latter, that we're a spark of divinity within a flesh form, essentially.
Yeah, I'd say that's kind of...
you're kind of more the new age end of things.
Maybe. I guess Jesus would have been accused of the same, I think.
I don't know, I don't think the new age...
I bet he was accused of being a New Ager when he turned up.
Well, he was accused of lots of things.
But just the short version, it is quite fashionable for people to say, I'm not Christian!
But I'm spiritual and I do think that Jesus was the most, or Yashua as they often call him, was the most incredible spiritual guide and the most amazing person who ever lived.
And you know, I make his precepts my watchword and stuff.
Yeah. But I know where they're coming from.
I'd say probably, I don't know, probably it's part of the New Age deception.
Oh, I don't know.
The flame in the heart is very real.
I can believe that.
He said it, didn't he?
The things I've done, you can do, and more.
So I don't think he was messing around there.
He was definitely telling us what we can get on and do what he did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've got various Podcast people who want to do a podcast with me on the subject and that, you know, Gnostics and New Ages and stuff.
Yeah. I try to avoid the New Agey type stuff because I think that is part of the agenda.
I think they're very often led up the garden path, particularly with their full moon ceremonies and such like.
Well, the whole of the New Age is designed, it was sort of cooked together by people like Madame Blavatsky and the Theosophists as a way of kind of encouraging us to adopt the Eastern religions and leading us into the false conception that all religions are basically one and they're all saying the same thing and that one day we should abolish religions and just have a kind of one world religion like
we've got a one world government and it's not a good idea.
But just going back to teeth for the moment.
So oil pulling, does it work?
Yeah, I mean it does, but most people don't do it for very long.
They might do it for a couple of weeks and then abandon ship.
But I like the little brushes you poke in between your teeth, they're great.
I don't know if you've used those?
Incidental black brushes.
Yeah, unfortunately, they are a really good idea.
I mean, unfortunately, from the point of view that you can't escape them.
I think once you get a little bit more senior in years, it's more important than when you're younger to really make sure in between your teeth are spotless.
So not floss.
But interdental brushes don't really see much benefit with floss so much these days.
Maybe back in the day when it was, you know, when it used to splay open into a hundred different filaments and then pull all the food out.
That was great.
That worked, but it doesn't seem to do that anymore.
It just tends to go.
And it's normally coated in PTFE or whatever, you know, some sort of stuff coated in fluoride.
Oh, yes.
I hadn't thought about that.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
Yeah, so tend not to be so hot on the floss these days, but definitely the brushes in between his teeth are great.
What about those things that spray jets of water?
Yeah, they're brilliant fun.
Definitely get two.
If you're going to get one, get two, and have a water pistol fight with the missus every night, or with your children.
But do they work?
I used to.
Do they work?
I think they do, yeah.
They do work, yeah.
But they're even more fun just to spray around the house.
They're great.
They're brilliant.
My girls were never more excited about bedtime than when we had those in the house.
Like, yeah, let's go and have a water pistol fight.
Excellent. And my wife would come up five minutes later and scream at us, what are you doing?
You flooded the bathroom again.
But yeah, they're good.
Definitely good.
I'm now worrying about those acid drops.
How could I neutralize them?
So they didn't do any damage.
Oh, good question.
I don't know.
Maybe wash them down with bicarb.
I don't know.
That's why I say I use seaweed predominantly for my minerals.
Yeah, that's a good thought.
Stay hydrated.
Plenty of minerals.
All the usual things apply to dental health that apply to heart health.
Sleep a lot.
A bit of exercise, be happy, watch some comedy movies.
Comedy movies I think are the best best healing method that we just don't employ that much anymore.
You know about Norman Cousins with his great book and film Anatomy of an Illness.
Oh it was a great story, brilliant story about this, was he a Wall Street journalist or a New York Times journalist?
Anyway, well he was a well-known journalist.
Got ankylosing spondylitis, was told that he'd be in a wheelchair or crippled for life, and his options were to be put in a wheelchair or to be crippled flat in a bed.
He didn't like either of those options, so he booked himself into a hotel and watched the Marx Brothers, Lauren Hardy, all those kinds of great comedies, and laughed himself, well, walked out of the hospital, out of the hotel a few months later, just totally fixed.
You need to watch the film.
See the film, read the book, Anatomy of an Illness.
It's quite fascinating.
Yeah, I mean, it's about...
Let me put it this way.
