BBN, Apr 15, 2025 – FORBIDDEN CURES: The astonishing true story of DMSO...
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Welcome to Brighteon Broadcast News with Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Alright, welcome to a different kind of Brighteon Broadcast News.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Today's focus is about health, consciousness, and spirituality.
I've got some new laboratory results to share with you about the ability of chlorine dioxide to destroy glyphosate.
And then our featured interview today is with Greg Braden.
Greg Brayden, a very accomplished author and speaker and just an extraordinary mind, extraordinary spirit.
I really, really enjoyed speaking with Greg Brayden, and I can't wait to share this interview with you.
You're going to love it.
Wow, it's going to be amazing.
So, really, no politics and no finance today.
We would focus on health and some health secrets, and then this interview with...
Greg, Braden, I've got a couple of things to share with you, but I think, you know what, let's start out with what I promised, which is this laboratory experiment, science experiment that we did.
So, well, you'll see it in the video, but we made up some glyphosate vials, glyphosate diluted in water.
And then we made some chlorine dioxide using the Safrax tablets, and then we mixed one milliliter of the chlorine dioxide water with the glyphosate water.
And then we tested the glyphosate vials in our lab using triple-quad mass spec analysis, and then we have the results to share with you.
And I think you'll find them quite surprising.
So let's go to that video.
Filmed it in two parts, you know, I don't know, 10 days apart, whatever it was.
A week apart.
But here we go.
I think you'll enjoy it.
Welcome to today's mad science experiment here at Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon.
And every time you see with my purple gloves on right here, this is because we're going to be handling some unique artifacts, let's say.
And today we are working on answering the question, does chlorine dioxide destroy glyphosate?
So if you could show the side camera there, what you're going to see is a bottle of weed and grass killer.
That's glyphosate.
That's actually 410 parts per million glyphosate, right?
So 41% glyphosate, roughly.
And then we have some water in a jar there with a shot glass in the center.
We're going to make chlorine dioxide-infused water using the product there called Dysin ClO2.
Which is from the Safrax company, S-A-F-R-A-X.
So it's a disinfectant.
And then what I have here, I'm going to hold this up, this bottle is diluted glyphosate from that weed killer bottle.
So this is, I don't know, somewhere in the hundreds of parts per million or maybe as low as 100 parts per million.
I'll have to check with our lab.
And we're going to take that, divide it into...
Two 50 ml vials here.
And in one of them, we're going to put a volume of chlorine dioxide in water.
And then we're going to have these tested in the lab to see if the glyphosate has been destroyed.
Sound good?
So let's do it.
Let's get busy.
Now, I'm going to have to actually work on this over there.
So the first thing I'm going to do, I won't have my microphone with me there.
First thing I'm going to do is open the chlorine dioxide, and I'm going to put one tablet into the shot glass.
Which will begin to make chlorine dioxide gas that will come out of the shot glass and it will infuse itself into the surrounding water.
And that's actually the preferred way to make chlorine dioxide water.
So I'm going to do that first, and we can follow along here.
All right, so these are the pouches that come in the large pouch, these individual bags.
With multiple chlorine dioxide tablets in them.
So I'm going to just use one of these tablets, which is equivalent to one gram of mass itself.
So one gram, which is actually a lot for such a small vessel.
I'm going to put one gram in there.
Okay.
Okay, you see that?
That's one gram.
Going to put it in.
And close it up.
And it's starting to work.
Okay, as you can see, it's going to work, and it's making chlorine dioxide-infused water right there in the shot glass.
That shot glass water will, well, the chlorine dioxide from that will infuse itself in the surrounding water.
And you'll begin to see the color of all the surrounding water change to be a more yellowish color.
So we're going to come back in a few minutes, and you're going to see the water more yellow.
And when we have that, then we're going to take some of that water and combine it with chlorine dioxide over here in these vials.
But first we have to transfer the glyphosate that's in this bottle.
Into these 50 ml vials.
So we'll do an A and a B. And the precise volume of this isn't actually very important, but I'm going to go for roughly 50, about 50 ml each, give or take.
So here we go.
So I don't want to get this on my skin because, you know, this causes non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, obviously.
That's why I'm wearing the purple gloves.
Okay, stand by.
That looks almost perfect.
I'm going to put the lids on and label these.
So here we have our first vial.
Right here.
And we're going to call this GLYA.
And I will date these samples later.
So this is GLYA, glyphosate A. And then we'll do GLYB.
I will properly label these later, and I'll date them, and I'll have my initials on them too.
It's just proper sample handling in our lab.
But for right now, we have an A and a B here.
Now these...
Two vials have the same concentration of glyphosate in them.
We don't yet know exactly what that concentration is.
But we're going to run the test in our mass spec instrument in our laboratory, and we're going to find out what is the starting glyphosate and then what is the ending glyphosate.
Now, if you look at the side camera, you can see that the shot glass is now very much inundated with a lot of chlorine dioxide gas infused in that water.
So what we're going to do now is, actually, you know what, I'm not even going to wait for it to go into the surrounding water.
I'm just going to use a pipette here.
Where's my pipette?
Okay. I'm going to take, let's say, let's do one mil, a milliliter of that chlorine dioxide water, and I'm going to put it into a vial B. So this is currently about 50 mils.
It'll be 51 when we're done.
And one of those milliliters will be...
the chlorine dioxide water and then we'll see if it destroys the glyphosate.
So I'm going to go do
that transfer.
All right, so the transfer is done.
I'm going to hand these over to my lab tech that does the glyphosate testing, which is on our triple-quad mass spec instrument.
And that is a quantitation method that we developed that does not require post-column derivatization, by the way.
So it's a really advanced, very precise quantitation technique using, of course, liquid chromatography combined with mass spectrometry.
And, by the way, this is something that we do in our lab routinely.
And we test everything that we sell at healthrangerstore.com.
All the food, all the supplements, all the superfoods, everything.
We test everything that's a food or a consumable item.
We test it for glyphosate.
So we do these tests routinely every day.
I mean, I don't know how many thousands of samples we test in a year.
We test our raw materials, we test finished products, etc.
So this is something that we do routinely.
And so this is a really great practical use of that.
Instrument technology to find out, to answer the question, does chlorine dioxide destroy glyphosate?
And folks, I don't know the answer to that.
I really don't know.
And this isn't theater.
We didn't pre-test it.
I have no idea.
We're going to find out.
I was told that chlorine dioxide destroys glyphosate, but I'm like, eh, don't trust and then verify.
I don't trust anything anybody tells me, but I want to verify it and find out.
Maybe they're right.
Maybe it only destroys half the glyphosate.
Maybe it destroys 99%.
Maybe it destroys nothing.
We're going to find out.
And then we're going to share that answer with you.
In the meantime, if you want to support us, you can shop at HealthRangerStore.com where you can find all of our supplements and foods, storable foods, superfoods, and so much more.
We have an amazing assortment of health-oriented products, natural care, home care, emergency first aid products.
We've got products on sale.
We've got numerous categories and so on.
And again, we apply our laboratory expertise to all of our products.
So that's why you'll find our products to be the cleanest products available anywhere in the world.
Because we test for heavy metals.
We test for glyphosate.
We test for microbiology and much more.
And can you show camera three?
I just want to show people our microscope here right now.
And I just want to show you that...
What we're doing with our microscope here right now, if you can show the screen, this is a zoomed-in image of the gold deposition on a goldback.
So there it is zoomed out at 20x right there.
This microscope is just one of the instruments that we have here at our lab.
Anyway, this is our microscope with our digital display here.
Yeah, you can kind of see it in that shot right there.
And we're taking a look at foods and superfoods, all kinds of supplements and interesting...
We're doing a lot more laboratory demonstrations, science demos here, using our microscope in this case or back in the lab with our mass spec instruments for testing things like glyphosate.
So thank you for your support.
When you shop with us at healthrangerstore.com, you help us have the budget to be able to afford this equipment.
And to be able to film and share these demonstrations with you.
And a lot of interesting things coming up.
You'll want to stay tuned on this.
So follow me on Brighteon.com.
Follow me on X at HealthRanger or on NaturalNews.com or Brighteon.social.
My username is also HealthRanger.
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And it's a free speech platform.
Brighteon.io.
So, thank you for all your support, and I look forward to bringing you more videos like this and the conclusion of this video.
We're going to find out, and we'll let you know what the results are.
Thanks for watching.
Alright, welcome back.
We have the test results now.
It's been, I don't know, a week or whatever it's been.
We have the test results now on the glyphosate, and just to review, if you'll show the side angle camera there, we took glyphosate weed killer.
And we put it into two vials at the same concentration.
And then we took this chlorine dioxide, which you see there, DisinClO2.
That's from Safrax.com.
I'll tell you about them.
And then we use it to make chlorine dioxide water, which is what you see, the yellowish kind of greenish water there in the canister.
And then we took one milliliter of that water and put it into one of these 50 mil vials.
In order to see if it would destroy glyphosate.
And I'm going to share the results with you now.
And the reason I did this experiment is because I was told by several people that chlorine dioxide will destroy glyphosate.
And I wasn't sure if I believed it, because glyphosate is a very robust molecule.
It's small, it's nimble, it penetrates a lot of things.
It's actually very hard to destroy, except maybe by microbes in the soil can eventually We've tried to microwave it, and we've tried to use sunlight to break it down, and we couldn't break it down.
We've tried this in the lab many times.
So here's the question.
Did chlorine dioxide break down the glyphosate, and if so, how much?
All right, so here's the answer.
The first vial, now we had to dilute this way down in order to get it into our instrument range, because we have a certain calibration range on our mass spec triple quad instrument.
For glyphosate quantitation.
So we diluted it way, way down into under 100 parts per billion.
So the vial on the left, which is A, I labeled it A, that has 58 parts per billion of glyphosate in it.
Vial B, where we added the chlorine dioxide, it only has 15.8 parts per billion glyphosate.
Which means that the chlorine dioxide destroyed 73% roughly of the glyphosate.
Wow! I mean, there's your answer.
It destroyed 73% of the glyphosate.
I'm actually surprised.
I did not expect to see that high of efficacy of chlorine dioxide destroying glyphosate.
But what this tells me is that...
You know, if you're washing vegetables or anything, you buy fresh fruit or vegetables at the grocery store, it can have glyphosate residue on it.
And, you know, on the outside of those, it probably makes sense to use a little bit of chlorine dioxide to wash that off.
It's going to denature the glyphosate or at least almost three quarters of it.
And it might do the same thing to other pesticides as well.
It probably will because many of the pesticide chemicals are way more fragile.
Compared to glyphosate, which is quite robust.
So this tells me that using a very simple, low-cost product that you can use safely at home, which is this Safrax chlorine dioxide, you can actually help clear off the majority of the glyphosate from surfaces.
And that's a really great thing to know.
I didn't know that before we ran this test.
Now, the Safrax company, just to be clear, they're not a sponsor.
They didn't pay me to do this.
We paid for all this ourselves.
I was just very curious about this.
But we promote Safrax because of the benefits of chlorine dioxide, and from time to time they also donate their product to our church that we then re-donate to the local community to first responders for sanitizing surfaces,
dealing with outbreaks, or whatever.
A lot of emergency medicine uses.
There are a thousand uses of this product.
So that's the only relationship we have with the Safrax company.
But they are kind enough to have given us a discount code for our audience.
If you want to get some of this yourself, you can go to rangerdeals.com, and if you scroll down there to the Safrax tab, you just have to scroll down.
There's a lot of different deals there.
