| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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Noco Genius Rescue
00:08:28
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|
| Welcome to Bright Town Broadcasts News. | |
| I'm Mike Adams and it is Thursday, January 22nd, 2026. | |
| My goodness. | |
| Already Thursday. | |
| Look, the crazy storm continues to approach. | |
| And although it's shifted slightly north, it's not going to hit, let's say, my area as much, central Texas or southern Texas. | |
| It's going to hit Dallas-Fort Worth and then a lot of other states, including blanketing much of Arkansas and hitting, you know, Tennessee and a bunch of states all the way into the Carolinas and so on. | |
| It's going to be bad, apparently. | |
| I mean, if the forecasters are correct. | |
| In terms of ice, I know that we can all handle a little snow. | |
| Sometimes it's even enjoyable. | |
| But it's the ice that brings down the trees onto the power lines. | |
| And then the problems begin, you know, no power. | |
| So yesterday I posted a special report with the broadcast that gave you some reminders and some preparedness tips of what to do to get yourself ready for power outages. | |
| And of course, I went through a lot of that process myself earlier today because, hey, it's never too early to prepare for the storm. | |
| So, you know, I'm recording this late, late Wednesday night. | |
| So Wednesday during the day, I went around and I started everything that has an engine in it, including my diesel generator. | |
| I've got a pretty beefy diesel generator that powers my property and I've got a lot of diesel fuel stored for it. | |
| I've got, for example, a 500-gallon diesel tank sitting right next to it with a battery-powered pump in that case. | |
| But I also have manual pumps as backups. | |
| But I tried to start the engine and wouldn't, you know, didn't want to start. | |
| Ah, that's my fault for not starting it for three months or whatever it's been. | |
| So it took some effort. | |
| I had to bring in a booster, the Noco Genius battery booster that I talked about in 2021 that saved, helped me save my dog when my dog broke through the ice on my pond back then in 2021. | |
| Remember that story? | |
| I don't know if you've been listening that long. | |
| I saved my dog's life by breaking the ice so he could swim to shore. | |
| Now, he was a great Pyrenees, so he had a lot of fur and everything. | |
| But man, he would have died if I hadn't discovered him. | |
| Let me tell you, he would have died frozen in the ice. | |
| Anyway, I used the Noco Genius battery booster to start one of my machines at that time. | |
| So anyway, I also used the Noco today to start the generator. | |
| And finally, it started. | |
| I mean, I think I had to crank that thing 12 or 15 times. | |
| Finally, it started. | |
| And again, that's my fault for not starting it every week. | |
| You know, if you have a diesel engine, this is just a reminder. | |
| If you have a generator, especially diesel, but anything, start it right now. | |
| Make sure it's good. | |
| And, you know, I'm not sponsored by the Noco Genius Company. | |
| And that's spelled N-O-C-O. | |
| I mean, they're not a sponsor. | |
| I've never even talked to whoever that is that owns that company. | |
| But their products have become an essential part of my preparedness on my ranch. | |
| I think I own every Noco Genius. | |
| I think it's called Noco Genius or Noco Boost or whatever it is. | |
| I must own every product that they've made of every different size, including the monster charging device. | |
| Let me look this up. | |
| I want to get you the right name. | |
| Oh, yeah, here it is. | |
| Sorry, I had the name wrong. | |
| You can tell I'm not sponsored by Noco because I can't remember their product name. | |
| Anyway, it's Noco Boost Max. | |
| That sucker costs $1,200. | |
| Okay. | |
| This thing will start like semi-trucks. | |
| It's for 16 liter diesel engines. | |
| That's a massive engine. | |
| That's a bigger engine than any regular vehicle, you know, or truck even. | |
| That's an engine for tractors or big ass generators. | |
| So anyway, yes, I spent $1,200 a couple years ago on this device and I used it today. | |
| Man, it just, boom, it rips. | |
| I mean, it does its job and then the engine starts. | |
| So something to keep in mind. | |
| They have far less expensive versions of the Noko Boost. | |
| I guess that's what it's called. | |
| They've got, again, they should be a sponsor of the show, but whatever. | |
| They've got like a $99 version. | |
| That's the Boost GB40, which is for boosting your little pansy ass car, your little mini Cooper or whatever you're driving, your Volkswagen bug from the 1970s. | |
| Yeah, it could start that. | |
| And it's only $99. | |
| So they do have a range of products. | |
| Anyway, I drive around with these things in my vehicles, by the way. | |
| But then again, I also drive around with, for example, the Milwaukee tire inflator. | |
| And no, Milwaukee, also not a sponsor. | |
| I've been through this a couple of times over the last few years. | |
| I just want to advocate for stuff that works, you know? | |
| So I've been through all the power tools. | |
| I've been through all the brands. | |
| I've tried all the inflators. | |
| I've tried all the batteries. | |
| You name it, man. | |
| Because I got to maintain a number of different vehicles on the ranch. | |
| Everything from little ranch vehicles to trucks to cars to excavators and skid steers and you name it. | |
| And so I've tried all this stuff. | |
| And for tools, for inflators, for cordless, anything, for me, it's Milwaukee. | |
| It always works. | |
| It just freaking always works. | |
| And then for battery boosters, it's Noco, N-O-C-O. | |
| And I don't even mess around with anything else because I don't like this is critical to work. | |
| When you're in the middle of an ice storm, you need this stuff to work. | |
| So, you know, what do they say? | |
| Buy nice or buy twice. | |
| Yeah, just get it right the first time. | |
| But anyway, boy, was I glad when that diesel engine came on on the big generator. | |
| And there's one other thing I want to mention. | |
| Did you know you can't run diesel generators for too long without having them under load? | |
| Because they actually need a load of at least about 30 to 35 percent in order to reach the internal temperature to cook off the diesel fuel residue. | |
| Yeah, and if you, if you run diesel engines for a long time without having them under load, you get what's called, I think it's called stacking, which is this ugly kind of gummy, black grease looking stuff coming out of your your um, your exhaust pipe, or maybe it's called piping or something like that. | |
| Uh anyway, it that's, that's not oil from your engine, that's actually diesel fuel residue that didn't get burned off. | |
| Okay, so just keep that in mind. | |
| If you have a diesel engine uh, from time to time make sure you run it under load for a couple of hours so that you can burn off all that garbage and you're not going to get whatever that's called stacking. | |
|
Detecting Part Per Trillion
00:03:31
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|
| Is it called stacking? | |
| I don't know it's. | |
| Whatever it is is ugly, I don't know, toxic stuff coming out of the pipe. | |
| We should just call it lindsey gramming, I think, is probably the appropriate term. | |
| Hey, you know uh, yesterday I played for you a really cool video from my lab where we have achieved now this really great method for testing dioxins and we were running a test on dioxins at 10 parts per trillion and getting very good peaks and I I forgot to tell you the signal to noise ratio on those peaks and the signal to noise ratio was over 42. | |
| Now uh, if you're wondering well, is that good? | |
| Well, it turns out that if you want to go down to what's called the limit of detection, which is the lowest amount of something that your instrument can see, or otherwise known as lod limit of detection, the lod requires a signal to noise ratio of typically three to one. | |
| Four to one would be better, five to one even better, but sort of, in a pinch you could, you could maybe say three to one, but I don't really go on that because I like to quant everything. | |
| So I I run on what's called the limit of quantitation, or loq, and the l? | |
| Oq. | |
| Typically in most lab methods the low q is 10 to 1, or sometimes 12 to 1, but 10 to 1 is a good rule of thumb for that. | |
| So your signal has to be 10 times higher than the background noise. | |
| Is what that means, 10 to 1, and if you get a 10 to 1 peak, then you can quant that and then you can run the calculations against your calibration curve and you can say, aha that's, you know, that's like three picograms of dioxin chemical, you know whatever. | |
| So we were getting? | |
| We were getting 42 to 1 signal to noise at 10 parts per trillion. | |
| So what does that tell you? | |
| Probably we could detect one part per trillion at roughly a four to one signal to noise ratio. | |
| Now, it's not always linear like that, just to be clear. | |
| It's not always linear, but as a rough estimate that's probably likely. | |
| Um, that's pretty amazing because if you think about it you know a part per million is a very tiny amount Of something, and then a part per billion is 1,000 times smaller than a part per million, and then a part per trillion is 1 million times smaller than a part per million. | |
| It's like, what? | |
| You can see a part per trillion on this instrument? | |
| Yes, yes, we can. | |
| And that's the magic of a triple quad gas chromatography instrument from Agilent. | |
| You know, it's got this 60-meter column. | |
| These gas columns are crazy long, right? | |
| Like liquid chromatography columns or LC columns, they might be, you know, six inches long. | |
|
60-Meter GC Coil
00:03:16
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|
| But gas chromatography, oh, that thing, it's 60 meters long. | |
| You're like, well, how do you fit it in your lab? | |
| Well, because it's all coiled up in a spiral. | |
| You know, it's a giant coil. | |
| It looks like somebody's been winding copper for a generator or something. | |
| But that's how that works. | |
| It's literally a 60-meter column. | |
| And because of the extreme length of the column, and well, for a lot of reasons, you can detect things at ridiculously low concentrations. | |
| So here's the good news: pretty soon, I'm going to be rolling out an announcement about the official lab testing of Health Ranger store that we will be testing all animal-derived products for the full dioxin compound array. | |
| And I mentioned what all those were yesterday. | |
| You know, you remember the PCDDs and the T C D and the HP C D Ds and the O C D's. | |
| Remember all that? | |
| The octachlorodibenzo P dioxins. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, all that stuff. | |
| That's what we're going to be testing for. | |
| And for once, I'm a little bit afraid to run these tests on things that I buy at the grocery store. | |
| We have a rule in our lab, which is that you should never test what you eat. | |
| It's kind of a joke, but it's because one of our lab technicians over the years, he used to go out and eat a lot of Chick-fil-A. | |
| He loved Chick-fil-A. | |
| And myself and the other analysts, we were always giving him crap about that. | |
| I'm like, dude, you work in a food science lab and you eat Chick-fil-A? | |
| He's like, yeah, I love Chick-fil-A. | |
| I love their chicken. | |
| And I said, hey, have you ever tested it in our lab since you work here? | |
| He's like, no, I don't. | |
| I don't dare test it. | |
| I don't want to know. | |
| So that gave rise to the rule: don't test what you eat. | |
| But that rule doesn't apply to me. | |
| I always test what I eat. | |
| But I'm talking about other people who work there because some of them, they want to keep eating their favorite junk food, you know. | |
| But they also work at a food science lab. | |
| So it's kind of like don't ask, don't tell policy. | |
| Remember that with the U.S. military? | |
| Don't ask, don't tell. | |
| Yeah, what are you eating? | |
| I don't know. | |
| We don't want to know. | |
| Okay, well, that's why I give them crap every day about eating Chick-fil-A. | |
| Anyway, then a couple years later, that same analyst said to me that he gave up eating Chick-fil-A. | |
| I said, why? | |
| He said, he said, well, one day he tried to read the ingredients and he realized there's like 30 ingredients in there and he didn't recognize most of those names and he's a food scientist. | |
|
How I Clone My Brain
00:15:24
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|
| I'm like, yeah, well, good for you. | |
| You know, start drinking smoothies, man. | |
| You'll be healthier. | |
| All right. | |
| So switching up topics here, I would like to mention that our book creation engine, BrightLearn.ai, now has 24,000 books. | |
| 24,000 books. | |
| Oh my goodness. | |
| It's a big number. | |
| And of course, we have a lot of new features coming for brightlearn.ai. | |
| And I haven't actually been working on that site lately because I've been working on the new technology, which is I put out a little podcast yesterday that I'm going to include here today. | |
| It's called How I Clone My Brain. | |
| Yeah, what is it? | |
| How I Clone My Brain into an Article Writing AI Breakthrough is the official title. | |
| And I do want to explain that here today because I did manage to kind of clone my writing style, my knowledge base, my writing personality, because I've been writing for 20 plus years. | |
| And so there's a lot of examples. | |
| And I've been able to put that together now, which is enabling me to create a lot more important articles on naturalnews.com. | |
| So if you go to naturalnews.com now, you're going to see at least two or three articles from me each day. | |
| And those are articles that I do the prompt engineering for them and I assign the research for the articles. | |
| But I'm not typing out every word of those articles. | |
| Instead, I built a system that does the typing on my behalf. | |
| And I wanted to explain that, what that technology is here in a special report. | |
| And then after that, I've got some very startling news here about something that's about to be released in terms of AI models. | |
| And it's a very big deal. | |
| I'm going to try to avoid making it too geeky. | |
| But I'll give you that update after this special report. | |
| So here we go. | |
| How I clone my brain and what this means for you also, for all of us, because this technology is going to reshape the way we interact, the way we learn, the way we publish, the way we do lots of things. | |
| And I want to make sure we use this technology for freedom, liberty, health freedom, pro-human narratives, you know, instead of the anti-human nonsense that we get from all the globalists. | |
| So enjoy this special report. | |
| And then we will continue on the other side. | |
| I have upgraded myself from an article writer to an article architect. | |
| And I want to share this with you because this is the future of things to come. | |
| But, well, it's here now. | |
| And you're going to see a lot more of this across the board. | |
| So my name is Mike Adams. | |
| As you know, I'm the Health Ranger. | |
| Thank you for joining me. | |
| I'm an AI developer. | |
| I've been working on AI technology for two years now, building AI engines, curating data, lots and lots of data for AI training as well as context and research indexes. | |
| I single-handedly built the brightlearn.ai book creation engine website that's very popular. | |
| Over 6,000 authors there have created over 21,000, well, I'm sorry, it's 22,000 books now on a variety of subjects and they're all free to download. | |
| And we have audio books coming shortly. | |
| And by the way, that makes us the most prolific book publisher in the world by far. | |
| We'll be publishing at least 15,000 to 20,000 books per month from here forward with lots and lots of audio books in multiple languages available to download for free. | |
| So pretty cool project there. | |
| And so I took all the knowledge and experience from that project and I applied it to one of my pet projects that I've had in my mind for these two years, which was I wanted to create a system that if I gave it the right prompt, the right context, the right research hints and things like that, the right sources, that it could write an article like me. | |
| And I'm happy to announce that that milestone has now been achieved. | |
| And I'm now publishing these articles on Naturalnews.com and they're they're awesome they're. | |
| They're indistinguishable from articles that I would manually type out myself. | |
| So they're written with my inspiration, with my direction. | |
| I'm the architect of these articles, but i'm not typing them out and I don't even have to do most of the research. | |
| I I always do some of the research and I give sources and so on. | |
| I create a really good prompt like how I want this written, or what's the emphasis, the angle of the story, things like that. | |