I had a lovely lady in who developed a terminal illness, ended up in bed, was told...
No, she ended up in her bed.
I better make that clear.
Very sick, was told she had Months a month maybe a couple of weeks to live And she did these breathing exercises And at the same time visualized herself at the top of this hill that she could see out of her window And she went from being terminally sick to being to walking up the hill in about a week so often people when given a different goal can achieve
it and So given a goal by the doctor, you're going to die in a month or a week or two weeks or whatever.
That's the goal they have their mind on the whole time.
Yes. Going to die, going to die, going to die.
And when they change their mindset to, I'm going to walk up the hill, I'm walking up the hill, I'm at the top of the hill, then they're at the top of the hill.
We have that innate ability within us.
I see it all the time.
People heal themselves.
Physicians heal themselves.
Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah. Zach, it's been lovely chatting.
Where can people support the Fluoride campaign?
Yeah, West Midlands Against Fluoride.
I think that's WMAF.co.uk.
But if you Google Joy Warren, she's the head honcho of West Midlands Against Fluoride.
And also she's head honcho of the Fluoride Free Alliance.
If people want to come and see you, where do they find you?
Doctor Google knows all.
They could just put me in Zack Cox's dentist.
I mean, you are in the back of Beyond.
Yeah, really, really in the back of Beyond.
It's a nice spot, isn't it?
It's a nice spot.
Yeah. It's too nice to actually do any work there, of course.
But I like the people around Strav, well, some of them.
I mean, it's got some nutcases as well.
Yeah. Animal rights nutcases and stuff.
Eco-fascists.
But it's also got some really lovely people.
Yeah, it does.
That's true.
Very true.
Yeah, it's a really good spot.
Lovely. It's a beautiful day out.
Come to the dentist.
There's a very nice pub just around the corner, isn't there?
I don't know if you...
Oh, what?
You mean the Woolpack or...?
No. The one opposite, what's it called?
The Carpenter's Arms.
Oh, I see.
Sorry. Yes, no.
The Woolpack is a better pub, obviously.
Well, it's more it's more famous.
Yes lad sided with Rosie.
Yes. I did with Rosie.
Yeah, great pop But yeah, no, it's nice part of the world.
Yeah Thank you very much James, thank you Um Zack, it's been lovely chatting and I must come and see you again soon Yeah, it's been great chatting.
I'm sorry.
I have to pull some of my punches.
I have to be a bit No, no, you gotta be careful.
I don't want I don't want to kill you kill what's left of your career Yes, and if you've enjoyed this, please consider supporting me.
This is all I do.
This is how I make my living.
This is my job.
Making you happy, giving you information, being annoying occasionally, if you disagree with me, that kind of thing.
But it is how I earn my living.
So if you can contribute to that, Please do.
You can support me on Substack, on Locals, Patreon.
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And you can support my sponsors.
Thanks again, Zach.
It's been great talking to you.
And happy...
toothing. That's what they say.
Happy toothing.
Happy two things to you too.
Happy two things to you too.
Global warming is a massive con.
There is no evidence whatsoever that man-made climate change is a problem, that it's going to kill us, that we need to amend our lifestyle in order to deal with it.
It's a non-existent problem.
But how do you explain this stuff to your normie friends?
Well, I've just brought out the revised edition to my 2012 classic book Watermelons which captures the story of how some really nasty people Decided to invent the global warming scare in order to fleece you to take away your freedoms to take away your land It's a shocking story.
I wrote it as I say in the well 2011 actually the first edition came out and it's a snapshot of a particular era the era when The people behind the climate change scan got caught red-handed, tinkering with the data, torturing till it screamed, in a scandal that I helped christen, Climategate.
So I give you the background to the skullduggery that went on in these seats of learning, where these supposed experts were informing us, we've got to act now!
I rumbled their scan.
I then asked the question, okay, if it is a scan, Who's doing this?
And why?
It's a good story.
I've kept the original book pretty much as is, but I've written two new chapters, one at the beginning and one at the end, explaining how it's even worse than we thought.
I think it still stands out.
I think it's a good read.
Obviously I'm biased, but I'd recommend it.
You can buy it from jamesdellingpole.co.uk You'll probably find it online.
Just go to my website and look for it.
And I hope it helps keep you informed and gives you the material you need to bring round all those people who are still persuaded that, oh, it's a disaster, we must amend our ways and appease the gods, appease Mother Gaia.