Scroll down.
There it is.
Save 10%, and you just use discount code ranger at the Safrax website, which is safrax.com.
And you can go there.
You can pick up.
These pouches, they're very affordable.
500 tablets, so you can make 500 batches of chlorine dioxide water, which has just a multitude of uses.
Chlorine dioxide kills bacteria, kills fungi, molds, and spores, as well as denaturing so-called viruses and much, much more.
So it's an outstanding first aid item.
It's an emergency preparedness item.
I've got cases of this stuff, and I've given away cases to so many people now, and everybody loves this product.
Of course, use it only as directed.
Read the instructions because it does create chlorine gas soluble in water, and you need to know about that.
But I use it on the ranch.
I use it in the watering containers for my goats, for my chickens, for my dogs.
I use it in my automatic dishwasher.
If I've got dishes that are especially dirty and I really want to make sure they're fully sanitized, I'll put a tablet.
But just read the directions and get the parts per million concentration that you're looking for, which depends on how much water that you use.
But bottom line, folks, turns out chlorine dioxide, it really does destroy glyphosate, or most of it, and that's a surprising result to me.
So this is why we do the science, this is why we have the instruments, this is why we have our lab, and we test everything that we sell at healthrangerstore.com.
That's why we even know how to do this test, because we test our products for glyphosate.
We test our products, our superfoods, our supplements, our nutrition products, for heavy metals and glyphosate, aflatoxins, also microbiology, bacteria, salmonella, E. coli, etc.
We do all of this testing on our product line at healthrangerstore.com.
So if you want really clean food, most of it's certified organic, all of it's lab tested, shop with us.
So when you want really clean foods and superfoods and supplements and nutritional products, shop with us at healthrangerstore.com.
Scroll down, you'll see all the things on sale, all the different categories, all the different benefits we have, new products that we're introducing, all laboratory tested for your safety and for your health.
So thank you for shopping with us.
Thank you for your support.
I'm Mike Adams.
The founder of brighttown.com and the founder of healthrangerstore.com.
Take care.
All right, pretty cool to know, huh?
So if you want to destroy glyphosate, it turns out that chlorine dioxide is very good at doing that.
Not 100% effective, but still quite good.
Now, here's a question.
Does it work in your body the same way?
I don't know the answer to that.
I mean, not from this test.
Because this was just done in vials here.
But could it work in your body the same way?
I mean, well, I suppose if you get chlorine dioxide molecules to interact with glyphosate molecules in your blood, it could have the same effect.
But one question would be, does chlorine dioxide, maybe it reacts with other stuff first.
And if your glyphosate levels in your blood are just a few parts per billion, let's say, then...
Maybe there's not enough for the chlorine dioxide to really interact with.
I don't know.
But I'm not drinking glyphosate in order to test it.
So we'll just have to wonder about that one for now.
However, a lot of people do consider the capabilities of chlorine dioxide in destroying glyphosate.
But I would say the obvious use is topically on your fresh fruits and vegetables.
So if you're washing Let's say apples from the grocery store, what have you, which also have a coating of fragrance on them.
By the way, if they've been sitting in the store loaded with fragrance, I can smell the laundry detergent fragrance on the peels of the apples from the grocery store.
Literally, I can tell you that they were in a store.
It's crazy.
I've had like bags of grapes that just reeked like fabric softener.
Oh my God.
But, you know, Chlorine dioxide also destroys fragrance chemicals, along with many other complex chemicals as well.
So it seems like chlorine dioxide would be something very effective to maybe wash off, and also it would kill microbes and bacteria and things on the outside of your fruits and vegetables.
For example, salmonella or E. coli.
As you know, some people get E. coli from slicing open a cantaloupe.
And what happens is there's E. coli all over the outside, and then with their knife, like, they don't wash the outside, because normally you don't wash cantaloupe, right?
I mean, I normally don't.
But with your knife, you can shove that E. coli right into the fruit, and then you can eat that, and if you have a weak immune system, that could be a problem.
So what if you soaked your cantaloupe in chlorine dioxide water first, before you cut it?
That seems smart.
That seems smart.
So, again, the Safrax company, S-A-F-R-A-X dot com.
They offer the, what is it, 500 tablets per pouch.
So you could make 500 batches of chlorine dioxide water.
And what do they sell those pouches for?
Like under 40 bucks?
I mean, it's an incredible, incredible bargain.
So take advantage of that.
Use discount code Ranger at Saffrax dot com and you'll save 10%.
And no, we don't earn anything on that.
And they're not a sponsor, but they do donate product to our church, which we distribute to the community.
So if you use our discount code, that helps them know that you heard about it through us, and then that increases their donation to our church.
I can't give this stuff away fast enough, by the way.
I mean, I keep getting more and more cases of it coming in from Safrax, and I keep giving it away at the church services and other places.
Gave a case to the owner of a restaurant a couple months ago.
It's like, hey, you can use this in the restaurant, you know, check it out.
But that's the way abundance works.
You notice that?
That's the way abundance works.
If you give things away, then more stuff comes to you.
Interesting. It's really the fabric of the cosmos.
There's a blueprint that way.
If you hoard stuff and don't give stuff away at all, like if you're really, really selfish and just hoard everything, you know, if you're like that, the universe kind of operates on scarcity for you.
It doesn't give you more stuff.
At least this has been my experience.
And then when I give away stuff, more stuff shows up.
It's crazy.
So, hey, it's a good system.
And I love providing...
Things to people in this time of economic stress, you know?
And I love helping people gain knowledge and save money and solve problems for pennies on the dollar very often.
And speaking of that, let's go to the next topic today, which is about hidden cures.
So hidden cures, welcome to this special segment.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
And I'd like to talk to you about some of the things I've learned over the years about hidden cures and hidden treatments that are absolutely, you're not allowed to know about these things.
And I had previously mentioned in a previous segment about chlorine dioxide, which is, it's one of the most extraordinary natural medicines in the world.
And there's a website on it, and I think it is, let me just check it out, the Universal Antidote.
Theuniversalantidote.com Yeah, there it is.
Theuniversalantidote.com It's the science and story of chlorine dioxide.
You can download the free books and you can watch the videos and take the course and it's got all the research.
It's amazing.
So, obviously, learn about chlorine dioxide, but that's not what this segment is about.
This is about something else.
This is about special dyes.
Now, years ago, when I Toured the spirulina farm in Hawaii on the Big Island.
And the company there was really great.
They gave me the full tour.
I got to see the ponds and the harvesting and the machines.
And they also took me to their science lab.
And I don't know if you know this about spirulina, but spirulina contains some extraordinary pigments.
Now, the most extraordinary pigment...
Found in spirulina, which, as you know, has a very dark green, almost blue-green color.
The extraordinary pigment that does that is called phycocyanin.
And, of course, cyanin refers to the color cyan, which is a kind of blue hue.
And phycocyanin, I don't know if just the phyco means plant-derived, probably.
But phycocyanin is this bluish pigment that spirulina creates.
And this pigment can be extracted from spirulina, and this pigment all by itself is extremely valuable.
If you have one liter of this pigment in solution, you can sell it for something like $30,000, you know, in its pure form, because it's used as medical imaging pigments in various procedures.
I forgot the exact details, but this pigment, Fluoresces under certain conditions.
So it shows up in contrast imaging, different kinds of medical imaging.
So this is a dye that is injected into patients in order to pursue the medical imaging.
Well, researchers in Japan discovered something really extraordinary about phycocyanin.
What Japanese researchers were able to do...
Was to use microinjections of phycocyanins extracted from spirulina.
And they would inject them into the cancer tumors in patients' organs, such as the liver.
So if they had liver cancer, liver tumors, or I think they were also treating pancreatic cancer, but I'd have to check the source on that.
When they did this, it destroyed the tumors.
The phycocyanins from spirulina, in other words, induced cell toxicity or apoptosis cell death in the cancer cells, but they were very specific to the cancer cells.
This pigment did not harm healthy cells.
And then this was also done in breast cancer studies in mice as well.
This was in the year 2013, and that was a study in China.
If you look at how this dye works, and yes, this dye is found in spirulina.
I mean, this pigment is part of spirulina.
It has anti-angiogenesis factors, so it halts the formation of blood supply to the cancer tumors.
It induces cell death of the cancer tumors, and it modulates the pathways known as BACS-BCL-2.
So, if you're a...
Biology expert, you'll know all the details about that.
I don't know all the details about it.
But I know that spirulina is also anti-inflammatory and it has antioxidant effects and it also helps modulate the immune system to help the body fight cancer better.
So, they know that in Japan this destroys tumors.
They know that in China it also destroys tumors.
The methods of delivering Spirulina to the cancer tumors.
In one case in Japan, it was through endoscopic microinjections to target the liver and the pancreas.
But you can also use nanoparticle carriers.
And it turns out that some metals, like silver nanoparticles, are very good at that.
But there's a better one, which is...
Part of rosamarinic acid that I've talked about in previous podcasts that is also able to bind with many things, such as phycocyanins, and then to help deliver that to cancer tumors throughout the body.
Of course, if you eat spirulina, then there's a systemic distribution of phycocyanins, but that may not have the concentration necessary.
To destroy a cancer tumor, you know, compared to localized injection, right?
So you want to deliver the pigment directly to the cancer tumor.
Now, a lot of people have tumors that are very close to the surface of the skin.
Some people have cancer tumors on the skin.
But breast cancer in particular is often very near the surface of the breast skin.
So, you might have the question, well, is there a way...
To topically deliver the pigments of phycocyanins into the tissues.
And are there other things that can be used topically that are very effective at treating cancer?
Well, enter the miracle substance known as DMSO.
So DMSO, and I did not believe this about DMSO for many, many years, but DMSO...
DMSO penetrates the skin, and it goes deep into the tissues.
It's really extraordinary.
And now I know this to be absolutely true, but I was skeptical of this when I first heard it.
But DMSO, which is derived from trees, actually, I think it's a solvent that is derived from specific trees.
DMSO has been...
Extensively studied and used to treat all kinds of things.
And here I want to give credit to MidwesternDoctor.com.
The author is a Midwestern doctor.
And this author documents some really extraordinary things.
And I saw an article of his recently about DMSO and its use with another dye called hematozylin.
That's what reminded me of phycocyanins in spirulina, because what's become apparent here is that DMSO is a carrier that carries other substance deep into your skin and your tissues and can penetrate and deliver these substances to any tissue.
That's within a certain depth.
I don't know exactly what that depth is, but it's a lot.
It's probably inches.
It's probably several centimeters.
So it could even be a couple of inches.
It's at least an inch, maybe more.
I don't know the full depth of it.
But just DMSO by itself has over a thousand studies backing it.
Here I'm quoting from the MidwesternDoctor.com article.
It's been shown to treat strokes, paralysis, neurological disorders, circulatory disorders, including varicose veins and hemorrhoids.
It treats tissue injuries, sprains, concussions, burns, and surgical incisions, and spinal cord injuries.
It treats chronic pain, including arthritis and bursitis and...
It treats a wide range of internal organ diseases such as pancreatitis, infertility,
liver cirrhosis, and endometriosis.
And then it also treats a wide range of skin conditions like burns and varicose veins.
I mentioned that.
Acne. Hair loss, ulcers, skin cancer, and autoimmune dermatologic diseases.
It also treats bacterial infections, herpes, and shingles.
Very interesting.
But where DMSO, and all of those things I just mentioned, that's with DMSO by itself.
And by the way, I don't sell DMSO.
So I'm not plugging a specific product.