| But then I let the engine that I built go off and do even more research and bring in more information from multiple sources including, you know, website searching, as well as books and science, papers and interviews and lots and lots of things. | |
| So if you want to see the results of this, you can just go to Naturalnews.com and you can click on any of my recent articles and you'll start to see anywhere from two to six articles per day that are now authored by myself that are using this new engine. | |
| Now I had a lot of people I mentioned this in the podcast yesterday because I wanted to just be very public about this. | |
| Like, I am not typing out all the words in these articles. | |
| But i'm still the architect of these articles and I want to explain how that works, because I got a lot of questions from when I mentioned this yesterday. | |
| People were texting me and saying, wait a second, can you explain this more like, how does this thing write like you exactly? | |
| Because it's not like prompting, you know chat, Gpt or something and just saying hey, generate an article like me, and that will produce hallucinations and all kinds of horrible results and it'll be all biased in favor of big pharma. | |
| You know things like that. | |
| So what I built is a. | |
| It's a very complex engine that had to be trained extensively on my own writing. | |
| So yes, I can build the same thing for anyone if there are lots of examples of their writing, and the more examples the better. | |
| But I've written, you know, 10,000 articles and I've done thousands of interviews and I don't know how many 10,000 podcasts or whatever the number is, over the last 20 plus years. | |
| So I've got this massive content database to work with, and the more content you have, the easier this process is. | |
| But let me explain to you what this is and why. | |
| Why I'm still the author of these articles, even though I'm not typing all the words. | |
| Why should I? | |
| So let's let's back up. | |
| Actually, let's go through a little bit of history of writing. | |
| We use the the term writing to describe people who aren't writing, people who are just typing on a keyboard, in a word processor. | |
| We still call that writing, even though you're not writing with a, you know, a quill on a piece of parchment or whatever people were doing back then, a feather pen, Ben Franklin? | |
| Um, we still call it writing. | |
| But no one sits down and and and has a pencil and a pen and writes articles on paper. | |
| Okay, I mean no one who's a serious participant in today's world. | |
| I mean they might do it for fun. | |
| You know, you can write poetry sitting under a tree writing poetry it's great, yeah. | |
| Or you can write your personal journal with with your pen, because you don't want that to be picked up by Google or whatever I get it. | |
| But in terms of writing articles, nobody's using pencil and paper okay. | |
| So we got rid of the pencil and paper and we moved to typewriters. | |
| Originally you know, this is a couple hundred years ago we started having typewriters, or 150 years what, whatever it was started having mechanical typewriters. | |
| We still called it writing, but you no longer had to trace the letters with a pen on paper. | |
| Instead you had a machine that with one click of a key it would punch the letter a, the letter b, right? | |
| So no one would say that's cheating. | |
| You're not really doing the writing. | |
| You have a machine that's punching the letters for you. | |
| You should trace out every curve of every d or every z, otherwise it's not real writing. | |
| You know that's a silly argument. | |
| So typewriters, that was state of the art for a long time, and then in the 1980s came the personal computer. | |
| Well, wait, wait a second. | |
| Before that was the IBM Selectric, I think, the electric typewriters. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So they were still typewriters. | |
| You just didn't have to punch the keys as hard because they weren't mechanical. | |
| They had an electric motor in them. | |
| They still used a ribbon with ink. | |
| They still punched letters into paper. | |
| You know, you still had to use white out brushing if you made a typo. | |
| Go back and paint it with a little bit of white. | |
| Oops, I spelled zoo wrong. | |
| Too many O's. | |
| You had to white it out. | |
| Still very mechanical, but it was aided by more machines. | |
| In this case, electricity. | |
| Oh, using electricity. | |
| That's not writing. | |
| Real writers use pen and paper and parchment. | |
| But of course, most of the world's best novels and I mean throughout history were written on typewriters. | |
| Okay? | |
| Electric or mechanical. | |
| Now then, 1980s, personal computers. | |
| So now we're no longer punching things onto paper. | |
| We're typing clickety clack on keyboards and it's putting digital letters on a screen, which is great because no longer did we have to use white out. | |
| You didn't have to paint your screen with white ink in order to correct that. | |
| So instead, you just hit the backspace key. | |
| You know, you hit the backspace key and then you correct it on the screen. | |
| And then, you know, you had a printer and you could print everything out, whatever. | |
| And then later on with the internet, you could send an email. | |
| And a lot of great writing has happened this way ever since on computers. | |
| But there might still be people who sit there and argue, well, that's not writing. | |
| You're using computers. | |
| You should have a pen and paper for all this stuff. | |
| That's nonsense because the important part about writing is not using paper. | |
| The important part is about your ideas, right? | |
| It's about your thoughts. | |
| Are you expressing your thoughts in a way that's trying to communicate with the reader? | |
| That's the point of writing, I believe, is to communicate something to a reader. | |
| So then after a number of years, along came automatic spell check. | |
| Oh, automatic spell check. | |
| So in other words, people who can't spell could still write. | |
| And yeah, people can't spell at all. | |
| People still use the wrong form of the word there, like T-H-E-I-R versus T-H-E-R-E. | |
| I still see people using the wrong form of that all over Twitter and social media. | |
| I'm like, my God, did you graduate from high school? | |
| How do you not know which word to use? | |
| And people are illiterate. | |
| But spell check made them look like they could spell. | |
| Okay, and then there came grammar check, right? | |
| So, but anybody who argued, well, that's not writing, you have spell check. | |
| You're not a real writer if you have spell check. | |
| That's a silly argument, too. | |
| Because why shouldn't we have spell check? | |
| You know, sometimes, especially in English, words are very confusing. | |
| Or in German, for that matter, whatever, they can be confusing. | |
| Why shouldn't we have spell check? | |
| So these are just ways to assist the writer to achieve the art of communicating something important to their audience. | |
| So now, now we have AI, LLMs, that are text generation engines. | |
| And yeah, they can create text so they can write. | |
| They can put together text, and if you prompt them correctly, they can churn out a lot of great text on a lot of topics, etc. | |
| So, is that writing? | |
| And the answer is: if you are the architect of the article, if you're the one who described it, defined it, prompted it, then yes, you're still the writer. | |
| Because just like I don't need to actually put a pen on a piece of paper and trace out the letter P that doesn't add anything to the value of the topics I'm trying to communicate. | |
| Well, I also don't need to be the person to string together words to say something. | |
| What I need to be is the person who's deciding the strategy of the article, the architect. | |
| And that's why what I'm explaining right now is I upgraded myself from an article typist to an article architect. | |
| I'm letting AI do the typing. | |
| I'm letting AI compose sentences and put words together as long as they are congruent with my concepts and my ideas and what I want to communicate here. | |
| And that's as it should be. | |
|
Amplifying Communication
00:05:52
|
|
| So, just like we've always upgraded technology from pen and paper to mechanical typewriters to electric typewriters to word processors to spell check to grammar check. | |
| Now, AI composing sentences and paragraphs is just a natural progression of the tools that writers use to communicate. | |
| That's all it is. | |
| It's just the next step of the evolution of technology to communicate important points. | |
| And as a result, I can communicate a lot more. | |
| See, I used to write, there was a time where I wrote an article each day. | |
| And writing an article each day, even though I'm a very fast writer, I'm a fast typist. | |
| I'm like crazy fast typist, by the way. | |
| People are shocked when they see me type, but I'm not the only one. | |
| There's a lot of fast typists out there, but I can't type faster than AI. | |
| Not even close. | |
| It's just like, hey, I can pick up a shovel and I can dig some dirt. | |
| I can make a hole in the yard, but I can't dig as fast as an excavator. | |
| I can carry dirt in a wheelbarrow, but I can't carry dirt as fast as a skid steer. | |
| See, we use machines to amplify our intention. | |
| Like, hey, if I want to create a new garden and move a bunch of dirt around, am I going to do it by hand? | |
| No way, not on your life. | |
| I'm going to have a machine do that, maybe a tractor with a front loader. | |
| I'm going to use the machine to move the dirt. | |
| Well, I'm trying to move concepts around. | |
| Am I going to sit there and type every word? | |
| No, I'm going to use a machine to help me do that. | |
| But as long as I'm in control, as long as I set the tone, I create the prompt, I direct the machine to do what I want to do. | |
| I'm still the architect. | |
| I'm still the writer, but I don't have to type out a bunch of letters. | |
| You see what I mean? | |
| That's the upgrade. | |
| It's still writing. | |
| It's just using today's advanced technology. | |
| And it still writes in my style. | |
| It's still, but, but it does all the research for me in addition to what I provided. | |
| So, again, it used to take me a couple hours a day. | |
| Now I can do it in a few minutes. | |
| I've got the research. | |
| I've got the prompt. | |
| I know what I want. | |
| I enter the prompt. | |
| I paste in the research. | |
| Here's a bunch of URLs. | |
| Here's the abstract of the science paper. | |
| Paste all that in. | |
| Boom. | |
| I hit go and you know, five minutes later, here comes this article that's researched, fact checked, with references citations, all the URLs have been crawled, everything's been incorporated, everything's been well already said, fact check, but the grammar's perfect, it's proofread, all of it, and the article's done in five minutes. | |
| Now see, so that means I can write more articles, so I can be a more effective communicator now that I have this technology. | |
| Even though it took me two years when I wasn't really writing much, you may have noticed I was working on this. | |
| I mean this kind of technology. | |
| So now I'm gonna be able to write a lot because I'm now the architect of the articles instead of the typist, and I might just have I might have other announcements about this technology coming out later that might involve more than just me. | |
| Who knows? | |
| That's a possibility. | |
| We'll see. | |
| In any case, this is what's coming. | |
| So if you are a creator of content, if you are a writer, you're gonna have a lot of new tools at your fingertips to be able to create things and to be able to communicate all the things you've been trying to communicate. | |
| Use our free book engine. | |
| It's at brightlearn.ai. | |
| People love it and that's a tool right now that can help you amplify the things you want to communicate and, by the way, if you prompt brightanswers.ai, if you prompt it correctly and give it an example of your own writing, it can do a halfway decent job of creating an article that that kind of sounds like it's in your voice, by the way, so that's something you could try, if you want to, could be interesting. | |
| Uh, in any case, thank you for listening. | |
| I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and be sure to check out all my new articles at Naturalnews.com multiple articles per day at this point and again, use our AI engines at brightlearn.ai or brightanswers.ai. | |
| Thank you for listening, take care. | |
| So, by the way, continuing the broadcast here. | |
| I don't know if this is healthy or unhealthy or what, but I don't feel like i'm being productive if i'm not vibe coding seriously. | |
| I I, I feel like the only time i'm getting enough done is when i'm vibe coding. | |
| Now, because you know I have high expectations and i'm a really driven, self-disciplined kind of person, or also known as a quote workaholic, but I, I do want to get things done. | |
| I, I have. | |
| I mean, come on, we're only here for a limited time on this planet right, and we're not gonna achieve immortality by merging with the machines. | |
|
Printing For Pro-Human Values
00:03:47
|
|
| Even if that were available, I wouldn't do that. | |
| Are you kidding me? | |
| No way, man. | |
| My god is not made out of silicon, you know? | |
| Um, i'm not merging with the machines, so Our time is limited. | |
| So, of course, we want to use that time wisely. | |
| We want to have a positive impact on the world. | |
| We want to help as many people as we can. | |
| We want to empower and enable others and use our time wisely. | |
| And that also means using all the best tools that are available on our planet right now. | |
| Just like with the invention of the printing press, the Gutenberg press, let's say, was that the 15th century technology or something? | |
| With the invention of the Gutenberg press, if you wanted to help educate people, you would immediately go to the press. | |
| You would go to Gutenberg. | |
| Hey, hey, Mr. Goots, could I buy a printing press from you? | |
| Because I want to print stuff. | |
| I mean, that's what I would do. | |
| If I live next to Gutenberg and he invented it, the first thing I would say is, dude, can I have one? | |
| Because I want to print stuff. | |
| And I'd be rolling out flyers, you know, cranking the handle, getting all ink all over the place. | |
| Oops, got a typo there. | |
| Because they use like physical letters. | |
| They used to have to lay out all the letters. | |
| You know, that's why they call it letting, I think, you know, sort of the kerning between letters. | |
| I think it was called letting, or maybe that's line spacing, because all the letters were made out of lead alloys back then. | |
| Yeah, that's a good way to go insane. | |
| Use a bunch of lead. | |
| Anyway, a little bit of history. | |
| At least that's my understanding. | |
| Maybe that's a myth, but that's what I thought the situation was. | |
| Anyway, you're laying out letters, right? | |
| And you're using the technology of the day to print out a bunch of flyers. | |
| And I'd be handing out flyers all over the place. | |
| Like, you know, even in the 15th century, you're being lied to, you know? | |
| And then they would probably crucify me because it's the 15th century. | |
| Like, wait till you find out about the origins of the Vatican, you know. | |
| It's like, oh, you're going to burn at the stake. | |
| Of course, you know, today it's deplatforming. | |
| Back then it was burn you at the stake. | |
| You know, call you a warlock or a witch or something, burn you at the stake. | |
| Today they just censor you. | |
| But anyway, you and I probably have the same idea. | |
| Like whatever technology exists, I want to use it to help free people from enslavement. | |
| I want to free people's minds. | |
| And so, of course, I'm going to do that with any technology. | |
| And today that technology is AI. | |
| So obviously I'm going to use the best tech as long as I'm in control, right? | |
| And I get to use it for pro-human values. | |
| And I get to use it in a way that achieves my life goals, which are aligned, I believe, with humanity's goals, you know, pro-human goals. | |
| Then I'm going to use this technology. | |
| And the history is about to be made. | |
| And it is, this does concern DeepSeek, which I covered six days ago. | |
|
New DeepSeek Model Insights
00:12:20
|
|
| But there's something new that just got discovered about DeepSeek. | |
| And I want to tell you about that in another short special report. | |
| So here we go. | |
| So what just happened is that the DeepSeek company, which is, of course, a leading AI developer out of China, appears to be on the verge of releasing their new DeepSeek version 4 model. | |
| And they just kind of leaked something in some code-based document updates to their GitHub repo. | |
| And what that means is that, well, people have analyzed what they posted to GitHub, but they found references to some new stuff that I think connect the dots on what DeepSeek is about to release. | |