If you want to get some, you need to find your own sources for it.
I don't have a source for it.
But it's best known for treating various cancers.
And so from this article, some of the mechanisms is that it slows the growth of cancers.
It can cause cancer cells to transform back into normal cells.
It assists the immune system in targeting and eliminating cancers that were...
Reluctant to be removed.
It treats complications of cancer, including cancer pain.
Very helpful for multiple myeloma.
DMSO also helps protect tissue from radiation and chemotherapy injury.
And it can also potentiate many cancer therapies.
Because remember, DMSO is a carrier, a solvent, or you could call it a penetrant.
That penetrates your cells and tissues with whatever it's carrying, which is why, in some cases, if someone is undergoing systemic chemotherapy, which I generally do not recommend, but if someone's doing that and then they use DMSO on the surface of their skin to help penetrate,
let's say, a breast cancer tumor, well, the chemotherapy circulating in their blood may With the help of DMSO, it may penetrate more in the cancer tumor.
So in other words, DMSO can potentiate chemotherapy, which of course can also make chemotherapy more toxic to healthy cells.
So be very careful with this and understand that everything I'm telling you here today, this is clearly under the category of experimental medicine.
But it turns out that our new AI engine, which again is about to be released, At brighteon.ai, you'll have access to it for free very soon.
It is well-versed on DMSO.
You can ask it all kinds of questions about DMSO and also cancer treatments.
In fact, some of what I was talking about earlier was from Enoch, the phycocyanins and the anti-cancer mechanisms and how that works.
That wasn't all just from my memory.
I pulled up some notes from Enoch.
So it's a great research engine.
I'm not done with this story.
There's more to this.
So here's what's extraordinary about this.
So again, DMSO by itself does all these amazing things.
But when you combine it with specifically pigments or dyes, that's when things get very, very interesting.
Remember how I said in Japan they did microinjections of...
Phycocyanin molecules from spirulina and they found that it destroyed tumors.
Well, DMSO combined with phycocyanins stands as a very promising but experimental treatment for cancer tumors.
Now, this isn't something, this is not a combination that, to my knowledge, has been studied.
But what has been studied is DMSO plus Hematozylin.
So hematozylin, let me spell that for you.
It's spelled H-E-M-A-T-O-X-Y-L-I-N.
So it's kind of like xylitol, how that's spelled with an X. Well, hematozylin.
So hemato means of the blood.
And xylin is referring to this specific structure of this dye.
Now, this dye is obtained from the logwood tree.
And then the dye itself is water-soluble.
So when the tree is kind of ground up and then boiled in water, then you get this dye that you can then dry into a powder.
And that powder is called hematozylin.
And this was discovered in the 16th century.
And it's a very potent dye for the textile industry.
Interesting, right?
Did you know that a lot of natural substances have been used as dyes of textiles over the years?
I mean, over the centuries by Native Americans and Europeans from centuries ago, etc.
And it turns out that a lot of these natural dyes are really powerful.
Medicine, also.
These have very special structures.
So, these dyes began to be used in the 19th century.
In pathology, as slide stains to be able to visualize tissues.
So, you know, I have a microscope, and people who are familiar with microscopy or tissue examination, they know that if you want to have high contrast, then you can stain the slides with certain dyes.
And by the way, one of those dyes is just iodine.
You can stain with iodine.
It stains quite well.
And then you typically, you know, you would stain a specimen and you might wash it with IPA, isopropyl alcohol, or water, or a 50-50 mixture of IPA and water, or if you need something a little stronger, you might wash it with methanol.
But the dyes tend to penetrate certain structures of the tissues and the cells.
Often like the cell membrane, for example, or other specific structures, depending on the dye.
And then that provides the contrast where you can then turn on the microscope and you can see what you want to see.
Now, you know, you've got the contrast, you've got the outlines, whatever.
So this stain, hematozylin, has this kind of purplish hue, kind of blue-purplish hue.
And then it turns out that along the way, one researcher...
Named Eli Jordan Tucker Jr.
Yeah, his last name is Tucker.
He was an orthopedic surgeon in Texas.
And he was trying to image tumors from animals like cows because he was looking for cancer treatments for these animals.
And he was using the hematozylin pigment as a stain because that's what it's commonly known for.
Well, it turns out that hematozylin is highly soluble in DMSO.
And so he found that he could mix this pigment with DMSO, and then he could stain slides with very high contrast, making it very easy to see under the microscope.
And that's when he discovered two things.
He discovered that DMSO plus hematozylin, it did not stain.
Normal cells, but it stained the cancer tumor cells.
And very interestingly, even under the microscope, even though these cells were no longer part of a living system, this combination of DMSO plus hematozylin, it began to degrade or to kill off the neoplasm of these cancer cells.
Or what is called central necrosis, or the dying off or the deterioration of the cancer cells, even under the microscope.
So experimenting on animals, he found that he could administer through IV a combination of DMSO and this pigment, this dye.
And he found that even in terminal cancer cases with very large tumors, He was able to kill off the tumor and save the animal.
And he found that the hematozylin by itself had no effect on cancer cells and the DMSO had some effect but nowhere near the effect of the combination.
So this combination that he came up with is known as D-Hematozylin, which is what this author refers to here from MidwesternDoctor.com.
And the D just stands for DMSO.
So this combination is known to be very potent in terms of its anti-cancer properties, not only in animals, but, well, some people have done this research in humans.
In one case covered in this story, there was a dog that was just riddled with cancer tumors.
And Dr. Tucker administered an IV of D-hamatozylone to the dog, who was practically choking to death from tumors in his throat, by the way.
He had large tumors all over the body.
Within two weeks of the IV being administered, all the tumors were gone.
The cancer tumors had completely regressed.
All the masses of the cancer tumors were gone, and the dog was completely cured.
And with a further analysis, after the death of the dog and the subsequent autopsy, and the dog did not die from cancer, by the way, he found there were no cancer cells in the entire body of the dog.
The cancer had been completely eliminated.
Okay? Now, again, I want to remind you that this is in the category of experimental medicine, and I'm not telling you...
To go drink DMSO, that would not be wise.
And I'm not telling you to, you know, inject yourself with this.
I'm getting to the potential topical uses of this, but again, this qualifies as experimental medicine.
I'm giving you a lesson in history of hidden cures.
So, of course, Dr. Tucker, having this success with animals, he began to administer it to Really late stage cancer patients who were on death's door and the first woman that he treated was actually in a coma and was about to die from fibrosarcoma and there was no surgery that was possible.
So Tucker gave her this IV infusion over several weeks and then the tumor receded and then she was able to have surgery to remove the tumor and then she reportedly had a full recovery.
So that was the first woman to receive this treatment and the first life saved by this treatment.
So the FDA came along and banned DMSO research in 1965.
Of course they did.
Because the FDA is a terrorist organization that wants people to be sick and to die.
And, you know, the FDA protects big pharma.
You know all that.
But did you know that the FDA goes out of its way to ban things that work?
To ban cures.
Or to ban research on those cures.
And that's exactly what happened in 1965.
And since then, there was this massive effort, you know, all part of Rockefeller Medicine, to try to cover up the truth about this extraordinary treatment.
But the research continued in other countries.
And what they found is that patients had far better outcomes if they did not undergo chemotherapy.
And there were many different methods of applying this DMSO solution or de-hematosilin.
Those methods include, of course, intravenously, but also they tried orally, they tried intra-arterially, they tried rectally, and also topically, with the topical applications of this found to be extremely helpful for cervical cancer.
Isn't that interesting?
For cervical cancer.
So with no surgery, no injections, nothing crazy, just basically DMSO plus this dye, Hamatozylin, a dye that you can buy on Amazon, by the way.
I mean, you can buy it on eBay.
I mean, it's a very common dye.
It's commonly available.
If you do buy it, by the way, try to get it pure.
Don't get it mixed with other crap.
I've seen mixtures of this that are for slide staining that are mixed with chemicals that you wouldn't want on your skin.
So if you happen to want to research this and buy some of this, make sure you get it in a pure form.
But isn't it interesting that topically it works?
Further research found that it worked with all kinds of cancers, breast and ovary cancers, adenocarcinomas.
Giant cell bone cancers.
It even worked with squamous cell carcinomas, cervical cancer, lung cancer, mouth cancer, prostate, stomach, etc.
It didn't always work in every case, and some types of cancers responded better than others, but it showed efficacy across a very wide spectrum of cancers.
In one case, a woman had a malignant giant cell tumor affecting a third of one of her femur bones.
And after this treatment, she experienced a complete regression and new bone regeneration.
And see, that's something the cancer industry doesn't want you to know about.
So the research was so astounding that, of course, the American Cancer Society, which depends on the existence of cancer, In order to keep raising money, the American Cancer Society, in my view, is a giant con.
So in 1971, they put out a bulletin warning everybody against using D-hematosilin, saying that it didn't work and it was unproven, you know, typical stuff that you would expect from the American Cancer Society,
which, again, in my view, is a total con.
Just, really...
Criminally run operation.
And then because of this Dr. Tucker, he was fired from the hospital where he worked and then another hospital, and he stopped publishing research on this substance.
And that was the shutdown that took place in the 1970s to try to stop any more research from showing that this could treat or even reverse cancers.
What's extraordinary about D-hematosylin is that it has virtually no side effects, no signs of organ damage.
In some people, if administered intravenously at high doses, it would cause a fever.
But usually that was the result of a high dosage.
But the cancers that have been shown in all the research since then that has continued in other countries, It shows that D-hematosilin works on non-Hodgkin lymphoma, which of course is caused by glyphosate exposure,
that it works on bladder cancer, it works on ovarian carcinoma, it works on sarcomas, including soft tissue sarcomas and leukemias, particularly acute leukemia, and cancers with a giant cell tumor phenotype.
Now, again, I'm...
I'm sourcing this from MidwesternDoctor.com, and I want to give the author credit because it's an extraordinary article.
But I also want to say, if you want to go down this rabbit hole, just wait for the launch of Brighteon.ai because we have a tremendous amount of research on this in the system, and more coming.
This treatment did not work well.
For melanoma or lung cancer or colon cancer or gastric cancer or brain cancer, possibly because many of those tissues are much more difficult to reach, especially via IV.
So some of the takeaways from this are that D-hematosilin selectively targets cancer cells and that cancer cells did not develop a resistance.
To this substance, as cancer cells can do with chemotherapy.
And then, from the article, it says here, while some tumors rapidly disappear, other types frequently become avascular, which, that's because of the anti-angiogenesis effect.
In other words, the blood supply stops to them.
And then they are dried out, blanched, or fibrous, rather than being directly shrunk.
Those tumors, in some cases, then are relatively easy to extract surgically.
Importantly, where D-hamatozylin worked for patients, there are virtually no relapses.
It is a cure, and it's a permanent cure.
Fascinating, right?
I mean, of course the American Cancer Society doesn't want people to know about this, my goodness.
Why would they exist if we already know about...
A cure for cancer, especially many different types of cancers, you know, no wonder the FDA shut this down.
No wonder the ACS shut it down.
One other note is that it is not as effective in vaccinated individuals who are suffering from the vaccine turbo cancers.
So there's something about the vaccines, you know, probably the mRNA, etc., that really programs cells to cancer, toward cancer.
But this DMSO substance is unable to overcome that in some cases.
So it's better to not be vaccinated.
During intravenous administration, patients can also experience chills or alternating hot-cold sensations, especially in the first one or two sessions.
And often this indicates that they've reached kind of maybe a guardrail limit.
Of how much they should have in that session.
But that's been noted in the research.
So the bottom line in all of this, look, I can't go into every detail of all the protocols here.
There's a lot.
But what I want to mention is that my belief, my current understanding of how this works is that DMSO is a very potent carrier of certain pigment.
chemicals such as hematozylin or potentially phycocyanin from spirit
And it can selectively deliver these molecules to cancer cells.
And DMSO also has many other benefits for other tissues.
Pain treatments, for example, and a whole lot more.
So let me just wrap this up by saying, again, this is all experimental medicine.
But it's also, this is something that has been deliberately covered up by the FDA and covered up by the American Cancer Society, in my view.
And this knowledge has been withheld from humanity.
And if this is interesting to you, the fact that you can use DMSO to topically deliver molecules to tissues, then I want you to start thinking about all the different possible uses of that.
What about extracts of turmeric, such as curcumin, for anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects?
What about extracts from beetroot, the red pigment?
Or what about the anthocyanins that are found in various blue and purple and black berries?
We have an anthocyanin dietary supplement product that's basically just powdered berries.
For sale in our store, it's not an extract of just the anthocyanins, but it's a combination of the anthocyanin-rich berries.
Well, what if those pigments, if they could be extracted and isolated, could they be used then topically?
And I believe there are some very potent anthocyanin liquids that are available that might be useful for researching that.
And I also know it's pretty easy to make an extract.
Of a phycocyanin out of spirulina.
All you have to do is take spirulina and soak it in water and alcohol, like vodka, and use an ultrasonic container there and just go at it.
And then you pour off the liquid, which is a very deep blue-green color.
And then if you dry that, you have mostly pure phycocyanin powder, which, again, is very valuable.
And it has a lot of amazing uses.
And what about methylene blue?
There's a lot of buzz about methylene blue right now.
Does it have possible uses?
Or are there berry extracts?
Is there cinnamon extract?
Are there traditional Chinese medicine herbs that could be used for this?
You know, shikimic acid, for example.
How can DMSO be used to deliver molecules to tissues in a way that is safe and efficacious?
I don't know the answers to this question.
But I know that this knowledge area has been heavily suppressed.
And I know that, for me personally, if I were suffering from some kind of tumor or cancer that was close to the surface of the skin, I know what I would do.
I mean, I'd be doing a bunch of things.
But I absolutely know what I would be doing.
And I would be using DMSO and doing a lot of research, etc.
But think about all the essential oils.
Think about all the molecules that come from nature and how now they can be delivered into tissues using DMSO.
Fascinating, right?
So there are all kinds of things.
There are bilberry extracts that That are very high in anthocyanins, that are liquid.
And those might have special functions.
I would just caution you about one thing.
Remember that anything you put on your skin, if you apply DMSO to it, it's going to really push that into your tissues and your cells.
And as you know, I've warned many times about toxic fragrance chemicals.
So if you're using toxic laundry detergent or fabric softeners, which is...
Pretty much all the mainstream brands.
If you're using toxic shampoo, detergents, deodorants, skin lotions, perfumes, colognes, essentially any of that stuff.
Cosmetics are loaded with fragrance.
So if you have toxic fragrance on your skin and then you put DMSO on it, what's it going to do?
It's going to drive all those toxic cancer-causing fragrance chemicals into your tissues.
So don't use DMSO.
With toxic substances on your skin.
And many people don't realize how toxic their perfumes are or their cosmetics or their sunscreen or their lotions or whatever.
I'm just mentioning this in the interest of your safety.
Make sure that you are clean and you don't have crazy toxins all over your skin when you apply DMSO if you choose to do that.
So brainstorm this.
Think about how this can be useful to you.
Do your own research.
Understand I'm not your doctor.
I'm not giving you medical advice.
I'm not even advocating that you do any of this that I've mentioned here.
What I'm saying is that this is something to research if it's of interest to you, but make sure you are well informed.
And, I mean, I use DMSO topically from time to time for different situations.
So I know DMSO as being safe and effective for lots of things, but it can be very drying by itself as well.
So it does tend to dry out skin and tissues.
So just be cautious with how you use it.
And I'm not advocating drinking it or certainly not injecting it or putting it in an IV, although there are qualified doctors who oversee that kind of thing.
That's their specialty.
There's one doctor in particular.
But I'm not going to mention his name here because I don't want to bring extra attention to what he's doing.
Anyway, that's my discussion on hidden cures and treatments.
You know, we talked about chlorine dioxide, and now we've talked a lot about DMSO, and there are other things.
You know, we could have talked about ivermectin or essential oils or...
Frankly, anthocyanins or curcumin or other kinds of things.
But DMSO is something that I think needs to be on your radar.
So check it out.
Do research.
And frankly, right now, the best writer on the Internet about this is MidwesternDoctor.com, who's got a Substack site that requires a paid subscription.
And I purchased a subscription to his site.
But he's got the best documentation on DMSO right now.
Probably even better than Brighteon.ai, but I guess we'll find out soon.
But we are going to up the DMSO training material for our AI engine in the months ahead.
So I'll keep you posted about that.
That's coming.
So I want to play one book review video for you here called Chinese Herbal Cures by Henry C. Lu.
Maybe that's Lu.
I don't know.
Anyway, it's spelled L-U, so it's just Lu.
Chinese herbal cures.
I think this is a great fit for today's topic because using DMSO with other substances seems to be this incredible synergy.
This is the ticket to a lot of amazing treatments.
And I think the more we know about herbs, the more...
We can understand the potential for their function on various human tissues, whether it's joints or cancer tumors or healing injuries or reducing inflammation, reducing chronic pain, things like that.
So check out this book review video.
Again, Chinese Herbal Cures by Henry Liu.
And then we'll have the full interview with Greg Braden on the other side.
And by the way, thank you for your support.
Shop with us at healthrangerstore.com for your foods, superfoods, all laboratory tested, of course, and nutritional supplements.
Thank you for supporting our various sponsors, including the Satellite Phone Store, which has satellite phones and Starlink systems and solar generators,
everything for emergency backup situations.
Check them out at SAT123.
All right, enjoy the book review video here, Chinese Herbal Cures, and then the interview with Greg Braden.
Today, we're diving into the mystical and intriguing realm of Chinese herbal medicine.
We'll be exploring the legendary book, Chinese Herbal Cures, by Henry C. Liu, a treasure trove of ancient wisdom and modern applications.
So, grab a cup of tea, sit back, And let's embark on this enlightening journey together.
Did you know that Chinese herbal medicine boasts a history spanning thousands of years?
It's a system deeply rooted in the belief that nature holds the key to health and longevity.
The book we're discussing today is not just a collection of herbs and their uses.
It's a narrative that weaves together folklore, science, and practical advice.
It's a journey through time.
From the prehistoric era to the modern day, highlighting the evolution of Chinese medicine.
Let's start with the legendary herbs.
According to Liu, there are over 5,000 Chinese herbs, but only a select few have achieved legendary status.
These are the herbs that have been revered for their extraordinary effectiveness in preventing disease and promoting good health.
Imagine a time when stories were the only way to pass down knowledge.
These herb stories were like fairy tales, filled with mythical elements designed to capture the imagination and ensure the knowledge was remembered.
For example, puffballs were said to be effective in stopping bleeding, a use that is still recognized today.
These legends, while not scientifically verifiable, often reflect the herb's actual effects as acknowledged by professional herbalists.
It's a fascinating blend of myth and reality.
where the line between the two is often blurred.
Chinese medicine is traditionally divided into four branches: herbalism, food cures, acupuncture, and manipulative therapy.
Herbalism and food cures are often practiced together, as many plants are considered both food and medicine.
This dual nature is a cornerstone of Chinese medicine, emphasizing the interconnectedness of diet and health.
The book also delves into the historical development of these branches.
For instance, the discovery of fire led to the practices of moxibustion and ironing, which use heat and herbs to heal various ailments.
It's a testament to the ingenuity of ancient peoples, who used their observations and experiences to develop effective healing methods.
A significant portion of the book is dedicated to the Yellow Emperor's Classics of Internal Medicine, This classic outlines fundamental principles that are still followed by Chinese physicians today.
It's a stark contrast to Western medicine, where the history of medicine is often seen as irrelevant to clinical practice.
In Chinese medicine, the experiences of ancient physicians are considered invaluable.
This is because Chinese medicine is based on centuries of clinical experience, which remains relevant today.
The book provides examples of how these ancient principles are applied in modern clinical practice, demonstrating their enduring validity.
The book lists 20 major classifications of herbs, each representing a specific action or effect.
For instance, there are herbs that induce perspiration, reduce excessive heat, relieve pain, and regulate energy.
Each class has specific uses and precautions, In modern China,
both Chinese and Western medicine are practiced side by side, With patients having the freedom to choose between them.
This has led to the development of combined therapy where Chinese and Western treatments are used together for optimal results.
For instance, patients might opt for Western medicine in crisis situations or for conditions requiring surgery while choosing Chinese medicine for chronic diseases like rheumatism and hypertension.
This approach reflects a broader trend towards integrative medicine.
where the strengths of different systems are combined to provide comprehensive care.
The book provides insights into how this integration works in practice, offering a glimpse into the future of medicine.
The book also explores the role of emotions and fatigue in disease.
In Chinese medicine, emotions are seen as powerful forces that can either heal or harm.
Excessive or prolonged emotional states can disrupt the body's energy balance, leading to various ailments.
Similarly, fatigue can weaken the body, making it more susceptible to disease.
The author provides examples of how these factors are addressed in Chinese medicine, offering practical advice for maintaining emotional and physical wellbeing.
This holistic approach is a hallmark of Chinese medicine.
In conclusion, Chinese Herbal Cures is more than just a book about herbs.
It's a journey through the rich tapestry of Chinese medicine.
It offers a unique perspective on health and healing, blending ancient wisdom with modern science.
Whether you're a seasoned practitioner or a curious newcomer, this book is sure to provide valuable insights and inspiration.
Thank you for joining me on this episode of Bright Learn.
I hope you found it as enlightening and engaging as I did.
If you have any questions or comments, feel free to reach out.
Until next time, stay curious and stay healthy.
This has been a Bright Learn video from brightlearn.ai on the book Chinese Herbal Cures by Henry C. Liu.
Visit brightlearn.ai for more fascinating videos like this one.
And visit NaturalNews.com for full editorial coverage and breaking news on critical stories that keep you informed and aware of what's really going on.
We've got a new product at the Health Ranger store called Oat Milk Powder.
Here it is, available now, and it's got just one ingredient, which is oats.
I mean, check it out.
It's loaded with natural minerals, and it's about 5% fat organic oat milk powder.
Certified organic, laboratory tested.
And it's a great base for lots of smoothies.
You know, I make my smoothies every day.
And I started putting it in here as well.
Just gives it an extra rich and sweet taste, actually.
Oat milk powder is naturally kind of sweet.
And if you really want to jazz it up, you can add a banana to it, or you can put whey protein in it.
Let me show you what I have on my desk here.
Just some ideas of some of the things that I use in my smoothies.
Because, you know, I've been...
Living on a smoothie for breakfast and lunch for like 20 years now.
And so I'll use like Coco Energize.
I'll use whey protein.
I'll put broccoli sprouts in it for the sulforaphane.
And there's the oat milk powder.
I also use turmeric powder and then instant coffee sometimes.
But those are currently out of stock at our stores.
So you have to check back on those later.
And you can use anthocyanins for fruit-based smoothies, etc.
But now I use a big Vitamix blender.