| And if this is correct, it's history unfolding. | |
| This is going to be, I believe, the most significant open source large language model ever released. | |
| And it's going to change everything. | |
| So without getting too super geeky here, let me explain what this looks like. | |
| First of all, it looks like DeepSeek is going to call this Model 1, not just DeepSeek version 4. | |
| But we may be wrong about that. | |
| So be ready for either case. | |
| Model 1 or DeepSeek version 4. | |
| Doesn't matter what it's called. | |
| I don't care what it's called. | |
| But remember a few days ago when I talked about the n-gram structure that was described in a science paper by DeepSeek scientists, including, I think, maybe the CEO of DeepSeek was on that paper, I heard. | |
| And these are all super high-level math and computer science engineer type of people. | |
| Very, very bright people. | |
| And remember what I said about how the n-gram approach effectively separates reasoning from memory. | |
| And so what they found out is that if they make the engine about 75% reasoning and about 25% memory, that is, you know, knowledge or n-grams, which is a reference to human, essentially human knowledge nuggets or like word pairs or concept pairs, things like that. | |
| If they do a 75% to 25% ratio, then the engine is faster and smarter because the reasoning components of it don't have to sort of re-figure out facts and knowledge. | |
| They don't have to recalculate it through all the multiple layers every single time. | |
| So it's faster and smarter. | |
| It's more accurate just by separating these two things. | |
| And again, that's a super simplified version of what they've done. | |
| Also remember that what DeepSeek released in version 3.2 was something called DeepSeek Sparse Attention, I think is what they called it, DSA. | |
| And there's a term that you want to become familiar with called sparsity. | |
| Yeah, I know. | |
| Sparsity. | |
| It's a weird word. | |
| And sparsity handling means how well the engine is able to narrow the number of digital neurons or vectors that are activated in order to solve your problem or answer your question. | |
| And the fewer, let's just call them neurons, the fewer neurons that are needed to answer the question, the faster it works. | |
| And the more lean it is on consumer-grade hardware. | |
| Because you don't have to run the whole freaking engine. | |
| You don't need all the hundreds of billions of parameters in order to answer simple questions like, you know, how many letters are in the word strawberry? | |
| You only need a little tiny narrow little, you know, low IQ part of it. | |
| So that the algorithm that controls that is called sparsity. | |
| And sparsity handling is referenced in the new documents that were just leaked about DeepSeek. | |
| Now, here's something that's really interesting. | |
| If you've run inference on large language models, you know about something called KVCache. | |
| KV means key value. | |
| Put simply, it's a way that the engine sort of stores knowledge as it's processing your prompt. | |
| And if you ever want to understand how important KV cache is, if you're running something like LM Studio, turn off the KV caching in the GPU and force KV caching to happen in your computer's CPU or RAM, effectively, your computer's RAM. | |
| And all of a sudden, your model's performance slows down by about 10 times. | |
| You know, it's 10 times slower. | |
| What happened? | |
| Well, the KV cache now isn't immediately fetchable within the GPU's fast bandwidth RAM or video RAM as it's called. | |
| And as a result, performance totally sucks. | |
| Well, KVCache is actually strongly related to the Ngram algorithm that, again, separates knowledge from reasoning. | |
| And then the fact that there are now admitted to be key advancements in the restructuring of key-value cache, this is indicating a strong architectural change to the upcoming DeepSeek model that indicates that it has incorporated the Ngram science paper or the concepts described in that paper. | |
| It has already incorporated that into its engine. | |
| And that roughly around late February or roughly a month from now, give or take, we're going to see probably the most architecturally advanced open source language model that's ever been created. | |
| And I think it's going to be a game changer. | |
| Now, the third thing that was leaked in this paper, and this is really exciting, this is probably the biggest deal of this, is that they started talking about the model natively being able to operate for inference or decoding in FP8 or floating point 8. | |
| Now, FP8 means a quantization of the model into an 8-bit quant for each, well, for each calculation, let's say for each vector. | |
| And the FP8, see, these models natively are trained in a 16-bit floating-point data format or numerical format. | |
| So FP16, of course, takes twice as much storage space as floating point 8. | |
| And you only really go to an FP8 quantization if you're planning on having a model that can be run on lower end hardware, which means the kind of hardware that perhaps you and I have. | |
| In other words, sort of prosumer hardware. | |
| Even though it's a massive model, it's possible that with FP8, we could run it on something like the NVIDIA Spark. | |
| I think it's the, what is it, the GDX Spark. | |
| It's got 128 megabytes of RAM. | |
| And those of you who have the amazing Mac, what are they called, the Mac Pros or whatever, and you've got like 512 gigs of unified video RAM or 7, what is it, 784, whatever you have, you can definitely run probably FP8 versions of this model. | |
| And then there will probably be very quickly, the organization known as Unsloth will be able to put out something like a, an Fp4 or you know, a four-bit quantization version of the model that might just might fit into consumer grade Geforce Rtx 5090 cards which run on your desktop computer. | |
| You have to have a kind of a beefy computer for it, by the way. | |
| I mean you need a, you need a power supply that alone has to provide over a thousand watts, so it's not for just some simple low-end desktop. | |
| But i'm i've got one running right here. | |
| I'm looking at it right now. | |
| In fact i've got a bunch of these cards running all the science papers, analysis. | |
| It's been going for months. | |
| I'm heating my building with the heat off of these 5090 cards. | |
| That's why I love winter in Texas, because I don't have to pay any heating bills at all. | |
| I'm just heating with gpus, but in the summer, oh man, I pay the price with all the extra air conditioning, you know. | |
| But the 5090s put out a lot of heat, but they've got 32 gigs of ram and and i'm wondering if i'll be able to run the new Deep Seek Model One, some some kind of simplified version of it, a four-bit quant or even I mean i've heard of some quants going down to like two bits or even dynamic loading of layers, which sounds really slow to me but anyway that there could be some ways to run this on consumer grade hardware. | |
| That's a big deal. | |
| And the other thing that's about to happen is that Nvidia is about to release what's called the Spark Station hardware, which is there, I think. | |
| Is it the I don't want to get this wrong is it the Gb100 Blackwell microchips? | |
| Maybe it's the Gb200? | |
| Whatever it is it's, it's the state-of-the-art Blackwell microprocessors in a workstation format with a lot of video ram could be up to 784 gigabytes. | |
| Now those workstations are going to cost could be 30 40, 50 000, but they will replace uh server hardware that used to cost 150 or 200 000 easily. | |
| And so the reason i'm saying all this is because it's very likely that you'll be able to take this open source deep Seek model, one that China is releasing, and then you'll be able to buy a piece of hardware that again might be 50k, which that's a lot for an individual but not so much for a business, you know. | |
| I mean, think about what I spend on just lab science equipment. | |
| I mean, is my company going to buy one of these uh spark stations and run deep seek locally? | |
| Yeah, absolutely of on day one I am, because then we can run it locally, the full model. | |
| We can run it locally and we can do all the inference and all the calculations and all the writing and everything that we need, all the reasoning and logic. | |
| We can do it without sending anything out through the cloud anywhere. | |
| We can run it locally in our own data center and, of course, we have our own data center. | |
| So you know racks of systems That run our content ecosystem and all of our social media sites and things like that. | |
| So I'm going to be doing that. | |
| And I will keep you posted if there are versions of this that can run on consumer-grade hardware. | |
| Now, the reason all this matters is because the context window of this new DeepSeq model is reported to be rather massive. | |
| We don't have an official confirmation from the company yet. | |
| But many people suspect that it could support either 512,000 tokens or even, according to some rumors, up to a million tokens. | |
|
Missed Ban DeepSeek Limit
00:09:48
|
|
| The current standard of DeepSeek 3.2 is 128,000 tokens, which is kind of limiting, actually. | |
| Even when I try to use it for certain kind of research posts and I'm shoving in like 100 excerpts from science papers and books and things, I can blow through that 128K pretty quickly, believe it or not. | |
| It sounds like a lot, but you can use it up if you're throwing in large context. | |
| So if it has a much larger context, then what this means, oh, and I forgot to mention it's also rumored to be very good at coding. | |
| So writing code, writing almost any kind of code. | |
| It can write Python, it can write Node.js, it can write JavaScript, it can handle APIs. | |
| It can write in any language, including full stack languages for web applications or even mobile apps. | |
| And of course, static HTML pages, obviously. | |
| But what this means is that this could be the very first AI model that's called a repo-level coding system. | |
| Repo means repository, a repository of code typically refers to a full stack of code. | |
| A full stack means it's got all the different chunks of code for the different components that make up an application. | |
| Like, for example, let's talk about, let's say, you know, Uber. | |
| So Uber has code that runs the Uber website. | |
| And then there's other code that runs the Uber app. | |
| And then there's more code that runs the Uber backend that calculates how much they should gouge you for the fare, you know. | |
| And then there's more code that runs the revenue share and then the accounting and the payouts and then, you know, routes calculation and monitoring and complaints and this and that. | |
| All of this is written in different types, different languages, different codes. | |
| Some of it's Python, some of it's whatever. | |
| And some of it's front end, some of its back end. | |
| Okay. | |
| That code base could fit within 1 million tokens, possibly. | |
| I mean, I don't, maybe Uber's code is bigger than that, but there could be a lot of companies that their entire code base could fit within a million tokens. | |
| And what that means is that once this new DeepSeq model is available, you could tell it, especially if you're running it locally and you don't want to share your code over some API in the cloud or anything. | |
| You could tell, you could give it your entire code base as part of a prompt, even hundreds of thousands of lines of code, whatever, and say, hey, add this feature, and I want you to add it to the app. | |
| I want you to add it to the website. | |
| I want you to handle it in the back end. | |
| I want you to update the database. | |
| I want you to, you know, have the fallbacks and the checking and the retries and all this stuff. | |
| I want you to add this feature across the entire stack. | |
| And because of this very large context window, DeepSeek would, this is rumored, it would be able to handle all of those changes across the full stack of code. | |
| So what this means is that the AI coding can take on a higher level function, more of an architect or a supervisor role over large code bases. | |
| This is a big deal because right now AI is good at small projects and it has a lot of trouble with larger projects. | |
| Even I ran into that myself with the Bright Learn engine. | |
| When it was small, everything was great. | |
| And then it got larger, like tens of thousands of lines of code. | |
| And then I tried to do a database switchover. | |
| I mentioned this to you a few weeks ago. | |
| And the AI agent like utterly failed to automate that. | |
| It did a horrible job with that. | |
| And I had to go through and recheck it. | |
| I had to keep telling it over and over and over again. | |
| Oh, you missed this and you missed that and you missed this. | |
| Check this. | |
| And it's like, oh, really? | |
| I didn't know you meant everything. | |
| And that's going to change with DeepSeek version 4. | |
| Now, importantly, this means that the Open AI company run by Sam Altman and the CIA and a bunch of spooks and globalists and evil people, in my opinion, that OpenAI is basically going to be obsolete. | |
| And that's a good thing. | |
| That's a good thing. | |
| And OpenAI will probably lobby the Trump administration to try to ban DeepSeek Model 1. | |
| They will. | |
| And in fact, the U.S. deep state, the intelligence community, the CIA, et cetera, is already pushing a lot of false rumors about DeepSeek. | |
| For example, have you heard the rumor that, oh, you shouldn't use DeepSeek because China will get all your data? | |
| Yeah, that's nonsense. | |
| It's an open source model. | |
| You run it locally. | |
| Nobody sees your data other than you. | |
| Even you run inference on servers in the USA. | |
| China doesn't see that data. | |
| They released it as open source. | |
| There's not trackers in it. | |
| It can't even possibly function that way. | |
| That's not possible because there's no executable code in the language model. | |
| It's just a collection of vectors. | |
| Really, that's all it is. | |
| It's a bunch of safe tensors files. | |
| There's no executable code in it at all. | |
| So the people that are pushing this rumor though, oh, don't use DeepSeek. | |
| China might be spying on you. | |
| That is 100% CIA bullshit propaganda. | |
| 100%. | |
| And it relies on people who don't have technical knowledge to believe that. | |
| But if you have technical knowledge, you know that's not even possible. | |
| It would be like saying, you know, like Ecuador is spying on you through the bananas you bought at the grocery store. | |
| You're like, wait a second, I just bought these bananas. | |
| I'm eating these bananas. | |
| Like, how does Ecuador spy on my banana? | |
| How do they know what I'm eating? | |
| Well, they don't because it's not possible because the banana doesn't report to Ecuador. | |
| Okay. | |
| DeepSeek doesn't report to China. | |
| It's an open source model. | |
| You can take it and put it anywhere you want. | |
| You can use it offline. | |
| Like literally yank the Ethernet cable, use it locally and have no internet access at all. | |
| And it still works. | |
| Oh, well, how is that possible if it's reporting to China all the time? | |
| Yeah, because that's just propaganda. | |
| It's not reporting to China. | |
| But it'll be funny if the U.S. government or Trump tries to ban DeepSeek. | |
| Now, I think they have banned it in government offices already. | |
| Even though it's the best reasoning model out there a year ago, R1, the best reasoning model in the world. | |
| But the government spread a bunch of rumors and then they tried to ban it all across government offices, even the state of Texas, which is run by people who are technologically illiterate, I have to say. | |
| They don't know anything about technology. | |
| And so they ban DeepSeek in the Texas offices, which is why those offices are very inefficient because they won't use the best AI technology to get things done. | |
| They want to use crappy tech that's worse than DeepSeek, you know? | |
| But anyway, I will use DeepSeek because I understand it and I understand this is a game changer. | |
| And I'm going to use DeepSeek to benefit you. | |
| I'll use it where it's appropriate. | |
| I mean, I use lots of different models in our AI backend. | |
| I use Meestrel out of France. | |
| I've used Quenn before. | |
| I use a lot of different models and I'll use our own in-house model that we built based on modifying base models. | |
| So I'll use a bunch of models and maybe I'll customize DeepSeek and I'll do obliteration technique on it, do a mind wipe and replace it with all our knowledge. | |
| And who knows? | |
| There's lots of things I could do. | |
| But I'll use DeepSeek where it's appropriate to support freedom and liberty and to have an America first stance on all of this. | |
| But it's really, I'm more like humanity first. | |
| I'm not even, even though I love America, I'm an American. | |
| It's not my focus to just talk about America. | |
| My focus is I want to educate all of humanity. | |