But for those of you who want to have something more convenient for your office that's portable, we now carry the Blendie portable blenders at healthrangersstore.com.
Just search for Blendie, B-L-E-N-D-I, and there's a couple different sizes there.
Now, these clearly are not as strong as a Vitamix, but they're portable, great at the workplace, great for travel.
You can use it in a hotel room.
Or, you know, you can use it on the go.
You can use it, you know, traveling or in an RV or what have you.
And these can blend up, you know, bananas and all these different powders and the new oat milk powder that we have as well quite successfully.
And if you want to make my smoothie, it's really just put in like half an avocado and half of a big banana into the blendy with some of these other powders.
You know, cacao powder and whey protein powder, a little bit of turmeric powder, etc.
And then you're going to get a smoothie really close to what I drink every single day.
So that's how you do it.
And we've got these products and so much more available at healthrangerstore.com where every purchase helps support our network and our effort to bring you technologies and solutions and knowledge for human empowerment, life, liberty, and happiness.
So thank you for your support.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
Thank you for all your support.
Take care.
Welcome to today's interview here on Brighteon.com.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon, and today we have a very special guest, someone whose work I have followed for many years, probably 20 years, and yet somehow we've never had him on, and it's long overdue, and he has a very important message for humanity.
It's Greg Braden.
His website is gregbrayden.com, and there's two Gs in the Greg, so don't forget the two Gs.
So gregbrayden.com, and welcome, Mr. Brayden.
It's an honor, sir, to have you on today.
Mike, I am so excited to be with you today.
Thank you for those two Gs.
My mother did that intentionally because it means it's not a Gregory.
One Gs are Gregory, two Gs, plain old Greg.
Got it.
That's what I am.
And you know, I'm a huge fan and supporter of your work.
I have been for years, Mike.
And I'm not sure why we've never done this before.
And I'm honored to be with you today for the first time.
Well, we're so honored to have you here.
And we have to thank our mutual friend at the Arlington Institute for really connecting us because he was here in studio.
And then he mentioned that you're a regular guest doing all kinds of sessions there with the Arlington Institute.
That's what brought us together.
It's perfect timing.
Well, we'll give our love and gratitude to John Peterson, then, from the Arlington Institute.
I watched the interview that you did with him.
Oh, great.
It was a beautiful interview.
I always learn something when I listen to you, and I always learn something when I listen to John.
So it was a very educational interview that I listened to as well.
Well, it's very interesting.
I mean, thank you so much for saying that, and I've watched countless numbers of your presentations over the years.
And let's actually begin with this common bridge with John Peterson.
He donated a lot of material to our AI project, and we are building at brightown.ai the only free open-source AI that I believe is trained on pro-human material.
So it's this weird coincidence of machines being able to answer questions from a pro-human point of view.
And a lot of it, there's a lot of spirituality in it.
There's a lot of consciousness.
there's a lot
of work about morphic resonance, right?
Things like that in the engine.
And no doubt some of your work is in there from transcripts of your conversations as well.
So you've influenced an AI engine that's about to be released free to the world.
So thank you.
Well, I'm honored.
And I think now is the time.
When John told me about your project, I was really excited to hear what you were doing.
And of course, John has devoted a tremendous amount of time and energy to digitally transcribing a huge library that he has accumulated over the course of his lifetime.
And when I heard that was going to be part of it, I'm excited and I'm excited to learn more about it.
Absolutely. Yeah, his book list was quite fascinating.
Okay. All right, thanks.
So what we want to do is, let me bring up your website here, gregbrayden.com, like I said, with two Gs.
Now, Greg, beginning here, we're coming together on a day that, for me personally, is emotionally difficult because I feel really let down by a lot of humanity.
And I'm not asking you to be my counselor or anything.
But you have a book that appears to give new hope to humanity.
It's called Pure Human.
Here are some of your books on Amazon.
And I'm seeing this divergence.
I'm seeing some people become really awake, really aware, delving into the nature of consciousness and the reality.
And then I'm seeing this other group of people fall off and become less human and abandoning everything that makes us human.
Are you seeing that, or what are your comments on that?
Well, I'm absolutely seeing it, Mike.
I want to honor our time together here, and I want to do a good job.
With your permission, I'd like to lay a foundation that we can tie into for every portion of this conversation for the time we have together that I think addresses the divergence that you're seeing right now.
And it's all about how deep you want to go.
So I'm going to ask you, Mike, how deep you want to go in this conversation?
Well, whatever we can explore in the hour that we have, go as deep as you'd like.
Well, the reason that I wrote this book, the book is entitled Pure Human.
The best minds of our time are telling us that unless we change the trajectory that we are on right now, and the thinking underlying that trajectory, that we most probably are the last generation of pure humans.
That the world, this world, and presumably we're not living in another world right now, so we are the last generation of pure humans The universe will ever know.
I have very strong feelings about that.
I believe that we are worth preserving for a whole lot of reasons.
So I wrote this book, Mike, and the book has two parallel themes, and those themes provide the context for everything we're seeing in the world today.
So many people come up to me, and I'm sure they do with you as well, live events, you know, walking through an airport terminal at a grocery store.
You know, and they say, Greg, you know, isn't it interesting how all of these things are happening in the world at the same time?
What a coincidence that all of these big changes are converging in our time right now.
Well, it's not a coincidence.
And there's something missing in our story, Mike, and that's what I want to get to here.
We are rarely told that we are in the midst of a process.
That process has a beginning.
It has an end.
We're in it.
The only way out of it is to go through it.
And the book addresses two facets of that process.
Number one, there is a concerted effort to replace our humanness, our very biology, with machines and technology.
And that's no secret.
I mean, we see it happening.
We see it at just the tip of the iceberg.
We see happening in public and mainstream.
So, when I talk about technology in the human body, I'm talking about computer chips in the brain, chemicals in the blood, RFID chips, under the skin, nanosensors in the circulatory system, respiratory system, it goes on and on.
A concerted effort to replace our biology on the one hand, and on the other hand, in the other part of the book, is the best science of the modern world.
The new discoveries are telling us, and this is a mind-blower, what I'm going to say.
The new discoveries are telling us that in many cases our own natural biology not only meets, but it exceeds the capacity of the technology that we're being asked to accept into our bodies.
That's a message very few people are receiving.
I'm sorry to interrupt, but I really resonate with that and I've said many times to people that the greatest neural network computer in the universe is in your skull and the greatest nanotechnology.
technology in existence is already built into your immune system.
And you have this innate wisdom.
Your body has this wisdom.
And the thing is, you don't need to know how it works.
You don't have to tear it apart and know all the pieces.
You just have to allow it to work and give it the resources it needs, right?
Well, this is the beauty of who we are.
And again, we could do many hours on this conversation, you and I, together, based on what I've seen of Of your work, your conversations in the past, the books you've written, and where I am right now.
The evidence, the best science of the modern world, and the evidence is telling us, first of all, that we are not what we've been told.
We're so much more than, probably more than we've even allowed ourselves to imagine that we could possibly be.
We know that our species, the first of our species, Appeared on this earth mysteriously.
We emerged about 200,000 years ago.
That's not that long, about 10,000 generations.
We've been here, and we are the product of an intentional intervention of some kind.
And we have to say that, Mike, because the genetic mutations that give us our humanness, that give us our ability for empathy, sympathy, compassion...
Love, forgiveness, the ability to self-regulate our own biology at will, on demand.
Those abilities are the result of mysterious genetic processes, fusions of pre-existing chromosomes, the silencing of some genes, the removal of some, the addition of others.
And they did not happen slowly, gradually over a long period of time.
Science is showing us chromosome number two, human chromosome two.
For me, it's a smoking gun.
It is a fusion of two pre-existing chromosomes that give us our neocortex, where so much of our human capacities come from.
Chromosome 7, for 175 million years, it was stable for all primates.
All of a sudden, there was just this little tweak of a gene, a switch of two genes.
That connects our brain and our tongue and our jaw in just the right way so that we can have complex speech and sing.
You know, we share 98 to 99% of our DNA with a chimpanzee.
I'm a musician when I'm not doing this, and I'll tell you as a musician, I've never seen a chimpanzee sing Led Zeppelin's Stairway to Heaven.
And I seriously ask that question.
Why is that when we have so much in common?
And the reason is because of chromosome 2. And the kicker is all of these mutations occurred pretty much in the same period of time.
Quickly, they did not occur slowly, gradually over a long period of time.
So the very essence of who we are appears, and scientists know this, they say these mutations cannot happen under natural conditions and they have to stop there because it opens the door to a conversation that many scientists prefer not to have and they believe science is not equipped to have.
And that is a conversation of some kind of intelligent intervention.
So I'm going to stop that part of the conversation there and just say we appear to be a highly advanced, technologically sophisticated, soft technology.
Not a hard, primitive technology like computer chips and chemicals and wires.
We're more than that.
We're neurons.
We are cell membranes.
We are ion potentials moving across cell walls.
And you nailed it, Mike, just now when you said that we have the ability.
One of the hallmarks of an advanced technology is the more complex it is behind the scenes, the simpler the user interface.
And this is what you said.
We don't need to understand how everything works.
Our user interface is the core of our most ancient and cherished.
Spiritual traditions, not religions, because the religions came along later and wrapped the rules and the dogma around pre-existing spiritual understandings that have been with us for a long time.
So our user interface, what is that?
Thought, feeling, emotion, breath, focus, movement, and nutrition.
And it is the combination of those interfaces that we now call epigenetic triggers that gives us The ability to transcend in a healthy way, whatever life brings to our doorstep, that is the ability that is being denied by replacing our natural biology with technology.
The tech cannot do what we do through our natural biology.
And when we replace the biology, our natural biology, actually technology in the human body, the natural systems begin to atrophy.
And we lose the very essence of our humanness.
Well, I love the way that you're describing this.
And now I immediately, I need to get your book, Pure Human, and go through it.
I love the way you're describing this.
It makes so much sense.
Now, this technology attempt to replace what we have innately, this is a theme that I've talked about as well.
And let me give our audience an example of what this sounds like.
When we see AI companies saying, hey, we have to have funding for AI because AI will be able to create a little tiny machine that will go through your blood and it will seek out cancer cells and it will kill those cancer cells.
And I'm thinking...
We already have that machine.
We already have it, yeah.
It's already there, and we don't need AI.
You've got to eat some celery and some broccoli.
But what I really want to ask you, I mean, so we both agree, technology is trying to give us a new God to worship instead of understanding the innate power that we were granted by whoever or whatever created us,
right? And here's the question.
Has our knowledge of our capabilities been deliberately suppressed for centuries?
This is why I asked you how deep you want to go with this, because there's a missing piece, and let me just identify that missing piece.
I'm a scientist.
I'm a degree scientist.
I'm a geologist by a degree, a strong background in life sciences, math, physics, computer science.
I was trained as a systems thinker.
What that means is, for me, I have been compelled through over 70 years of my life to look at the big picture to see what's driving not just the changes in the world, but the changes in my own life.
I have to understand that for myself.
And then forget about the big picture, zero in on the nanosecond of my life, and how I can be the best version of myself, knowing what it means to that big picture.
So here's the big picture.
Here's the missing piece.
What I'm going to share, I've lost friendships by having this conversation.
We've lost business by having this conversation.
It's uncomfortable for some people, and I think it's necessary, Mike.
And I want to preface it by saying this isn't a religious conversation, but it is a deeply spiritual conversation.
There is a strong body of evidence to support, not just suggest, to support that we are We are immersed in an ancient struggle between two forces.