| I want to uplift people and free people all over the world across multiple languages and cultures and different nations. | |
| So yeah, I'm humanity first. | |
| And that's what I'll use the technology to achieve. | |
| In the meantime, Open AI is going to be obsolete, I believe, unless they've got some card up their sleeve. | |
| And maybe they do. | |
| I mean, they've got tons of money, that's for sure. | |
| But how much you want to bet? | |
| Now, I don't own any stocks at all. | |
| I don't own any AI stocks or any other stocks. | |
|
NVIDIA Stock Surge
00:04:01
|
|
| Believe it or not, I don't even own, I don't own silver mining stocks. | |
| I should, but I'm just too busy. | |
| I own silver, obviously, but I don't own any stocks. | |
| So I'm not here to push some stock opinion on you. | |
| But if I were going to bet on something, I would bet that when DeepSeek version 4 gets released, I would bet that OpenAI stock prices crater. | |
| I would also bet that NVIDIA stock prices skyrocket. | |
| Because once it becomes apparent that you'll be able to use DeepSeek on relatively modest hardware to have all your AI inference completely free other than just electricity costs, and that you don't need to pay these big bills to OpenAI or Gemini or Microsoft or whatever, then everybody's going to rush out and buy more NVIDIA hardware. | |
| Oh, by the way, the prices are going up big time. | |
| Big time. | |
| I mentioned that previously. | |
| I think NVIDIA knows what's coming. | |
| I was paying $2,400 for the 50-90 cards. | |
| And now, actually, let me check. | |
| All right, let's see what they are. | |
| What? | |
| No. | |
| Wait a second. | |
| This is really weird because these were 3,500 like 10 days ago. | |
| And now I'm seeing them listing for 1,000. | |
| They're only 1,000? | |
| Okay, well, I'm going to buy some. | |
| Oh, my God. | |
| This is like a sale. | |
| It's like a 65% off sale because these are rumored to go to $5,000 in February. | |
| And right now, they're $1,000. | |
| I'm genuinely astonished because I like, are these counterfeit or something? | |
| What the heck? | |
| How are these $1,000? | |
| That's crazy. | |
| Hold on. | |
| I got to shop for two of these because I've got two workstations sitting here that are lacking high-end cards. | |
| I'm running some crappy low-end cards in them. | |
| I need to upgrade these. | |
| Hold on, let me get that done. | |
| Okay, I feel like that's a steal. | |
| I don't know what happened. | |
| I feel like I just took advantage of some kind of glitch or something because I just bought two of the 50-90 cards for $1,000 each. | |
| They're going to be $5,000 each. | |
| So I just bought for $2,000 what's going to be $10,000 in about 10 days. | |
| And you know why, by the way? | |
| These cards use the GDDR7 RAM, which is a high-speed RAM. | |
| High-speed RAM is bottlenecked in the supply chain badly. | |
| And it's needed for all the high-end systems for high-speed inference. | |
| For things like we were just talking about, KBCash, for example. | |
| You got to have high-speed RAM on the Blackwell on the board to talk to the GPU. | |
| You got to have high bandwidth between the RAM and the GPU. | |
| Otherwise, your inference gets really slow. | |
| So this GDDR7 RAM is in horrible short supply right now. | |
| In fact, I think it's completely sold out through about 2027, the end of 2027. | |
| So I don't know what's going on with the pricing here, but I feel like I just got a steal. | |
| Anyway, whatever. | |
| Sorry about that tangent. | |
| Just remember, if you buy one of these cards, just remember, you need a big system. | |
| Folks, I can't emphasize enough how important it is to decentralize so you can bring as much compute to your local system as possible. | |
|
Use Open Source Models
00:05:21
|
|
| And there's going to be a lot of censorship coming up. | |
| There's going to be a lot of attempts to ban certain models, maybe DeepSeek like we're talking about. | |
| It's going to be a lot of efforts to try to control the way people use AI. | |
| And the best workaround for that is use open source models, have your own hardware running on your own local systems. | |
| Yeah, you'll burn a lot of electricity, probably. | |
| I mean, for sure. | |
| But then you have total control and there's no censorship. | |
| And then also, of course, you'll have total privacy. | |
| And then eventually, when I'm able to finally get the centralized downloader available for Brightlearn.ai, then you'll be able to download a massive library of thousands of books free of charge to your local system. | |
| And then you'll be able to actually use your local AI to ask questions of those documents, of the books, locally. | |
| It'll be awesome. | |
| It's like chat GPT on your desktop, but better for free. | |
| You know, literally for free. | |
| Open source, man. | |
| This is what I'm talking about. | |
| You know, you buy the card once, which for some reason is only $1,000 now. | |
| You buy the card once. | |
| You buy the computer once. | |
| And then the model's free. | |
| And, you know, you're good. | |
| Oh, the software you want to use to run local inference is called LM Studio. | |
| LMStudio.com stands for language model. | |
| And it's also free for non-commercial use. | |
| Oh, and you know, while I'm at it, I might as well just tell you that the best operating system to run on this is actually Linux Mint. | |
| Linux Mint. | |
| So you just go to LinuxMint.com. | |
| You download that. | |
| It's free. | |
| It's open source. | |
| Follow the instructions. | |
| It'll put it on a thumb drive. | |
| Okay. | |
| And then you boot up your HP system on a thumb drive. | |
| And, you know, you have to hit like F1 to trigger BIOS during the boot. | |
| And then you select a Linux Mint. | |
| You install Linux Mint. | |
| And then you get Bill Gates and Windows and all that bullshit off your system because Windows is just going to spy on you. | |
| It does spy on you constantly. | |
| And it slows everything down with all the spying, it turns out. | |
| Anyway, you install Linux Mint. | |
| And then you download LM Studio and you run it in the Linux. | |
| It runs great. | |
| It runs better. | |
| It's so much better, actually. | |
| So I use Linux Mint on a bunch of systems. | |
| It's based on Debian Linux. | |
| It's a really good repo of Linux. | |
| And it's got a great user interface. | |
| Very easy to use, super easy to use. | |
| And then if you have any problems with Linux Mint, just install Claude code. | |
| If you have any problems on there, you just ask Claude code. | |
| Like, hey, I have this problem with Linux Mint. | |
| It's not doing the thing here. | |
| And Claude will tell you what to do, and you're done. | |
| So these are really valuable instructions, by the way. | |
| So if you want to get into this, just seriously follow what I just said there. | |
| You're going to have a really great setup. | |
| And at the end of the day, you're not going to have Windows. | |
| You know, screw Windows. | |
| Yeah, screw Bill Gates, right? | |
| You're not going to have Windows. | |
| You're not going to have to use some AI model in the cloud. | |
| You're going to have local inference with absolute security and privacy, control over your own data locally. | |
| You're going to have this kick-ass graphics card on a pretty decent workstation. | |
| You don't have to overpay for something new because you don't need a new Windows 11 operating system. | |
| You're not going to use it anyway. | |
| You're going to override it with Linux. | |
| And this thing's going to work for you. | |
| It's going to work great because Linux Mint actually has good drivers for these cards. | |
| For all the coup de cores for NVIDIA, it's all worked out. | |
| The Linux community is much smarter, much better than any Windows nonsense that's out there. | |
| So that's why I don't mess around with Mac. | |
| I know there's a lot of Mac fans out there. | |
| I don't mess around with Mac because I just go to Linux. | |
| Screw Windows. | |
| You don't need Windows for anything. | |
| Linux does it all and it's all free. | |
| Okay, so if you enjoy this information, check out all the free AI tools that I've made available. | |
| And they are at brightlearn.ai. | |
| That's our free book creation engine. | |
| You'll love it if you haven't used it already. | |
| We also have brightnews.ai, which is our news trends analysis engine. | |
| I've got some surprise new features coming there. | |
| And then we have, oh, brightanswers.ai. | |
| And brightanswers.ai is our AI research engine where you can ask it any question you want about anything. | |
| And it will do deep research and give you amazing answers. | |
| And I forgot to tell you, we now have 340,000 science papers indexed in our in-house data set that is used by all of those engines in order to understand your prompts, to do research for your books, to understand news trends and analysis and lots of things. | |
|
Free AI Platforms Support
00:04:14
|
|
| So, you know, I've built up the world's largest in-house content library of curated science papers, curated books, over 50,000 now, and millions of pages of articles and interviews and other content, spoken podcasts, transcripts, and also things like conferences, various transcripts, just millions of pages of amazing things. | |
| And that's all part of the data repository that we uniquely have in-house that's used by the AI engines that I built and have made available for free. | |
| So you can use those platforms and those engines completely free at those websites I just mentioned. | |
| And finally, if you want to support us, because it does cost, believe it or not, you know, a lot of money to do this. | |
| If you want to support us, shop at healthrangerstore.com, where you'll have lab-verified, ultra-clean foods, superfoods, nutritional supplements, personal care products, and home care products that are just pristine in their formulations. | |
| And we have massive laboratory testing. | |
| And I already have on my schedule next week. | |
| I'm filming in the laboratory to give you a new tour. | |
| I think I'm filming that towards the end of the week. | |
| So it'll be the following week when I bring you that video. | |
| I'm going to give you a walkthrough of our new lab with all the instruments that we use for all the different tests. | |
| So that's coming. | |
| You'll get to see because we, I mean, we have a food science lab that is larger than most universities, as you will soon see. | |
| In fact, I mean, you know, we have PhDs that come in because they want to do method validation in our lab. | |
| And they're like, oh my God, this is amazing. | |
| This is better than the lab at this whatever university. | |
| And I'm like, yeah, I know. | |
| I know, because we're serious about clean food. | |
| We really test for lots of contaminants because we have clean food. | |
| Anyway, you can get all that clean food at healthrangerstore.com. | |
| And by doing so, not only will you be giving yourself amazing nutrition, but you'll also be supporting us with whatever profits we manage to eke out of this system. | |
| Whatever profits we have, we're reinvesting that into this AI technology and all these platforms for decentralization of human knowledge, spanning multiple languages and multiple medium formats, including audio books and content and coming up soon, video content. | |
| And it's always going to be free. | |
| So that's our commitment to you. | |
| You support us by shopping at healthrangerstore.com and we support you in whatever way you want to learn or express yourself with all these technology platforms. | |
| And believe me, I have only just begun. | |
| There's much more coming, especially once I get my hands on DeepSeek. | |
| And I got to install these 250-90 cards I just ordered. | |
| Get out the Dremel tool, you know, and plug those suckers in, start running some faster inference. | |
| I got a lot of books to clean. | |
| So anyway, there you go. | |
| That's what's happening. | |
| Thanks for listening. | |
| I'm Mike Adams here, the AI Adventurer for today. | |
| Thank you for listening. | |
| Take care. | |
| All right, there's one more thing I want to share with you here today, and that is a special report or a special video I recorded earlier about the audio books. | |
| Now, I recorded this last week when the numbers were much smaller at Bright Learn than they are right now. | |
| So if you hear the smaller numbers, that's why. | |
| And I sort of held on to this video for a while. | |
| But the overall message is still the same, and it's very true of what we're doing going into full-length audio books that you'll be able to download. | |
|
Baldness Trade-offs
00:03:47
|
|
| That's coming sometime here, pretty soon. | |
| It's coming. | |
| And I'm struggling with the audio voice performance right now. | |
| That's the setback, but I'll figure it out. | |
| We'll solve it. | |
| Do you have any doubt that we can solve this problem? | |
| We could definitely solve this. | |
| Give me any conundrum. | |
| We'll solve it. | |
| So enjoy this special report here about our audiobooks and our commitment to free knowledge and decentralized empowerment of humanity. | |
| And then following that, we will have today's interview. | |
| And I believe the interview today is with Diane Kayser about peptide therapy advancements and also FDA crackdowns. | |
| And there's going to be some crushing of the supply chain of certain peptides. | |
| But also, there's some dangers with the GLP1 weight loss peptides, as you well know. | |
| And one of those that I just covered in an article is, of course, it can make you go bald. | |
| That's not good. | |
| That's not a great trade-off. | |
| You know, like injecting yourself and then you get thinner and thinner and thinner to where your waist looks awesome. | |
| But you're bald, you know, your hair is gone. | |
| It's like, dude, you're really thin, but what happened to your hair? | |
| And apparently this is happening to women too, because, you know, baldness normally affects men. | |
| But in this case, there are some women reported. | |
| I'm not saying it's going to happen to everybody, but don't inject yourself with venom peptides to paralyze your vagus nerve. | |
| That's probably not a good idea. | |
| Also, it can make you blind. | |
| That's a known side effect. | |
| It can also give you turbo cancer. | |
| So let's see. | |
| Let's add this up. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Well, I finally lost the weight, you know. | |
| Finally got down to, you know, 32-inch waist or whatever. | |
| But let's see, I went blind and I got cancer and I'm bald. | |
| It's like, that's not a good trade-off. | |
| Not a good trade-off. | |
| So I guess the good news is that when you go blind, you won't see yourself going bald. | |
| You know? | |
| And I'm not making fun of people who are vision or sight impaired, just to be clear. | |
| I'm only mocking people who take health shortcuts by injecting themselves with venom peptides and then have side effects. | |
| And it's like, seriously, what were you thinking? | |
| Did you really think that there's a shortcut to health and that big pharma was going to provide it, really? | |
| Did you think that? | |
| No. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So what's happening? | |
| Everything that's happening right here in your world, all your hair is falling out. | |
| That's a result of your own stupidity and having faith in Big Pharma. | |
| You should have known since COVID that it's all a scam. | |
| So if you still have your sight, you know, and you don't have cancer yet, you can turn this thing around. | |
| Maybe you could regrow some hair. | |
| If not, it's a pretty good wig selections on Amazon. | |
| So there's some options. | |
| And I usually suggest a mullet, by the way. | |
|
Control Over Audio Books
00:08:25
|
|
| Makes you the life of the party, things like that. | |
| Always fun. | |
| All right. | |
| With that said, enjoy today's interview. | |
| And I'll be back with you, God willing, tomorrow. | |
| Thanks for listening. | |
| Here we go. | |
| Did you know that when you purchase an audio book from Amazon or Audible, that you don't really own it? | |
| You don't have control over it. | |
| That book comes with digital rights management technology or DRM. | |
| Every time you launch an Audible app, it checks in with the servers to make sure that you still have, quote, ownership over that book before you can listen to it. | |
| So in other words, the control over your ability to listen to the book that you purchase is centralized. | |
| It's in the hands of Amazon, Amazon executives, and Amazon servers. | |
| And in the past, Amazon has, for example, deleted entire books off of people's Kindle devices with a remote delete command. | |
| And one of those books they did that to is literally the book 1984. | |
| I mean, it was an Orwellian demonstration of deleting the book about an Orwellian future. | |
| I mean, you can't make this up. | |
| So we have a better way. | |
| Of course, I'm an AI developer and I built the site called brightlearn.ai. | |
| You can see it right here. | |