In the old text, they call them light and dark, good and evil, is the way it's commonly put today.
And, you know, when I was a kid, growing up in the 1950s, 60s, in the Midwest, I was born in northern Missouri, a rural area in northern Missouri.
We used to talk about good and evil, but it was a joke, you know, a little red devil on your shoulder with a pointy tail and...
You know, spike horns and an angel on the other's shoulder, and they were always going back and forth.
Evil is a very real force.
This isn't a metaphor.
And it has many faces.
There is psychological evil in the algorithms that divide us from our own families and from our communities and lead us to hate one another.
That is an expression of evil.
Certainly, there's kinetic evil.
It plays out on the battlefields of Gaza or Ukraine.
We all know about that.
There's technological evil.
And that's what we're talking about right now.
The purpose of the evil, this may be the most important thing that we can offer today, to bring it from something nebulous to something rock-solid and concrete.
What is the purpose of the evil in this world?
It is to deny our humanness, our human potential.
Now, the word that is used for that is human divinity.
But that word has been hijacked.
Divinity actually has nothing to do with religion, although it is linked to religions.
There are schools of divinity that make that connection.
But the contemporary definition, people can look this up.
The definition of divinity is the ability to transcend perceived limitations.
And that's it.
So to transcend, let's just break it down.
Transcend means to become more than.
Perceived. Means that we most probably are living limits that aren't even real.
They're not even ours.
We have been indoctrinated, coerced to accept these.
So now this is where the rubber meets the road.
We came into this world as the product of an intentional act, some kind of an intervention.
We were given the ability to transcend whatever it is that life brings to our doorstep in a healthy way and do it in a healthy way.
This is across the board, not just physiologically, but emotionally, mentally, spiritually, psychologically.
And the goal of evil is to deny our divinity.
So expressions of divinity, we've already talked about.
The ability to imagine.
That is an expression of human divinity.
To create, to innovate, to love, to forgive.
Empathy, sympathy, compassion.
The ability to heal.
How can we possibly?
Heal our bodies if we don't even accept the possibility of our own healing.
So the goal of the evil is to deny human divinity, to deny us from being the best version of ourselves.
This is why the transhuman movement and this is why the introduction of tech into the body I believe is so concerning and problematic is because it denies us the very essence of what it means to be human.
To the point where in one generation, those abilities begin to atrophy.
Through epigenetics passed on next generation, pretty soon, we lose the ability to do things that we've always been able to do.
A perfect example is the immune system.
I'm just going to back off.
Let me give a beautiful one example, and it'll apply to everything.
And it's kind of funny.
When I was a kid, back 50s and 60s, We were taught that we had a fixed number of brain cells.
That when we come into this world, you have X number of brain cells.
And every beer you drink is what I was told when I was in college.
Every glass of wine, you're losing brain cells.
Well, now we know that isn't true.
This doesn't justify the beer and the wine.
I'm not saying that.
What we know is there's a part of the brain, the hippocampus.
Mike, we're producing new brain cells until the last breath we take.
Of our lives in this world.
But there is a catch.
And the catch is this.
If those cells are not engaged in a meaningful way within about a week, about five to seven days, they will atrophy and they will die because of the way we work.
We are a biological system based on use it or lose it.
So if they're not engaged, the body says, oh, you know, you don't need me.
And those cells then will atrophy and die.
That principle applies to every facet of the human body: reproductive system, the immune system, everything in our bodies.
This is why it's dangerous to replace our natural biology with synthetics and technology, because we're sending the signal to our individual and collective genetics that we're not needed anymore.
That's how you lose a species.
That's what I wanted to say in the book.
Okay, that's really fascinating.
And yes, I was aware that the hippocampus continues to engage in neurogenerative behavior, and you have to exercise.
That's really critical.
A lot of people think that, because we've been told this, this is one of the big lies of aging, is that as you age, you naturally lose brain activity, or you naturally lose immune function.
I don't know about you, Greg, but I'm in my mid-50s.
I have never been cognitively more capable in my life than now.
In fact, I'm thinking in my 20s, when I was at university in the Midwest, my brain then was functioning at nothing compared to how it functions now.
It's self-evident, and I think that's true among many people who continue to exercise their brains and who don't watch TV.
But that leads me to my next question.
I want to show you something, Greg.
I did a book a few years ago.
It's just a free e-book called The Contagious Mind.
And I'm just showing you here on the screen.
And this book just talks about how your brain, your neural network, is both broadcasting and receiving.
It's sharing information, and it's also tuned in to receive information.
You know, 100th Monkey Concept and all these things.
You've spoken about a lot of this.
The technology, if the technology comes in and replaces the cosmic internet, which is the contagious mind, the difference is that, well, corporations and governments can spy on the technology, but they can't spy on your mind.
They don't yet have the ability to do that.
So surveillance is not possible when we are being fully human and expressing our consciousness and our minds and sharing information.
We cannot be surveilled.
Go ahead.
Well, this is the whole point of when we give our humanness away.
First of all, this is being marketed in a way I know it's happening and I'm still impressed.
The marketing is so slick and so sexy.
We have multiple generations now of young people who have been indoctrinated to believe that they are a flawed form of life.
This is what is taught.
It's what I was taught, and it's what's being taught.
When I do live events, I often have multi-generational families.
So it would be the grandparents, the parents, and the kids.
And the kids are younger, obviously.
They're usually early in high school.
And what they're being told is they are a flawed form of life, that they need something outside of themselves to be the best version of themselves, but that's okay.
Because they have that something.
So they're being conditioned to be victims.
And as a victim, you need a savior.
The savior is technology.
That's right.
So this is where young people are being taught to worship AI, taught to worship the computer chip.
So I have some studies.
We just did this two weeks ago in a live event here.
I'm coming to you from a studio in a rural area in northern New Mexico.
Oh, okay.
We did a beautiful event on native land here.
People from 23 countries that were here about two weeks ago, and we have a lot of young people, which is good.
I'm happy to see some young people in the audience.
So I showed them a couple of studies.
One of these was done by the Salk Institute in Northern California.
Actually, both were done by the Salk Institute in conjunction with the universities.
One of them, they compared the human brain to a microprocessor.
Now, when I first saw that, I said, man, you know, how are you going to make that comparison?
Well, this is fascinating because they equate the synapse between neurons in the human brain, the place where the spark jumps from one cell to another.
They equate those synapses to the transistors on a microprocessor.
And interestingly, I mean, you can't make this stuff up.
We have about the same number of synapses in the average human brain that we have in the most advanced microcosm.
Microprocessors that we have today.
So that's how they're doing the comparison.
Very complex study.
I'll just cut to the chase.
Bottom line, the human brain is 100-fold more efficient than those microprocessors are.
And here's the reason.
Because the microprocessors, are they fast?
Yes. Are they efficient?
Yes. Are they scalable?
And the answer is that the microprocessors, the chip, will always be limited by the physics of the stuff the chip is made of.
So the information can only, if it's silicon, if you look at a silicon atom, the information can only move across silicon atoms so fast.
And we're actually reaching those limits now.
It's called Moore's Law.
We're reaching the limits of processing capability.
Now, so is it fast?
Yes. Efficient?
Yes. Scalable?
No. Only up to a point.
Look at the human brain.
This is a mind blower here.
Are we fast, efficient?
Yes. Are we scalable?
What is the top end of a human brain in terms of processing?
And the answer is we don't know because we are so sophisticated.
Every time we reach what we believed was a limit in the past, we do what we are made to do.
We morph and adapt to the conditions of that new limit and open up an entire new spectrum of processing capabilities.
You know, Tibetan monks were the first to demonstrate this.
We used to believe that 40 cycles per second, 40 hertz, was the top end of human brain processing.
It was on textbooks, medical books, and all of that.
And the monks came in, and they said, well, you know, if we do a certain kind of meditation, we can exceed that.
And they bumped it up to 80 hertz, and the scientists said, okay, maybe we were wrong, but the brain can't possibly.
Human tissue cannot possibly sustain frequencies any higher than 80 hertz.
And the monks said, well, you know, if we do a different kind of meditation, they bumped it up to 100 cycles per second, had to have a new brain state called the gamma brain state.
And then they did it again, 120, 40, 60, 80, 200 cycles per second, hyper gamma brain state.
But then they did something that had never been done.
They went to the other end of the spectrum.
And they said, we can slow our brain state to less than one cycle per second, less than one hertz.
Wow. In the past, when we have seen that with someone in the hospital, we give up on them.
We say they're not there.
These monks are very awake, they're very conscious, and they have consciously slipped into a brain state that allows that.
It's called the epsilon brain state.
So the point is, we don't know what the upper end is of our...
We are processing right now because of the way we're designed.
But, you know, Mike, it doesn't stop there.
Every cell in the human body is a microcircuit, not a metaphor.
It literally is a gated circuit.
Input, output.
The components within the cell are the equivalents of transistors, resistors, capacitors.
Every cell produces a small electrical charge, about 0.07 volts per cell.
Not much, but you do the math.
50 trillion cells.
I've done this a few times.
It's about 3.5 trillion volts of electrical potential.
Now, what would it mean if we can harness that and apply it to our immune response or our deep states of intuition?
But it doesn't stop there because every cell emits photons of light, receives photons of light.
Light is information.
So we're in communication with the world around us.
And every cell...
I mean, it goes on and on and on, and this is the beauty, because we self-regulate through those triggers, thought, feeling, emotion, breath, nutrition, movement, focus.
And that's what sets us apart from all over life.
And that's what we stand to lose if we give ourselves away to the technology.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And if we de-emphasize what we are and try to rely just on a Neuralink implant, for example.
So you hit upon so many interesting things.
Number one, let me back up what you said about the voltage of our cells.
So even in mainstream science, and I run a science lab, I'm a published scientist in mass spectrometry, and we talk about voltage-gated calcium channels for cell membranes, right?
I mean, you've done so much speaking on cell membranes, you know this, but just for our audience, if you change the voltage potential around the cell, you open up or close down selective channels for the absorption of certain minerals.
It could be calcium, it could be zinc.
You've heard of zinc ionophores being opened up with quercetin.
Well, 5G exposure alters the voltage potential across your cell membranes, and it causes toxicity of calcium into the inner cell.
And so that's called the voltage-gated calcium channel.
The other thing you said, Greg, is that our cells emit photons of light.
You're absolutely correct about that.
Many mainstream scientists are completely unaware of this.
They think that only the eyes receive light.
That's not true.
We receive light everywhere, and we process light.
And think about it, Greg, how the entire computing industry is trying to develop light microprocessors.
I think China's leading the way on that right now.
They have some prototypes.
The light microprocessors, they produce a fraction of the heat, a fraction of the energy.
They're just beginning that, but we were born with it.
Well, there's so many paths we can follow here.
There's an emerging view, a philosophical view of our world, that was shared with me through a native man here in northern New Mexico.
When I met him, he said to me, Very clearly.
He said there was a time that people lived very differently.
They were close to the earth.
They knew who they were.
And they understood their power.
And he said something happened.
And even he said the elders don't know precisely why.
He said, but we got lost.
And we began to forget who we are.
And this is where it gets interesting.
He said we so longed for the abilities and the connections that we knew that we had in the past.
That we began to build machines outside of us that remind us of what we already are in here.
And we will continue to clutter the world around us until we recognize that we're actually mimicking in the external technology what we already are.
Then we let that go.
Our lives become much simpler, although we are a higher consciousness is essentially what he's talking about.