| As of today, we have over 21,000 books. | |
| We just crossed that threshold in the last few minutes. | |
| 21,000 books published by over 6,000 authors. | |
| And every one of these books is free to download. | |
| And I mean, here's a bunch of quantum consciousness, resonant energy architectures, the quantum, someone's doing a bunch of quantum books. | |
| Here's the vital code, root and remedy, the elephant in the room, tooth crisis. | |
| Oh, that sounds fun. | |
| The pyramid code. | |
| On and on. | |
| And you can use, oh, here's whiskers and wellness. | |
| There's a lot of books about animals. | |
| Oh, this right here, the survivalist Pathfinder, this author is a chief Bollinger, USN meteorologist. | |
| This guy's got the best book collection ever. | |
| Love his books. | |
| I'm going to have his books turned into audiobooks here shortly. | |
| And that's what I want to talk to you about. | |
| So what we're about to do is start producing full-length audiobooks for the most popular titles on this platform. | |
| And we will allow you to download them completely free. | |
| In fact, what we're about to do, and this is only maybe a week away, is that every day in the naturalnews.com newsletter, which is free, just go to naturalnews.com and join that email list. | |
| And you can find the subscribe link there on the site. | |
| It's easy. | |
| Every single day, we're going to give to the email list a free audio book, full length. | |
| There'll be a link there where you can download it. | |
| And in our case, when you download the book, you're not downloading some digital rights management, centrally controlled, cloud-based, you know, corporate system that determines whether you have permission to listen to the book. | |
| Screw that. | |
| You can download the MP3 file and it's yours. | |
| And you can share it. | |
| You can post it on torrent websites. | |
| You can post it on your website. | |
| You can copy it to your different devices and no one can ever take it from you. | |
| Not us, not the author, not some powerful corporation, not some government. | |
| Nobody can take it from you. | |
| Because I believe in freedom of speech and decentralized knowledge. | |
| I believe in using technology to empower humanity, not to surveil and enslave humanity. | |
| And that's what sets me apart from everybody in government, you know? | |
| So what you're about to see is going to be a revolution in audiobooks. | |
| Right now, did you know that Brightlearn.ai, we are the most prolific and largest book publisher in America. | |
| In terms of the number of books that we are producing now, again, 21,000 books in about less than six weeks, that makes us the largest book publisher in the world. | |
| Larger than Random House, Penguin, HarperCollins, anybody you can think of. | |
| They don't even come close to this. | |
| And within the next year, we will have easily a quarter of a million book titles. | |
| And many of those books will be turned into full-length audio books. | |
| And all of those will be free. | |
| And it won't take long before we have more audio books than Audible and more books than Amazon. | |
| And everything that we produce is free. | |
| It's open source. | |
| It's offered through Creative Commons licensing. | |
| So you can download these, you can share them. | |
| And they're all original works, by the way. | |
| None of this is plagiarism. | |
| Every book is uniquely written and uniquely researched by the AI agents with your prompting and your instructions. | |
| And I built the whole system myself, so I know how it works under the hood. | |
| And we now have, oh, it's about to be 250,000 science papers in our science paper index that are referenced by the book research agents during the writing of the books. | |
| In addition, we have 50,000 other published books that can also be used for research. | |
| And that number is going to 100,000. | |
| And we have millions of pages of articles and transcripts of interviews and podcasts and so much more. | |
| All of that is automatically used right now. | |
| And the books that you see that have been published are based on that. | |
| So not only are we the largest book publisher in the world, soon to be the largest audio book publisher in the world, but we have the best research engine in the history of the world in terms of writing books. | |
| Nobody's ever written books based on researching a quarter of a million science papers and 100,000 other books and millions of pages of other content. | |
| But we do that every day, completely free in mere minutes at brightlearn.ai and you can use the tool completely free. | |
| Now, you can do the three chapter books free. | |
| If you want to do a longer book, we do ask you to use a token, which is just like a little voucher string. | |
| And you can get those tokens at healthrangerstore.com. | |
| Every time you make a purchase, you get points there, and you can trade those points for the tokens. | |
| So that's how you unlock the longer books or the more advanced features. | |
| But you don't have to use that. | |
| It's completely optional. | |
| You can just use the tool for free. | |
| And many people do. | |
| Most of the users use it for free, actually. | |
| But audio books are coming. | |
| And we believe that human knowledge or access to knowledge, I would say, is a human right. | |
| It's a fundamental civil right, access to knowledge. | |
| Censorship is evil, but knowledge is good. | |
| And we believe in providing knowledge and making it decentralized and bringing it to you at no cost, wherever we can. | |
| But we need your support in order to do that. | |
| We fund this from our sales at healthrangerstore.com. | |
| So if you want to help support this project, there are two ways you can do that. | |
| Number one, you can just shop with us at healthrangerstore.com. | |
| We're also looking for donors, that is larger donors, minimum $10,000. | |
| If you want to donate to this project, it's tax deductible because this is our nonprofit organization, 501c3. | |
| And we will give you credit for your donation. | |
| So talk to us. | |
| Just reach out to us. | |
| You can reach us through Natural News or you can reach us through contact information on brightlearn.ai. | |
| If you want to donate $10,000 or more to this project for freedom of speech, then we can help you in a number of ways that we can talk about. | |
| It's going to take some money to make this dream come true and it's going to take your help. | |
| If you can't donate to us, that's fine. | |
| Just use the engine, share it, tell people about it, spread the word, and get ready for incredible new features to come shortly. | |
|
Missing Peptides Matter
00:15:22
|
|
| That's all happening at brightlearn.ai. | |
| I'm Mike Adams, the AI developer of the platform. | |
| Thank you for your support. | |
| I am so tired of you guys just being told, oh, let's run another blood test. | |
| When do you go to your doctor? | |
| Let's run another blood test and everything looks fine. | |
| Just go home and take some more meds. | |
| Before you know it, you're on eight. | |
| Nobody has looked at why are you sick to begin with. | |
| Welcome to today's interview here on BrightTeon.com. | |
| I'm Mike Adams and today we're going to dig into the entire issue of peptide therapy and what's going on in the peptide marketplace. | |
| Now, peptides, it's just a fancy name for proteins, certain types of proteins that are signaling systems in your body. | |
| And as you know, I've been using certain peptides that are natural that are created in our bodies naturally. | |
| I've been using them for almost a year now and I've had extraordinary results. | |
| That's revolutionized my own fitness training, my own strength training. | |
| Now, I am, I'm literally stronger than I've ever been in my entire life. | |
| And we'll get into why that is. | |
| And I'm able to jog an hour straight now, which I couldn't even think of doing that a year ago because of some previous martial arts injuries. | |
| But I've been able to heal and repair. | |
| And I credit that to both peptides and, of course, all the superfoods, nutrition that I routinely pursue. | |
| My lifestyle is a very clean lifestyle. | |
| I do a lot of self-care. | |
| I get sunlight. | |
| I do stretching and body rolling and things like that. | |
| But peptides for me were kind of the missing piece. | |
| And so the person who introduced me to peptides is our guest today. | |
| And I have to thank her tremendously for her knowledge and wisdom and guidance in this space. | |
| It's Diane Kayser from dianekazer.com. | |
| And welcome. | |
| It's great to have you here. | |
| And let me just give out your website. | |
| Well, first of all, welcome to the show. | |
| Thanks, Mike. | |
| Good to be here again with you. | |
| And I'm so stoked. | |
| It's been a year and you're transformed and still transforming even more. | |
| Really, transformation is the proper term here. | |
| You know, sometimes when people use that word, it's hypish. | |
| But in my case, it's absolutely not. | |
| This has been a wild transformation. | |
| I mean, radical, but all for the for the better. | |
| You know, better endurance, better strength, better muscle tone, less pain, et cetera. | |
| It's been great all around. | |
| So thank you. | |
| You're welcome. | |
| And it's also interesting. | |
| Anybody who's listening and has been on the same journey or similar, been trying these things out. | |
| It's really awesome to go back and look at the picture of you six months ago or even three months ago and a year ago. | |
| You know, Mike has shared on our last episode a picture of him and what his upper body looks like. | |
| And when you don't see his head, just like, is that an 18-year-old? | |
| And this is not just about Mike. | |
| You might be a little too generous, but I have been able to just dramatically increase upper body strength. | |
| And I guess what was holding me back was just the lack of training because of my injuries. | |
| And I was afraid. | |
| I was afraid to lift heavier weights. | |
| And now I'm not. | |
| So anyway, I didn't mean to interrupt you, but go ahead. | |
| Thanks for the compliment. | |
| Yeah, no, absolutely. | |
| And it's a compliment to everybody too. | |
| There's other people who I've introduced peptides to over the last year or two years, and they're blown away because the beautiful part about peptides is that your body's already making 30,000 of them a day. | |
| Even some say even more. | |
| There are certain peptides that there's about 50 or so that I like to focus on, the ones that we are mostly missing or not producing as much as we used to because of all the poisons and the parasites and the processed foods and everything else that's blocking our body's ability to produce them. | |
| Like we have since we were actually inception, even before we were born. | |
| We make these things. | |
| And so it's just bringing back, it's like having, well, I like to say when you're bringing in peptides, it's like when you're somewhere without cell signal and you're trying to send a text and you keep getting the exclamation mark. | |
| And then when you get signal again and the text sends just fine, it sends very quick. | |
| It's kind of like having 1G versus 6G. | |
| I guess you could also make a comparison. | |
| That's more toxic. | |
| But all of a sudden, things are fast. | |
| Things move. | |
| You're able to communicate. | |
| That is your organs and your body's ability to communicate. | |
| This is bad. | |
| This is good. | |
| And so your body doesn't end up with autoimmune disease, confused, you know, attacking your own tissue. | |
| And it's able to do what God intended us to do, which is to defend ourselves, to make energy, to make babies, to sleep, to rest, to recover, to reproduce, and to recover. | |
| Like you were saying, Mike, if you can't recover from even the little bit of exercise or a little bit of walking, then it's hard to work out or exercise the next day. | |
| And we absolutely must be moving. | |
| Yeah, absolutely. | |
| And as I explained to you privately, I've also added kettlebell deadlifts to my routine, which that was unthinkable for me a year ago because of, again, my previous martial arts injuries. | |
| But now I'm doing kettlebell deadlifts. | |
| I guess I could be using barbell deadlifts if I want to, but I don't have barbells out in the forest. | |
| I just have kettlebells. | |
| So I just use that and it's fine. | |
| But I want to mention a couple of things because we're not here to just say everything's awesome. | |
| We're also here, you're here. | |
| We have some warnings because number one, there's abuse of peptides by people, especially the GLP-1 that it's famous for people trying to look thin and fit while still pursuing a really crappy diet, but they have an injection once a week. | |
| I think it's once a week, once a week, and it's like $1,000 a month or it used to be. | |
| And they can destroy their health by trying to take that shortcut without having proper diet and fitness and so on. | |
| And then the other thing is there's also peptide retailers out there that you don't trust, that I don't trust, that aren't doing the mass spec analysis and validation of what they're selling. | |
| So they don't even know what they're selling. | |
| So we're going to, in today's show, folks, we're going to tell you about these two issues also. | |
| So Diane, do you want to sort of elaborate on that introduction, some of the problems with peptides? | |
| Yeah, actually, I want to share my screen. | |
| Yeah, go for it. | |
| Okay. | |
| Special presentation just for us today. | |
| Yeah, that's, there we go. | |
| That's the, like an Ozempic injection or what is that? | |
| Yeah, you're Ozempic deficient. | |
| That's the problem. | |
| That's hilarious. | |
| I would never inject that stuff in me. | |
| Are you kidding me? | |
| I know, me neither. | |
| And actually, there's a lot of people talking about this, Peter McCulla and a lot of others who are actually looking under the microscope and have been for a very long time, that there's a difference between separating out peptides versus the prescription version of them, which adds the backbone and chemical and toxic signature that makes it a prescription medication. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So you're saying like somebody could go out there and buy actual GLP-1 in its pure form. | |
| And that's different from the prescription medication version that adds all this other garbage. | |
| Is that what you just said? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, if there's one thing we learned during COVID is that, you know, they're lack of trans, lack of informed consent and transparency. | |
| And there's, we looked, you know, there's a lot of people that we talked about. | |
| And I know you were one of them, Mike, talking about all the things that were found under the microscope. | |
| Anything pretty much a needle at this point that you're getting from Western medicine, you can expect to have a lot of the same chemical concoction that came with the COVID shots. | |
| They've been looking this at these things under the microscope for a long time and even in chemtrails. | |
| So it's like we can actually, yes, Mike, to answer your question, you can purchase semagluti, which is a peptide in and of itself. | |
| And that's a GLP. | |
| We make that in our gut. | |
| That's what our gastric juices will make provided in a healthy body, right? | |
| The thing that blocks that, we talked about this in the last show too, is eating a high consumption of processed foods, GMOs, a lot of the oils, the toxic oils, canola oil, vegetable oil, a lot of the seed oils. | |
| And people who took the jab, and I'm talking about not just this image I'm sharing here, but the COVID shots, there was a doctor who followed a lot of these patients who took the COVID shot, and she found that it wiped out their bifidobacteria, which represents about 80% of the bacteria that is our terrain, our immune system that is developing until the age of two. | |
| It's very important for our immune system that lives in the gut. | |
| Also, acromancia is very important. | |
| And what I see, Mike, in these two with these specific two microbes, we see them extremely low in our patient stool tests. | |
| And those two are not just random gut bugs. | |
| They're important for gut function. | |
| They're important for your immune system. | |
| And they are vital to produce GLPs naturally. | |
| So this is what's missing. | |
| We're not just GLP deficient. | |
| Go take, you know, we are GLP deficient, but there's a reason for that. | |
| So I always want to get to the root cause. | |
| And this is why, as you can see in this image here, people who come off slimming jabs regain weight four times faster than dieters based on study. | |
| Oh, because they haven't changed their diet. | |
| I mean, they're still living on processed junk foods and they're lacking, you know, fitness activity. | |
| Yeah, and they haven't changed their terrain. | |
| You know, the terrain of the body is basically your microbes, the healthy microbes, the good guys, the bad guys, the good girls, the bad girls. | |
| We should have healthy flora in the gut. | |
| Most people are missing that. | |
| Therefore, we can't make our own GLPs. | |
| So it's not just about how can I pay for a $1,500 one-time a week injection that is known to actually cause rebound weight gain, or how can I actually help my body to make my own GLPs? | |
| And therefore, there are certain peptides that you can do to also bridge that gap, which we'll talk about today: safer peptides, non-injectable peptides. | |
| But the second part of this image I wanted to share with you guys is these two are correlated. | |
| You know, obesity, overweight, and cancer, those are correlated. | |
| These are all correlated because a toxic body is going to be overweight, is going to be more prevalent to have cancer. | |
| It's going to have autoimmune disease, chronic pain, weight gain, body pain, energy drain, broken brain, and inability to sleep and actually repair and restore while you're sleeping. | |
| That's when we make human growth hormone. | |
| And so we need to, I mean, these are two signs right here that we need to get to the root cause of why people are not only not getting better with these, you know, chemo radiation, 98.6% failure rate. | |
| And now we're seeing GLPs because they've been around and they're super popular for the last two years. | |
| We're seeing a failure rate with those two. | |
| So what's the bottom line? | |
| What's the common denominator? | |
| What we talked about already. | |
| All right. | |
| All right. | |
| Hold on a second. | |
| I just brought up the ozempic.com website. | |
| Show my screen on this because I also want to tell people: look, this is from ozempic.com: side effects. | |
| Ozempic may cause serious side effects, including thyroid tumors, including cancer. | |
| Okay, it's like right there. | |
| Oh, swelling in your neck, and neck cancer, trouble swallowing. | |
| That doesn't sound bad. | |
| Shortness of breath. | |
| These may be symptoms of thyroid cancer, but it's more than that. | |
| It's more than that. | |
| Pancreas problems, retinopathy. | |
| Hey, I'm thin, but I went blind. | |
| You know, problems with your stomach. | |
| I'm so thin, but I can't see myself in the mirror because I'm blind. | |
| You know, I'm not. | |
| Look, I'm not trying to mock people who have toxic side effects. | |
| What I'm trying to do is tell people these are admitted side effects. | |
| Okay. | |
| And like you just said, Diane, there's not just GLP1 in these shots. | |
| There's other stuff as well. | |
| There's other stuff as well. | |
| So if you're taking prescription medications that claim to do things that are based on something like semaglutide, but there's more than that in there. | |
| What are the effects of all of that? | |
| Just like with the vaccines, like you said. | |
| So what you and I are advocates of, Diane, is purity. | |
| And I don't advocate GLP1. | |
| I advocate healthy living and healthy food choice, drinking smoothies and exercising, et cetera. | |
| But at least if anybody out there wants to use a GLP-1, don't use the prescription big pharma version. | |
| Does that make sense? | |
| Yes. | |
| Yes. | |
| And that is actually possible. | |
| So there's a lot of people who, I want to share an image too, because we're going to get into one of the things that last shot we didn't have enough time for, which people are extremely excited about when I talk about it, which is it's a peptide that's actually capsule-based and it's called SLOOP, S-L-U-P-P. | |
| And so there's definitely GLPs and you're welcome to inject yourself. | |
| Then there's SLOOOP and it's a capsule form and it is not going to be as widely taken away from our access as GLPs will be in the first quarter of 2026 per the Safe Drugs Act. | |
| So that's what I wanted to talk about today too, is that there's a peptide crackdown happening right now. | |
| There's a peptide shutdown. | |
| There's a lot of companies who are absolutely losing their company. | |
| They're going to jail. | |
| They're getting jail. | |
| Felonies, cease and assists, people who have to, they're getting in trouble because retatrutide is, so there's semaglutide, which is ozempic, then there's terzepatide and there's Wagovi-Mongero versions of that, which are the prescription needle base, right? | |
| And then there's retitrutide. | |
| Retatrutide is a GLP that I actually really like the effects of it because it does a lot more than semaglutide and terzepatide. | |
| Retatrutide is not yet a medication. | |
| It is not yet an injection. | |
| It is something that is owned by Eli Lilly. | |
| It's been patented by Eli Lilly. | |
| But until now, they haven't actually herded all the cattle to say you can't sell it as a research peptide, not intended for human use. | |
| We're going to take it and we're going to make it into a medication, an injection. | |
| The only way you can get it is through a compound pharmacy, through a doctor. | |
| And the prices are likely going to get marked up 5 to 15 times more than what a GLP in the form of RETA is right now. | |
| Retatrutide is about $100 a month. | |
| And when you look at what it's likely to become, it's probably going to be over $500 a month, if not close to what semaglutide is now, which is like $1,500 without insurance covering it. | |
| So you're talking about retatrutide? | |
| Is that what you called it? | |
| Yep, exactly. | |
| That's available right now through experimental use. | |
| But are you saying the FDA is going to crack down on that and limit that only to pharma? | |
| Yes. | |
| So what's happening right now is that there has been, for the last three years, there's been a lot of compound pharmacies that have been compounding things like terzepatide. | |
|
Retatrutide Risks Revealed
00:15:27
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|
| And that is another GLP. | |
| So there's single agonist, there's triagonist, and then there's dual agonist. | |
| So the reason why I like Rhetta more than the other two, which is semaglutide and terz, I say sema and glute and ters to be short, but they all end with glutide, tide. | |
| They all end with tide. | |
| So before you could not purchase retatrutide unless you purchased it like through something like Limitless, like we have a link for you if people want to buy that, you can't buy this right now just straight on the website. | |
| You would actually have to register as a VIP to do that and you could purchase it there. | |
| They actually have two FDA, previous FDA attorneys working for them. | |
| So right now it's currently available. | |
| We can't recommend anything on this show because we're not your doctor. | |
| This is all just conversation. | |
| But what I am saying is, if you decide to go down the GLP train, just know that the people that we've worked with and what we are seeing is people who get on retatrutide don't see a lot of these same negative implications. | |
| Like we actually saw close to 2,000 people who lost their sight, perhaps permanently, based on what you were just reading, Mike, when they took semaglutide, which is Ozempic. | |
| And that's because it's the main part of what it does is it slows gastric emptying. | |
| And I have a slide to show what the differences are between GLP and also SLOOP too. | |
| Okay. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Okay. | |
| Let me get into that. | |
| Did you want me to talk a little bit about the Safe Drugs Act too? | |
| There's a couple other points to do. | |
| Let's get to that. | |
| But now you've teased us with this slide. | |
| And now we got to see this slide. | |
| What's the difference between these GLPs here? | |
| Okay. | |
| So here's the image. | |
| So if you're looking at all the different semaglutide, terzepatide, and retatrutide, and one that I would like to share more about, which we talked a little bit about last episode in December, which is S-L-U-P-P 332. | |
| People call it SLOOOP for short. | |
| Some people spell it S-L-O-O-P. | |
| SLOOP is a capsule form, and most people will take one or two per day. | |
| And in my studies, they found that these mice lost up to 12% of their body weight in 28 days. | |
| Yes. | |
| And they gained, yes. | |
| What? | |
| And they gained endurance by about 75. | |
| So it was close to 78%. | |
| So SLOOP is a machine of a peptide. | |
| And as you can see on this visual, there's differences between what they do, right? | |
| So if we're looking at SLOOP versus semaglutide, which is what is in Ozempic plus a whole bunch of other chemical concoctions. | |
| Used to be you could just buy semaglutide or terzepatide or retatrutide just by themselves as a peptide without it being an injection from big pharma, but they're starting to take that away. | |
| So the differences between, and actually what I do like better about SLOOP than the GLPs is it doesn't come with some crazy rebound weight gain. | |
| Like the one we were just talking about, the people who got off of these injections, specifically Ozempic, they saw people gained weight four times faster than just dieting alone. | |
| And they're back not only to square one, but they're even worse because they didn't address the terrain, their lifestyle, their eating habits, movement, hydration, clean food, and then healthy, high-quality levels of protein. | |
| So when you look at the difference here, sloop is not going to suppress your appetite as much as the other three as we found in studies. | |
| That's not the intended purpose. | |
| I've actually seen patients that we work with who go on and have been on semaglutide before or Zempic, and they're like, I just didn't even have any hunger anymore. | |
| And they lost not only their hunger, but they lost their pleasure for food. | |
| And they lost not only their pleasure for food, they lost their pleasure for life. | |
| They didn't really have a craving for things in life. | |
| So there's a drug for that too. | |
| There's antidepressants they can stack on top of that. | |
| That's a great idea. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then at night. | |
| If you've lost your soul's connection to God, there's a drug for that from big pharma, you know. | |
| And then if you can't sleep, no, there's no little stuff. | |
| Right. | |
| Everything is another pill. | |
| But no, I get your point. | |
| So what you're saying is this sloop, S-L-U-P-P, here I have it up on my screen from Limitless. | |
| Sloop. | |
| And I do, I have a bottle of this sitting on my desk and I haven't done anything with it yet, but I got it because of what you said last time. | |
| I wanted to investigate this. | |
| But you're saying that this doesn't suppress appetite, which sounds good to me because I feel like messing with appetite could be treacherous territory. | |
| Yes. | |
| Now we're getting back to the women who have been on the HCG diet eating less than 500 calories a day and losing weight. | |
| What? | |
| And then we're back to that. | |
| Remember the HCG diet? | |
| No, but 500 calories a day. | |
| I mean, I, gosh, I can't, there's no way I couldn't function on that. | |
| Me neither. | |
| And let me just mention, Diane, I do not limit how much I eat at all. | |
| Me neither. | |
| You don't either. | |
| No, no, you, your body needs to sell signal to you when you're craving. | |
| A protein, let's say after you exercise or if you have an injury and you need tissues to rebate, repair and rebuild your proteins that you consume break down into amino acids, which is what peptides are. | |
| They're long chains of amino acids, up to about 50 amino acids long, and so these are nothing new to the body. | |
| The body already knows what to do, and then the body converts these amino acids into neurotransmitters. | |
| So if you don't eat healthy food, you don't have a healthy mood either. | |
| Right, and that's where people are losing their pleasure for life. | |
| You need it for neurotransmitters, serotonin, dopamine. | |
| If you're not getting enough calories, you might be dopamine deficient. | |
| Then you're going to be addicted to things. | |
| So that's why we're also seeing rebound weight gain. | |
| When people get off of these things because it's messing with their appetite, then they get it all back, then they gain the weight back. | |
| I'm not saying it's everybody, but they found this in studies that they followed. | |
| It was um British Medical Journal looked at 37 clinical trials and more than 9300 adults that were using glp medications like the semaglutide and the tersepatide, and what they found? | |
| That people regain nearly one pound per month when they got off of it and most were projected to return to their starting weight within one and a half to two years. | |
| Wow, so these are not things that are happening, you know, just to a few people. | |
| This is a large study that was conducted and then even things like blood pressure and a lot of things that people were talking about my cholesterol markers improved. | |
| Those things were reversed within a year or two. | |
| So we don't want to go back to where we started. | |
| We want to get to the root cause of why your body is not cell signaling properly to begin with, which is why we want to get rid of the toxic burden in your environment. | |
| Prove how you eat. | |
| Yeah, hold on a second. | |
| Uh, I want to give out your website here. | |
| It's Dianekazer.com. | |
| Slash Ranger will take you to the special homepage for all the Mike Adams listeners here, and you've got a course here called root cause reset that I noticed on your slide there. | |
| It's on the bottom of your slides. | |
| I love that name. | |
| Uh, tell us about this, this course, because I understand you have this coming up pretty soon. | |
| What's this all about? | |
| Yeah, so everything we're talking about Mike, you and I are on such a similar page and we've been talking about this for years. | |
| You know that that superfoods are important. | |
| I talk about eat fast food which is ferments and antioxidant and superfoods and toxin binder. | |
| That's what fast food stands for and superfoods are important. | |
| Mike's products are amazing. | |
| He was one of the sponsors for our tv show which is coming out soon and it's because I believe in them. | |
| Superfoods have been a part of my world for 20 years. | |
| And why superfoods? | |
| Because our normal average foods have lost the density of nutrition over the last well, let's say 50 years. | |
| It takes about five oranges or five heads of broccoli to get the same nutritional value of what one orange or one head of broccoli did in the 1950s before we gmo'd it and poisoned it and glyphosated and atrazine and everything. | |
| So, what we want to do in this root cause reset is just like you, Mike, I want to put people's health in their own hands. | |
| I want to put people's freedom and control and wisdom in their own hands so they know what their body is trying to communicate to them when symptoms do show up. | |
| But it takes proper cell signaling to know what symptoms are, to actually feel your symptoms and know how to decode them. | |
| So, what we're doing in the root cause reset is: I am so tired of you guys tell just being told, Oh, let's run another blood test. | |
| Let's when you go to your doctor, let's run another blood test and everything looks fine. | |
| Just go home and take some more meds. | |
| Before you know it, you're on eight. | |
| Nobody has looked at why are you sick to begin with. | |
| So, what we're doing in this group, it's an eight-week group learning immersion course where you guys are going to learn and you're going to have live lessons with me and my chi clinicians. | |
| And we're going to teach you exactly where to find toxins in your environment. | |
| And more importantly, what is coming out of your body in urine. | |
| We do a urine test and we look for three different classifications of toxins because if you don't address these toxins both in your body and in your environment, then the weight keeps coming back. | |
| The reason for needing to take medications because your body is going into histamine overload, because your immune system is struggling, and you wonder why we're getting cancer, autoimmune disease. | |
| It's because your body is so toxic. | |
| But until people, and I'm not saying that like Britney Spears, you're not a bad person, our whole environment's toxic, right? | |
| And it's not your fault. | |
| So, this should be the very first place that every doctor starts with to explore the root cause reason for all of your health issues because they start with toxicity. | |
| I always say we have thousands of diseases and thousands of diagnosis, thousands of boxes to put you in so they could put you on a drug, but there's really one disease, and that is toxins. | |
| So, once we can see those toxins show up on your labs, then you get excited about finding out where they're coming from in your environment, and you start to take your health more seriously. | |
| Yeah, I'm so glad you mentioned that because you and I are not at all about sort of shortcuts or instant miracle cures. | |
| There's no such thing as a miracle cure. | |
| You know, people may not know this about you, but you've also earned your health transformation. | |
| You went through hell and back. | |