I was a senior computer systems designer for a company called Martin Marietta Defense Systems during the Cold War years.
And I've worked in high tech behind the scenes with security clearances.
I've seen the most advanced tech, at least in the 80s, and who knows where it all is now.
And what I can say is, as advanced as that tech was and as impressive as it is, Mike, I have yet to see any technology.
Built in the world around us that does not mimic in principle what we already do in our bodies, except we do it better.
Good point.
And the scientists are struggling to mimic.
A vaccine mimics what our bodies already do, except we do it better.
That's a perfect example.
I want to add, too, that the neural network computation that is happening in your body, and as you know, you have neurology all throughout.
Physically, the second brain, in the gut, etc.
You actually have computational systems throughout your body, right?
And even the skin, the surface of the skin, everything, and some would argue even fields right outside your body as well, are information fields.
And information is engaged in computation constantly.
Now, here's the thing I want to point out to people.
You get answers without even having to ask the question.
Greg, I've been doing a lot of prompt engineering of the AI systems, right?
I'm an expert now in prompt engineering just from testing our own AI.
You have to ask the question first, and then the system generates the answer using an enormous amount of energy, right?
In your body, in your mind, you have something called intuition.
You don't even have to ask the question.
Your body has done the math.
Your neurology has engaged in the computation, it's taken in the input, it's processed it, and it's given you, it's bubbled up a feeling, which is like either, you know, positive, negative, whatever.
But isn't that actually what's going on?
You are a computational miracle.
It's precisely what's going on.
There was a, say, I didn't know where we're going to go with this, so I'm going to do this from memory.
There was a study, peer-reviewed study, it was released at the Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
In the late 2000s, that's how far back it was.
And the concluding statement, I'm going to cut to the chase.
The concluding statement, and I'm doing this from memory, it says, there's compelling evidence to suggest that the physical heart is coupled to a field of information that is not bound...
By the laws of time and space.
So what this is saying, and now, so it was 1991, Discovery was made.
It wasn't published in the tech journals until'94 of 40,000, approximately 40,000 specialized cells in the human heart that are essentially neurons.
They're sensory neurites, is what they're called.
It's not that they just appeared.
When they say discovered, I have to laugh.
They've always been there.
Nobody ever thought to look.
Why would you look for neurons that we are accustomed to thinking about in the brain?
Why would you look for that in the heart?
When they found these 40,000 sensory neurites, what they found is we have a very sophisticated neural network in the heart that is independent of the cranial network in the brain that thinks, feels, remembers, senses,
processes, and heals.
Absolutely. Independently of the brain.
What that says, this neural network is linked to a field.
I mean, this is just an astounding thing for a peer-reviewed journal, scientific journal to say, linked to a field of information that's not bound by the laws of physics.
It transcends time and space.
That's right.
This is the reason, and I share a study in the book, there was a mother in Brisbane, Australia.
Whose son was serving in the military in Afghanistan.
She woke up at three o'clock in the morning, sensed that he was in trouble, called his commanding officer.
The commanding officer said,"He's on a routine patrol.
Everything's fine.
I'll have him call you when he gets back." Well, in fact, he'd hit an IED, a roadside bomb, his convoy.
He was not hit.
The vehicle in front of him was hit, and it actually threw him from the vehicle, and he ended up...
Once he regained consciousness, he pulled the survivors and saved them from the burning vehicles, went back, Skyped with his mom and his wife, as he did every day, and that's when they learned what had happened.
So the question is, how did she know before his commanding officer that he was even in trouble?
This is where the information comes in.
If we're not bound by time and space, that is what that...
Deep intuition is all about from the human heart.
And this is why our most ancient and cherished spiritual traditions, not religious, but the spiritual traditions typically begin in the human heart.
And it's where we, our ability to self-regulate our bodies begins.
And, you know, I talk about in the book, and many people have heard of coherence between the heart and the brain that facilitates...
Many of the extraordinary potentials that we're talking about.
This is so critical, and I want to show your books again.
Here are some of them on Amazon.
Pure Human, I think, is your most recent, and there are others.
Most recent, yeah.
But what you hit upon is so crucial, and also we've covered many documented cases, I know you've mentioned this before, of organ transplants, where a person takes on an organ, and then they take on the personality, traits, and sometimes speaking characteristics, sometimes addictions of the donor.
So the information field that you're speaking to is absolutely critical.
So let me bring in this piece.
Maybe this is the conspiracy angle here, but I believe that there are evil forces, even as you said, that are preventing us or trying to stop us from learning who we are, from fully expressing our humanity.
And they do this by actually...
They leverage these morphic fields of information for negativity.
They force people to be preoccupied with war, with hatred, with wanting destruction, and then the other selfish things, the greed, ego, and so on.
These are all distractions to warp this transmission capability, this information sharing capability, to basically hijack it With an energetic virus of negativity that stops us from becoming who we are.
I love it when you talk that way, Mike.
Does that make sense?
It makes total sense.
This is where I asked earlier how deep we want to go with this.
When we give ourselves away to the technology, first of all, this is nothing new.
I mean, the desire to change the world around us has been happening You know, forever, from clear-cutting of forests to fossil fuels and all of that.
For the first time, Mike, we have the technology that allows us not only to change the world around us, but to change the world within us.
And that is a stated goal from UN projects.
I was on a UN NGO up until 2022.
I pulled out because the UN is not what the UN used to be.
I'm going to be really clear.
There are very good people working at the UN.
And there is no single UN.
There are UNs within UNs.
It's a big corporation.
In many respects, the UN has been hijacked through an agreement signed in 2019 to work with the World Economic Forum because they believe that their shared vision for where the world needs to go was so similar.
That they would have synergy by working together.
So the WEF had no teeth to implement their visions.
The UN does.
And by the two working together, we're now seeing a concerted effort.
And the date that we're looking at, the reason that we're seeing this increased chaos.
That date is in the realm of the year 2030.
And I say that.
It's not that it's like January 1st at midnight on 2030 or something like that.
But they have earmarked that date where they want the systems in place to remake the world in ways that we have never seen and in ways that are not good for us.
When we give our biology away to technology, we become vulnerable.
And susceptible to the ideas and the agendas of others when we give our divinity away.
Because divinity is directly linked to freedom and sovereignty.
The freedom to imagine and create and share ideas with one another and to love without fear and forgive and heal.
This is literally our human destiny if we fulfill the potential within our bodies.
Our fate is what happens if we don't.
Our fate is what happens if we succumb to the attempts to deny our humanness, to deny our divinity.
Now, the WEF, you know, they meet at Davos every year.
I know you and your community know this very well, in case there's someone watching that may not.
And they summarize the outcome of that.
The early in the year meeting is to give them direction for the year ahead.
And in a single sentence, Klaus Schwab identified this.
He said, the goal is to merge the merging of our natural world with our digital world.
And then there was a long pause when he was at the podium.
And he said, and of course, our biological world.
Well, the natural world has already been tokenized and digitized.
And of course, the digital world is a digital world.
The missing piece to remake the world in the image of what is seen by these organizations is us.
They cannot do it if we don't give our humanness away to the technology.
So this is why I feel what I call a sense of graceful urgency.
Graceful in the sense that we have the time.
To make the choice is urgent in the sense that if we're going to do it, we've got about four and a half years.
And we are all going to be inundated with marketing, coerced, in some cases mandated, to embrace technology, not just in the world, but into our bodies.
And Mike, the young people are so vulnerable because they make it look so good.
They say we will be safer, we will be freer, our lives will be easier.
So when I'm with those young kids, I say young kids, they're young adults, and nobody has ever told them, Mike, how beautiful and precious and sacred and powerful the gift of their human body is.
They've been indoctrinated to believe that they're broken and flawed and powerless and that they are craving something to replace them.
No one has told them.
And so they are very susceptible to this kind of marketing.
Gregor, you're right.
And during the COVID years, we were told that the immune system is a conspiracy theory.
That there's no such thing as your immune system.
Evil has many, many...
Deception is the name of the game, Mike.
And I apologize for interrupting.
I'm very passionate about this.
We're barreling down the road.
Toward a convergence point.
And that's why you're seeing a heightening of the chaos.
That's why you're seeing all of the breakdowns of the systems and the wars.
And you nailed it when you said distractions.
The more that we can be kept spun up and in fear with the events of the world around us, the less we will focus.
On preserving and engaging with and developing the gift that we have within us.
That's why you got to go back to the big picture.
These are expressions of evil.
And there's a whole conversation we can have about why and who and how.
And I also want to be clear that I think individuals can perform evil acts.
Out of ignorance and not actually be evil people.
I'm not saying everyone that implements a UN program is an evil person because they're naive.
And I've worked with a lot of these.
They're good people and they think they're doing good things in the world.
They've never looked at the small print.
They've never looked at the goals that the UN has stated.
For example, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals.
UN SDG 2030 is what it's called.
Those are beautiful goals that anyone would want, including myself.
Who wouldn't want an end to poverty?
Who wouldn't want an end to disease in the world?
Who wouldn't want food security?
Now you look at the fine print.
How do we achieve those?
It is horrendous.
It is absolutely horrendous.
Yeah. And a lot of those goals count on reducing global population of humans.
Even as we have the rise of AI robots that are coming online, I want to ask you about that here in a second.
But let me just state for the audience here, I will never allow myself to be implanted with any technology.
I don't have any tattoos.
I don't do piercings.
None of that stuff.
I'm not against somebody who has a tattoo.
I'm just saying that I...
I keep my body as clean and as pristine as possible.
I'm drinking superfoods all day.
That's who I am.
But the technology that they want to implant in you, you're right.
The youth feel like it's a convenience.
Oh, I don't have to carry my wallet.
I can just wave my hand over the cashier console, whatever.
Or they say, well...
I don't have anything to hide.
Why should I be afraid of the government having a neural link and reading my thoughts and recording my inner speech?
Because they say these things.
And you and I are thinking, are you insane?
Can I just add something, what you just said?
I just watched an interview that Ray Kurzweil did with Neil deGrasse Tyson.
For those that don't know Ray Kurzweil, he's a futurist.
Brilliant man.
He's a writer.
He's written a lot of sci-fi books.
And he is really good at prediction in terms of where tech is going to be in a certain amount of time.
And he's a Google fellow.
Well, he is right now director of at least one aspect of AI at Google.
I don't know if he's director of all AI, but one facet of AI at Google.
And they were having this conversation, very casual conversation, and the implications are just stunning, astounding.
What he was saying is that within, he was saying by the year 2032, 2033 is what he's looking at.
He said that we will have the technology, already have the technology in our bodies that links, it doesn't just link us, and this is the key, and you have to listen to the language closely.
That extends our neocortex into the cloud.
So now he's not just talking about accessing data occasionally on demand.
If we are extending our neocortex into the cloud, that's the Borg.
That's the hive mind.
It means everybody is thinking everybody else's thoughts.
It's all about power and control.
Well, and let me mention, Google in particular has a history of developing AI to use in weapon systems to slaughter innocent human beings.
And that's what Google's own...
We do.
Yeah, and this is...
I mean, there's so many...
Why would that be happening?
There's a fundamental battle between good and evil.
And apparently that battle, it's been going on since the first...
Actually, if you are to believe the ancient texts, that battle began in a realm before we appeared on Earth 200,000 years ago.
We were essentially born into a struggle.
And the struggle is over us.
And what it is that we have dominion over, who or what has dominion over us.
And, you know, that all sounds like pretty weird.
I mean, I'm the first to admit that sounds like some pretty, pretty out there stuff.