| And, you know, I've been through lots of challenges over the years, injury or, you know, pre-diabetes before I got into health and nutrition. | |
| But you are a fitness guru at this point. | |
| You're active like I'm active. | |
| You pay attention to your environment. | |
| You keep everything ultra clean. | |
| You are very particular about the foods and superfoods and supplements that you take in. | |
| And thus, you've earned the health that you have achieved. | |
| We are not advocating people like you can't actually just like, like I think Machado gave the Nobel Prize to Donald Trump recently. | |
| You know, like, here, have my Nobel Prize. | |
| That's not the same thing as earning the Nobel Peace Prize. | |
| You know, like you can't earn health by taking an injection. | |
| You've got to really have the full picture. | |
| And that's, that's what you're offering. | |
| I think it sounds like in your course. | |
| What is it? | |
| Root cause reset, right? | |
| Root cause reset. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You're getting me thinking, Mike, because I should get every, we should give everybody a certificate once they graduate this eight-week course. | |
| It's a big deal. | |
| You know, yeah, congratulations on being your own best doctor. | |
| Put your full name right there, you know, because that's how I became a doctor. | |
| Is just to your point, Mike, I'll share with you guys so that you can gleam some hope from my suffering too. | |
| I had breast implants. | |
| I took Botox. | |
| I got severely injured and damaged from them. | |
| I had Hashimoto's. | |
| I had small intestine bacterial overgrowth. | |
| I had IBS. | |
| I had herpes I was diagnosed with inappropriately. | |
| And I was told I was to take a cyclovir for the rest of my life. | |
| My Achilles tendon ruptured after I took Cipro. | |
| I took Democrovera. | |
| I didn't get my period for eight years. | |
| Now there's a black box warning on it. | |
| I took injections to travel the world because I've been to 30 countries and traveled the world mostly by myself. | |
| And so I did the vaccine schedules, then got severely sick thereafter. | |
| I could go on and on about all the things I was injured by. | |
| And that's actually how I got to this point: I see so many of our patients who have no idea. | |
| They come to us and they're like really proud that they just got a root canal. | |
| And 76% of disease begins in the mouth. | |
| And silver fillings, every single one of my molars was a silver filling. | |
| It's half aluminum and half mercury, but yet we blame it on the chemtrails. | |
| But it's also mercury and aluminum is in the COVID shots or any vaccine at this point, right? | |
| So there's a lot more to it than people saying, oh, the COVID shot killed the person or the COVID shots causing cancer or the COVID shots, the reason they're obese. | |
| It is and always will be the vaccines are hurting people and damaging people more than probably anything else. | |
| But we also can take health back into our own hands and realize that we've been poisoned since we were born and before. | |
| I've had autistic patients before. | |
| Actually, a good story: a 12-year-old and a 14-year-old, they were both severely injured by vaccines when they were about two years old. | |
| And when I met with the mom and I met with the grandma and had a meeting with them, I did a lot of deep dive digging into their health history. | |
| And this is what we do in the root cause reset. | |
| We ask the questions that no other doctor does to find out where the problem began. | |
| And the kids, like, why would these kids have been vaccine injured at this point? | |
| And normally it's because they had a previous exposure of aluminum and mercury somewhere else. | |
| This is called epigenetics. | |
| Genetics is 2%, maybe at most 5% of your destiny. | |
| Epigenetics is toxins, poisons, pathogens, parasites, EMFs, all these things that will actually turn good genes off and bad genes on. | |
| We could actually express healthy genes by removing the things that deactivate them and turn down the bad genes by giving the body what it needs to actually rebuild and repair DNA. | |
| And those are things like peptides that we'll be talking about in the course as well. | |
| Long story short, the mom and the grandma both had silver fillings. | |
| So the grandma had silver fillings when she had the daughter. | |
| The daughter had silver fillings and a whole mouth of them when she had her son and her daughter. | |
| And they both got vaccine injured. | |
| What predisposed them to that was that they had been exposed to all these poisons for a very long time. | |
| It's generational. | |
| It's epigenerational. | |
| So when we start finding these poisons in you, people start getting curious about how can I reduce my burden of them. | |
| And that's when diseases start to reduce and you can get off the medications because we address the root cause for why you had symptoms to begin with. | |
| Okay, got it. | |
| Got it. | |
| Let me give out your website again. | |
| It's dianekayser.com/slash ranger. | |
| It'll take you to this page. | |
| And here for your course coming up, root cause reset. | |
| There's a discount code here for $500 off. | |
| You just use the code 500Ranger. | |
| And I'm assuming that we are an affiliate for you. | |
|
Benefits of Exercise Beyond Pills
00:09:43
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|
| I'm assuming we have an affiliate relationship. | |
| I mean, I don't actually handle that part of our company anymore. | |
| So I don't know. | |
| I'd have to ask my team. | |
| But whether we do or not, this is extremely valuable to the audience. | |
| And that's why I'd like to have you on. | |
| I'd like to share this. | |
| Now, you've got more slides to show us, though. | |
| So let's get back to that. | |
| You just finished the slide of the comparison. | |
| Actually, I don't think you finished going through that chart. | |
| So what else is a benefit of SLOOP versus using all the different GLPs you were talking about? | |
| I don't even recall all their names at this point. | |
| There's a lot of variations, but continue with that chart. | |
| Yes. | |
| Okay. | |
| Let me get back to it. | |
| So with SLOOP, it's one of those easy ones that you can take because it's just a capsule. | |
| You know, it's one or twice a day. | |
| And they call it an exercise medic. | |
| Yeah, it's a capsule. | |
| No injections. | |
| That's that's really a big deal. | |
| And that is likely to not be affected by the safe, I call it unsafe, drugs act coming up, which they're taking away our access to GLPs. | |
| And so, well, what do you do then? | |
| Or what do you do if you've been on GLPs and you're somebody who is afraid to get off because you don't want the rebound weight gain, right? | |
| The thing I like about SLOOP so much is that there's a lot of people who are taking GLP ones or GLPs in general, and they are not moving. | |
| They're not exercising and they're not eating healthy amounts of protein. | |
| And you could lose with your weight up to 50% of your weight could be muscle. | |
| And this is a big part of why people not only gain the weight back, but gain it even more than people who didn't start GLPs. | |
| So with SLOOP, in studies, they have found, like I mentioned, that mice lose up to 12% of their body weight in 28 days. | |
| And the reason why is because the body literally thinks it's exercising. | |
| We've been talking about this for years. | |
| You'd be like, can't we just develop some sort of exercise and a pill? | |
| Well, here we are. | |
| It feels like exercise in a pill. | |
| So it works without cutting calories. | |
| And this is mice that didn't change anything, Mike. | |
| They didn't change their diet. | |
| They didn't change their movement. | |
| They didn't change anything. | |
| And they lost up to 12 pounds, 12% of their body weight in the first month. | |
| Well, I okay, just my reaction to that. | |
| I think losing 12% of your body weight in one month is pretty radical. | |
| And I don't even, I wouldn't recommend somebody aim for that. | |
| Now, if you lost 1% of your body weight in a month, that's actually really strong progress on sustained weight loss, right? | |
| So I'm not advocating 12% weight loss. | |
| That sounds like an emergency to me, but you're talking about rat studies there. | |
| So that's a totally different ballgame. | |
| What are you seeing that use this? | |
| And we're talking about the amount, the dosage too. | |
| What are these mice being dosed at, right? | |
| So that's why I'm very conservative in my approach. | |
| You wouldn't just ram like four capsules a day. | |
| And it depends on the person too. | |
| So if people really are, and some of our patients are, they could be 300 pounds or more. | |
| And so I might recommend two capsules a day for someone like themselves, but I would also recommend something like we talked a little bit about in the last show, which is MK677 or 777, which is a human growth hormone secretagogue because you absolutely should be building muscle while you are taking something like SLOOOP. | |
| And that is another reason why I would never advocate such rapid weight loss. | |
| When I have a patient, anytime they're losing more than 10 pounds a month, I'm like, wait, hold on a minute. | |
| Are you exercising? | |
| Are you eating enough protein? | |
| Making sure that they're doing everything in a holistic way, because I want to be the doctor that you listen to for a year, maybe two years, maybe less, and they don't have to listen to me anymore because we've helped fix the root cause of your body. | |
| And now you're craving healthy foods because your body is self-signaling, I want healthy things because now your mitochondria are working, your metabolism is back on board. | |
| So that's why I like to, anytime somebody is losing weight, recommend things that are helping you to build muscle at the same time. | |
| The thing I also like about SLOOP that isn't so much, we can say the same thing for semaglutide or ozempic, it's not going to work with your mitochondria and your metabolism. | |
| It's not going to work with. | |
| So I really like that approach. | |
| And it's for the needle phobes who don't really want to get into the needles. | |
| That SLOOP is another really powerful alternative. | |
| The other thing is if you're looking to exercise or improve your exercise results, the thing that I like about SLOOP too is what they found in my studies is that it improves their endurance significantly. | |
| So that's interesting. | |
| Yeah, go ahead, Mike, because I know you're a big exercise buff. | |
| So that's something that you can even measure in yourself. | |
| Well, yeah, that's interesting, but I've always had really good endurance. | |
| I have a very strong heart. | |
| And so even when I'm out jogging, I'm not out of breath. | |
| You probably heard I've sent you text messages or voice when I'm jogging. | |
| That's why I'm breathing heavy. | |
| I'm not stalking you. | |
| I'm actually out jogging and sending messages because I'm not totally out of breath. | |
| I don't know. | |
| It'd be hard for me to test that, but a lot of other people could test that. | |
| But I want to tell people how they can get some of these experimental peptides that you just mentioned. | |
| If you go to rangerdeals.com, and that's my website, and we have affiliate relationships with many trusted providers and limitless peptides right here. | |
| You click on shop and it takes you to their website. | |
| And we are compensated as an affiliate for sales of products there. | |
| But in return, I review the Mass Spec lab results of this company. | |
| And I've checked a lot of companies, a bunch of companies I do not trust. | |
| And yet, Limitless is who you and I trust. | |
| And here it is, MK777 that's available in capsule format from them. | |
| You can use discount code Ranger and you'll save 10 to 15% off of the prices that you see here. | |
| And I joke, MK777, I joke about this. | |
| It's MKUltra in a pill. | |
| But I'm just kidding. | |
| It's hilarious. | |
| So you can remember it, right? | |
| Just so you can remember it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But anyway, this is a very advanced peptide. | |
| I've done a lot of research on this one because of, you know, and for whatever reason, throughout history, the Russians did so much of the pioneering research on this. | |
| And as you know, I now have, I have 240,000 science papers that are in our in-house research index that's used for our book engine. | |
| And in those science papers, there's a lot of research out of Russia about peptides. | |
| So I've been looking through some of that stuff. | |
| It's pretty amazing. | |
| Like, even though this one's a very new one, MK777, it overcomes a lot of the problems of the 677 that you mentioned or maybe limitations. | |
| And it doesn't end up making you crazy, insanely hungry either, I think is one of the big benefits. | |
| But talk about the background, the research and the benefits of this formula as the newer version of the MK line. | |
| Yeah, I wanted to finish a little bit about SLOOPERS Matter and I'll circle back. | |
| For those especially, because I have a heart for people who are injured because I've had back surgery, I had Achilles tendon surgery, I had explant surgery. | |
| So I know that during surgery or times where you just don't feel like it, it's hard to exercise. | |
| So what I like about SLOOP is that it starts to rebuild your ability to actually exercise. | |
| And if you can't, for those maybe who are just surgery or they just can't work out right now as an exercise, what they found in normal mice in these studies is that they had a 70% longer running time, 45% greater running distance, and they had increased mitochondrial energy production, which means for you is that you'll have more energy and not just energy because you want more energy because you're tired, but your body needs energy. | |
| You need like 80% of your energy is to break down food and assimilate that into the byproducts that your body needs to fuel your brain. | |
| Your brain is very, very calorically expensive as well. | |
| So this is why SLOOP is a huge breakthrough. | |
| And what it does in mimicking exercise is it also means that there's greater fat burning and it can improve muscle efficiency. | |
| And it also, in studies they found, it lowered inflammation signaling. | |
| So it copies the cellular effects of training, not the movement itself. | |
| But when you then add to that exercise, you can get compound effects. | |
| So I have several professional, I think I mentioned this last time, Mike, several professional fighters, MMA, jiu-jitsu, boxing, and they're on sloop because they need to cut weight for their fights, right? | |
| And so it's really powerful if you want to cut weight. | |
| And if you're looking at the prices, Mike shared his screen a couple of times. | |
| If you're getting SLOOP and you're getting MK777, just imagine those two. | |
| They're less than $100 per bottle and they're going to last you two months if you take one capsule a day. | |
| So that's very inexpensive. | |
| We're talking like $45 per month for each one of those and you won't have to spend crazy amounts of money like people are on GLPs. | |
| So that's another thing to consider too. | |
| Yes, good point. | |
| But I do want to mention as a disclaimer, these are not sold for consumption. | |
|
Earning Good Health Through Education
00:15:15
|
|
| These are sold for experimental research purposes only. | |
| They're not labeled for human consumption. | |
| And also they're not FDA approved as a drug for anything. | |
| They're not prescription medications whatsoever. | |
| So I actually, I strongly encourage people to get education about this, which is why they should take your course, learn about all of this. | |
| And, you know, maybe work with a local naturopath about how to shape up the rest of your diet, your fitness, your sleep habits, your healthy exposure to light and so on. | |
| You need to, again, we don't push a quick fix magical solution. | |
| There is no such thing when it comes to health or money either, right? | |
| Like you have to be disciplined and educated. | |
| You have to earn your way to good health. | |
| There are things that can help you, but you're going to have to say no to the fried canola oil treats or whatever you're doing. | |
| Come on, get the seed oils out of your life. | |
| You're going to have to have some kind of movement. | |
| You're going to have to get some natural light in your life. | |
| You're going to have to do these other things in addition to this. | |
| So I just want to be clear. | |
| We're not claiming that these products are going to prevent, treat, or cure any disease. | |
| We're saying get educated, use all the tools that are available, but be smart and be safe, right? | |
| Does that make sense? | |
| Yes. | |
| And here's also what I'll say. | |
| I know you have a lot of smart people listening to you. | |
| If you're a doctor or a medical professional and you haven't been talking about peptides yet, you know, I invite you to reach out to us. | |