And then you look at the world and that's exactly what's happening in the world right now.
So ultimately, I want to say this in case we run out of time.
We're talking about a lot of stuff.
It can be concerning.
It can be frightening to a lot of people, especially.
And I'm going to be the first to admit, Mike, this is a very different way of thinking for some people.
Maybe not for everyone on your channel, but someone just picked up, you know, and in tune to this.
It's a very different way of thinking.
What I want to say is that this is a different kind of struggle.
In the old ways of thinking, we think of conflict as force against force, where one has to overcome another.
This is something very different.
This is a deeply spiritual process.
We don't want to win the struggle because that would imply the old ideas that keep us stuck in the fear that divides us right now from our families and our own power.
We don't want to win.
We want to triumph.
Triumph is different than winning.
When we triumph, this is why we go back to the very first part of this conversation.
It's transformative.
If the goal of evil is to deny human divinity love, forgiveness, empathy, sympathy, compassion, healing, if the goal of evil is to deny that divinity...
The way that we triumph is by living our divinity.
We live the best version of ourselves.
You don't have to get spun up in all of the diversions and all the distractions.
We live.
We imagine freely.
We share our ideas.
We innovate.
We create.
We heal.
We forgive one another.
We have empathy for our brothers and sisters.
In doing that, not only is it good for us, not only is it good for our bodies, but we triumph.
In this battle, and it all comes down to love.
Yes. And this is the question that's up for every one of us right now.
We're not finished, but I don't want to run out of time without saying this.
The question is this.
Do we love ourselves enough to accept the gift of our humanness, the gift of our divinity, and the power and responsibility that comes with our divinity?
Do we love ourselves enough to accept those things?
And, you know, Mike, it's not one of those questions you answer with words.
You answer, we answer by example.
It's the way we live our lives.
How do we treat ourselves?
How do we treat one another?
How do we solve problems in the world?
And this is where our spiritual traditions come in.
We each do the best that we can do.
It's not about making someone wrong, though.
And I think it's important.
It's not about making someone wrong, and it's important to share these ideas in kindness.
Not from fear and anger and hate and retribution.
This is what we're up against, and we have everything we need to transcend.
And the responsibility is that we have to accept the truth of our humanness and our divinity.
And that's a tall order for all of us.
Well, that is a tall order.
And, you know, it's hard for me to be kind sometimes when I'm talking about those who are trying to exterminate us, right?
People ask me, like, hey, I want to fight the system.
How do I fight the system?
Often my answer is, grow a home garden.
Yeah, exactly.
You know?
And witness the miracle of Mother Nature synthesizing all the nutrition and medicine that you need for free out of the sky from carbon dioxide and sunlight and water, photosynthesis, and it didn't charge you a dime and you didn't have to download an update.
You know?
Yeah, well, this is us loving ourselves.
But you use the word fight, and I just...
Didn't know if we wanted to get into that, but this is important.
We all have inner warriors, and I have an inner warrior.
And we all have to fight sometimes.
And that's part of our nature.
On a deeply spiritual level, the fight may have the same outcomes.
Someone is going to get hurt in a fight, and someone is going to get hurt less in a fight, either emotionally or psychologically or physically.
But here's the thing, spiritually.
Do we fight from our love of our family and our community and the world that's behind us?
Are we leading, fighting from our love of what we know is possible, or are we fighting because we have succumbed to the fear and the anger?
And the hate for those that we perceive as our enemies in front of us.
Yeah, really, really good point.
Exactly. It's critical to fight from a place of preserving our humanity.
It's basically, it's self-defense in that case.
It's a defensive thing.
Now, before we run out of time...
We still have just a few minutes left.
I have one more big question to ask you.
Let me give out your website again.
It's gregbrayden.com.
Greg is spelled with two G's.
Well, three total, but two at the end.
Thank you.
Yeah, right.
People are like, but I did.
I used two G's.
One at the beginning, one at the end.
No, it's three G's total.
gregbrayden.com.
So what I want to ask you, Greg, is how we walk this tightrope of using technology to promote pro-humanism points of view.
To my crew, show my desk, if you would, please.
So here I am with this microscope, and I've got an incubator there, and a computer and so on.
I'm using this technology to show people some of what's falling out of the sky, right?
The chemtrails, and then we use mass spectrometry equipment.
We did heavy metals testing, and we can see the barium and aluminum elements that are falling out of the sky, etc.
So we use technology, and I'm even, of course, building an AI engine.
That has a pro-human knowledge base.
How do we, Greg, how do we keep that balance where we use the technology of the day without being sucked into it?
You know, Mike, this is a question.
I was a problem solver for Fortune 500 companies from the late 1970s into the early 90s.
Defense industry during the Cold War was only a part of that.
I was first tech ops manager at Cisco Systems in 1991.
Wow. Wow.
That's great.
Well, these are the kinds of questions that we're asked almost every day.
And I don't know that there's a single answer.
I think there are many solutions.
What we know is the technology is never right, wrong, good or bad.
It's the thinking underlying the technology and how it's applied in our lives.
The computer chip in the brain, for example.
And I don't want people to demonize those chips.
That could be the most beautiful thing for a man or woman who's given their lives in service to our country, come back missing arms and legs.
And they get a chip in the brain that speaks to the prosthetics of new arms and legs that allow them to hold their baby and brush their teeth and feed themselves.
What a beautiful thing.
Same tech.
So it's the thinking underlying it.
I think our best bet, and I love technology outside of the body.
I think what we do is we capitalize upon the tech that's available and repurpose that tech for the very things that we're talking about.
We repurpose the marketing, repurpose all of those things to share the deep truth of what it means to be human, not to convince or persuade anyone, but I think we owe it to ourselves to know what it is we're giving away before we give it away.
I love your label, to repurpose.
Yeah, what I've found, Mike, is in most audiences, I don't have to convince or persuade them, when they see the facts, when the facts are clear, the choices become obvious.
But nobody's given them the facts.
When they see the potential within their own bodies that no one has ever told, not been told, but they've been told the opposite.
The body's been denigrated and demonized.
Carbon, in general, Has been demonized.
We are a carbon-based life, and young people have been taught to hate and fear anything that has to do with carbon.
So when they see the potential within their bodies, most people say, my God, I never knew this.
And it deepens the sense of their value and their worth and the potential.
Maybe... We do have a relationship with some higher power that has never been made clear.
And these are tech people I'm talking to.
And they're saying, we don't want to give this away.
We don't want to give this away.
And also, I just want to say that the techies, even people like Yuval Harari, you know, with the WEF, who's had the ear of Klaus Schwab for many years, or Ray Kurzweil.
I'm not saying...
I don't know them personally.
But I have spoken to techies like them personally.
And here's what's happening.
These are people that are brilliant, men and women.
They're given unlimited resources of advanced technology, all the money they need, and the freedom to push that tech as far as they're going to push it.
And so I say to them, okay, what does that mean for society?
What does that mean for communities?
What does it mean for families?
And everyone I've asked, they gave me the same answer, Mike.
They said, don't ask me.
That's above my pay grade.
I said, let somebody else figure out the implications.
We're just pushing the technology.
So it's up to us to reel that in.
It's up to us to claim our humanness and to place value in our divinity, take it out of the religion and away from the baggage of all the religion and say, look, this is our potential.
And I believe it is our destiny to awaken.
Yes. So the 2030 end date is actually a catalyst.
It's only four and a half years from now.
That is the catalyst that is forcing many people to get off the fence.
They're saying, are we going to accept this tech into our bodies in terms of legislation?
The laws are already being written.
Policies are already being created.
Are we going to accept those laws and those policies?
Or are we going to claim?
The truth of our humanness and preserve our humanness because you can't sit on the fence.
That's right.
The mass awakening is coinciding with the mass sleepening at the same time.
It's happening together.
Let me give you this example of repurposing because you'll love this.
Myself and my team, we spent now about a year and a half trying to figure out how to alter AI models.
It's called domain adaptation, how to really change its knowledge.
We finally figured it out.
We finally cracked the code about a month ago.
And the answer, you'll love this.
So you prompt a model.
You monitor all of its neurological nodes, its vectors.
Then you prompt it.
Like, tell me about why COVID vaccines are safe and effective.
And then you watch which neurons light up.
You take that set of neurons and you put that over here in the training targets set.
And then you train it with new information.
Hey, the COVID vaccine actually does not prevent transmission, does not prevent infections.
But in order to save compute, you only train that set of neurons that lit up when you were asking it the questions.
So we're using the neurology of the pro-pharma bias models.
As a confessional to tell us which neurons we need to target for retraining.
It's beautiful.
And it works.
It's beautiful.
I love it.
And I knew a little bit from John, our mutual friend, John Peterson, about what you're doing.
I didn't know to that degree.
And I'm not surprised at all.
And I'm really happy to know that you and your team are doing what you're doing there, Mike.
Thank you for all that you're doing in that direction.
Well, thank you, Greg, for all that you're doing.
Thank you for spending time with us today.
Let me give out your website again, gregbrayden.com, and it's spelled G-R-E-G-G, Greg Brayden.
There you can see it on your screen.
And then also, go to amazon.com and you can check out all of his books.
There are many more than this.
And most of his books are also on audible.com for the audiobook versions, which is often what I like to do.
Greg, I listen to books while I'm on my tractor, on my ranch, shredding mesquite trees.
Wow. Or whatever I'm doing, working on irrigation lines or whatever.
I'm a guy who believes in getting out in nature hands-on, getting in the dirt, growing food, planting orchards, whatever.
If I don't do that, I don't feel human.
I'm with you.
That's why we choose.
When I left the corporations, I made a choice.
I said, do I want to wake up in a place that's convenient?
And easy every day, which I had done all my life, or do I want to wake up surrounded by beauty and beauty won out?
1986, I bought a piece of land in the high desert four hours from the airport, an hour from the nearest town, and I'm still repairing the buildings.
Actually, this would be interesting.
You're familiar with Waldorf, Waldorf schools.
Yes. Rudolf Steiner.
This was one of the first Waldorf schools that was built in the U.S. in 1888.
No kidding?
Well, it had been abandoned, and I'm still learning about it.
I've learned everything from sheetrock and flagstone and sweating pipes to electrical.
We can't get anybody up there to work on the land.
Oh, I know that feeling.
Now, what state is that located in?
Northern New Mexico.
Northern New Mexico.
So, relatively dry climate?
8,000 feet above sea level, averaging 12 to 20 percent humidity most of the year.
But we have monsoons in July.
We get some pretty heavy rains.
Cold temperatures.
It's not an easy life, Mike, but it's a good life.
Oh, that's a great place for clarity, too, that higher elevation.
And you're also away from a lot of the electromagnetic interference of the cities and so on.
Hopefully. So, yeah.
Okay. Well, Mike, I'm not surprised, but I sense that our time would go by pretty quickly.
And this hour went by.
I know you've got another interview, and I do as well.
So I want to honor your next guest.
I want to honor your time.
Thank you for your trust, because the truth is, you had no idea what I was going to say, and you trusted me with your community anyway.
It means a lot to me.
And I want to thank that team working behind the scenes that we can't see that's doing a beautiful job right now.
They are.
They are indeed.
Thank you so much, Greg.
Have a wonderful day.
Take care.
You as well.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
Thank all of you for watching.
This has been another interview here on Brighteon.com.
You can watch them all for free at Brighteon.com.
You can also repost this on other channels and platforms at will.
Please do so.
And thank you for watching today.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, the founder of Brighteon.