| You can email us supporteddyingcasia.com because we do have people who are going through our trainings and we certify them to really understand and learn how to also, I'm a doctor and I know that I don't have time to repeat myself over and over and over about what is healthy, what it looks like to eat healthy, where you can get healthy foods. | |
| If you are going to have a snack, where would you go? | |
| How to order when you go out to eat? | |
| You know, what things that are going to be the villains when you're eating out for convenience or if, you know, depending on what kind of career you have. | |
| This is where my career began. | |
| I went to a doctor and I needed a lot of advice. | |
| And all I got was just eat more fish oil. | |
| And I was like, that's how I get off birth control and balance my hormones. | |
| So it didn't make any sense to me. | |
| I'm like, I paid $500 for this session. | |
| So maybe I should become my own best doctor. | |
| And then I became a doctor so I could help people become their own best doctor because it was what I didn't get. | |
| So doctors don't have the kind of time to sit down and teach you how to eat. | |
| That's why I put them all in courses because I'm repeating myself over and over. | |
| And that way you don't have to spend as much money. | |
| So actually, as a part of the ReotCause Reset, we're giving you guys my Warrior Cleanse. | |
| So in eight weeks, we teach you exactly what to eat, how to eat, how to help your body drain out properly. | |
| Most people are not draining toxins very well and they have their gallbladders removed or they have liver problems, fatty liver disease. | |
| One in three people has it. | |
| By and large, a big part of that is liver flukes, which are parasites that are protozoa that live in the bile ducts of your liver. | |
| And so you can't carry out fat-soluble toxins because your bile isn't flowing properly. | |
| So, a lot of these people really need to understand that, you know, the dementia, the Parkinson's, the cancer, the autoimmune disease, all of this is what we're talking about. | |
| But most doctors don't have enough time to sit down with you. | |
| So, I like to give doctors these programs they could offer or the peptides so they can really help a lot more people and they don't have to sit down and repeat themselves over and over and over because quality does matter too. | |
| And a lot of doctors are going down the wrong rabbit holes with the wrong peptide companies that are being shut down or being threatened to shut down. | |
| So, we always think about purity here and purity first. | |
| And then, over time, people start to crave the right foods and they won't go back. | |
| I mean, once you have felt what it's like to be poisoned by seed oils or soy sauce or any of these other xenoestrogens, which I do want to mention something about sloop in a minute about that, Mike. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Once you stop eating these things and you feel how good your body can feel, when you don't have flatulation and you're not farting every time you go to bed or when you wake up anymore, and you're not embarrassing yourself because you feel like you can't use the bathroom in public, all of these things that people live in shame about, the symptoms go away. | |
| And then, when you go back to eating these crappy foods, you go, ow, that hurt. | |
| I don't want to do that to my body anymore because your body is self-signaling again because the peptides are telling you very clearly, I don't like that. | |
| But a lot of people's peptides and the receptor sites to receive them are blunted. | |
| So, we got to wake them back up again. | |
| And that's where peptides come in. | |
| And I am going to be talking about that in the root cause reset eight-week program. | |
| Okay, that's all really important. | |
| Let me, I'm showing the sloop product page here from Limitless on my screen. | |
| So, there it is. | |
| That's how much it costs. | |
| But remember, you can use discount code Ranger to save. | |
| I think it's 15% off of this price. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, it's a really, it's very inexpensive, you know, compared to GLPs, especially. | |
| So, if you guys have been shy about that, I love to combine 5-Amino 1MQ with SLOOP. | |
| That's another really good one. | |
| I have a lot of my female patients, they don't want to do injections. | |
| So, I'll say, just try out the 5-amino 1MQ and the SLOOP and combine. | |
| They're like, whoa, the first day they're like, I'm not craving the crappy foods anymore. | |
| I have a lot of energy. | |
| I can think again. | |
| I'm actually sleeping when I'm supposed to. | |
| I'm not sleeping two hours, nap in the middle of the day. | |
| I'm creative. | |
| I actually crave the things that I really want to do versus those things that I was putting off for a long time. | |
| So, or you can just try sloop by itself, but just get on this bandwagon and start to consider because we can't, this is not medical advice unless you are in the root cause reset and I can guide you guys. | |
| But these are things that really make a big difference in a very short time period, according to the studies, which you could also look at on your own. | |
| There's a book I found on your website, Mike, that was written by me, a peptide book. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| That's right. | |
| We did that together. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I was like, wow, you and I wrote a book, Mike. | |
| This is great. | |
| Are we going to win Amazon bestseller? | |
| That's on the Bright Learn Book Engine site, but people can access that book completely free. | |
| I'll bring up a search page on that here in a second, but I do want to mention one of the questions that I honestly have for you about all of this is: you know, I've had so much success with the cognitive intranasal peptides, which I only use, I guess, three or four days a week, but I'm also powered by, you know, chocolate smoothies. | |
| So I've got kids. | |
| And then I'm using the BPC 157, right? | |
| Which I also use, I guess, three or four days a week, intranasally, but sometimes also in a capsule format that you have, or I'm sorry, that Limitless has. | |
| But I don't quite understand what's okay to start stacking with that. | |
| Like you mentioned, SLOOP and another one. | |
| What's okay to stack? | |
| And again, we're not offering medical advice. | |
| We're just discussing experimental peptides. | |
| But is that something that you answer in your course about stacking? | |
| I do. | |
| I've got several documents that are here right now and I've got several different guides. | |
| I stack silver. | |
| I'm good at stacking silver, which has been extraordinarily happy right now. | |
| But I don't know about stacking peptides. | |
| I don't know what goes together. | |
| I have the ones that you can stack together in the course. | |
| And you're also, if you guys do the reset with us, I'm also giving you guys my Peptides 101 guide, which contains a lot of this information. | |
| And I'll get to your answer. | |
| There's protocol dosage guidelines. | |
| Again, we're not telling you what to do. | |
| These are guidelines because they are still in the research chemical space, right? | |
| So, however, I'm there to guide you and give you some assistance. | |
| But to your point, Mike, the things I like to stack are what are the main problems that a human body is experiencing such that they get diagnosed with five, 10 different diseases and they're taking five, | |
| 10 different pills and or end up on chemo radiation because their body is absolutely destroyed because their immune system is exhausted and they're on mast cell activation syndrome because they have mold exposure or they have chronic inflammatory response syndrome and they take one supplement and they get pushed over the edge and they're sensitive to what feels like everything. | |
| This is an inflammatory process and we have to get rid of the arsenist. | |
| We can't just go after the flames. | |
| So that's what we're doing with the reset is taking away the toxins that create all of this stress. | |
| So to answer your question, the number one thing that people are struggling from and that is causing pain is yes, inflammation. | |
| But again, who are the arsonists? | |
| That's why when you take peptides, you absolutely must work alongside that with cleansing the poisons and the parasites that are causing your body to be deplete in peptide production to begin with. | |
| When we pair those things together, purification and peptides, the whole game shifts. | |
| So what I like to do is make sure that your body has enough energy also, because detox and drainage and killing parasites takes a lot of energy. | |
| People go on cleanses and parasite kills and then they feel like it didn't work because they get sicker. | |
| And that's because they didn't have enough energy. | |
| So mitochondria is important. | |
| Addressing inflammation is important. | |
| Working on like BPC, a restorative agent, BPC is a great gateway peptide. | |
| We also use form. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You take a capsule form too, you said, right, Mike? | |
| Yeah, both capsule and intranasal, just depending on the day, but I've used both forms of that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's, and the one we talked about last time, which is the gut one, our gut and healing formula, which is BPC, KPV, and larazatide. | |
| A lot of people go to work to air quotes heal their gut, but you can't heal your gut in a toxic body. | |
| So we always go back to toxins being the greatest problem. | |
| And some people might say, well, we're surrounded by toxins. | |
| So why would I even do this? | |
| Well, the number one reason that most people are sick that we see on every patient lab test today is mold mycotoxins. | |
| Either they're living in mold or they're eating a lot of mold and they're drinking toxic moldy coffee, which I know, Mike, you have lab testing for mold. | |
| You also have, you know, I think it's mold tested, right? | |
| It is yeast and mold, total plate count, E. coli, salmonella, and other things. | |
| We have that whole lab facility. | |
| In fact, if you ever come visit our lab, I'll give you a tour. | |
| I mean, if you come in the studio, I'll give you a tour through the lab. | |
| You can see the instruments. | |
| It's pretty amazing. | |
| We'd love to nerd out with you. | |
| That's my favorite. | |
| Yeah, you'd have a blind. | |
| Let's do a coffee taste test. | |
| Have Starbucks blindfolded and then your coffee next to it. | |
| Starbucks is the most moldy coffee. | |
| Yes. | |
| It's been tested. | |
| They found contaminants in it. | |
| Now when we're finding mold, then there's a whole bunch of other problems. | |
| So mold is a big issue. | |
| And many of our patients are completely shocked by this when they see it on their urine test. | |
| And so then they start making it a very huge priority to reduce what they're eating in mold. | |
| And so there's peptides to go up to that too. | |
| But my point in bringing all that up is with all of the toxins, the poisons, the pathogens, the chemtrails, everything. | |
| I get it. | |
| You guys are trying so hard to achieve health, but it's very difficult when you have a toxic household. | |
| And sometimes you can't control the chemtrails that you're exposed to. | |
| But air purification, a lot of the things that Mike even has on his site, but knowing that they're in your home is important. | |
| So our immune systems are, oh, go ahead, Mike. | |
| Well, and I would say stop poisoning your laundry with toxic laundry detergent and the fabric softener sheets in your dryer. | |
| Those are the absolute worst, incredibly cancer-causing chemicals in that stuff. | |
| And it's one of my pet peeves is like if people show up here in the studio and they reek of mainstream laundry detergent, I'm like, please keep your distance because why are you wearing cancer and bringing it into my studio? | |
| I actually built this table to be very wide. | |
| Can you give us the wide shot of, or whatever wide shot we have? | |
| This is funny, Diana. | |
| I'm just a little behind the scenes. | |
| I built this table to be very wide so that when I have guests in studio, I don't have to sit too close to them in case they're wearing laundry detergent fragrance. | |
| It happens again and again and again. | |
| And it's so, again, like my producers, we even tell people, don't come to Mike's studio reeking of perfume and body lotion and shampoo with fragrance and laundry detergent. | |
| They still do. | |
| They still do. | |
| I'm going to smell terrible if I don't mask it. | |
| I know. | |
| They slap on all the stuff and then they come in and I'm like, oh, God. | |
| I got a slide for you. | |
| Yeah, please. | |
| I'm not trying to be rude, but you know, people, why are you poisoning yourself in your laundry? | |
| Come on. | |
| You've seen this thing. | |
| You can take that out of your life right now. | |
| Take that point. | |
| What is it? | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| Go ahead. | |
| No, no, it's true. | |
| Laundry detergent. | |
| And here's why. | |
| You want to read that, Mike? | |
| Cleaning products as damaging as smoking 20 cigarettes a day. | |
| I believe it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| For sure. | |
| So, I mean, we're talking about not only the main reason, to Mike's point, that these cleaning products are so toxic is because of these phthalates and PFAS and artificial fragrance ingredients that are, they say, oh, God, I can't even stand it, Mike. | |
| Whenever I go to an Airbnb and they have those garbage cans, the garbage bags, and they have all of the fragrances on it, I can't stand it. | |
| It smells forever and it smells forever and will end up in your nose. | |
| It'll end up in your brain. | |
| PFAS, they're forever chemicals called forever chemicals for a very big reason. | |
| They're obesogens or carcinogens. | |
| This is why we can't lose weight because we don't even know if we could detox them from the body. | |
| So we talk with our patients and people who are doing the root cause reset with us that it's not just about, oh, God, I should fear everything, but there are healthier versions of all of this. | |
| And many of them are on Mike's site. | |
| He makes it so easy for us to live a healthier lifestyle. | |
| So these toxic products are everywhere. | |
| And you can use essential oils, which Mike also has on his store. | |
| I'm not even here to be your commercial, Mike, but this is why I love what you're doing because you give people an easy pass to say, instead of this, do this. | |
| And here it is on my website. | |
| It's right there. | |
| So you don't want to get sick from these things that you think you're cleaning your house, right? | |
| You're cleaning your house, hoping that your house is going to smell better and that it ends up being a carcinogenic cancer causing environment for you. | |
| But you could do it and make your house clean without all of that. | |
| So that's just one example of what that's just cleaning products. | |
| Now we're talking about skin products, beauty products, Botox, breast implants, and all the other things that people are using, not thinking twice that Botox is the single greatest, most toxic substance known to man. | |
|
Zero Immunity Warning
00:15:26
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|
| And it actually can paralyze your organs and your nerves and your tissue. | |
| It kills your nerves permanently. | |
| Permanently kills your nerves. | |
| Again, the takeaway, I'm sorry to interrupt, but the takeaway of what you're saying here is so important. | |
| If you're going to invest in your health and good nutrition and therapeutic peptides and good fitness and so on, why not clean up your whole living space? | |
| Like, you know, get the toxins out of your, out of your house, out of your life. | |
| You know, like you mentioned Airbnb. | |
| I can't even visit an Airbnb. | |
| I call it like Air HIV, you know, or Air HPV. | |
| I was like, oh, please, this filthy place. | |
| And then they try to mask it with all this laundry detergent. | |
| I'm like, oh my God, this is worse than a hotel in every way imaginable. | |
| They have like those Febreze things, those candles and the sticks. | |
| Come on, Mike. | |
| You know, at least in America, the hotels do not use fragrance in their laundry detergent. | |
| It's all fragrance free. | |
| But for whatever reason, the Air HPV places, they think that everybody wants everything to smell like tide, and it's insane. | |
| But let me give people some good news. | |
| So if you go to books.brightlearn.ai and if you search for the word peptide, here's some light reading for you. | |
| 25 books on peptides exist on the website. | |
| Now, just give you some background reading. | |
| If you want to know a little bit about peptides, you can get some back. | |
| Here's one on copper. | |
| How cool is that? | |
| But of course, and here's the copper cure, the peptide protocol. | |
| Probably one of these books is by you and I, Diane. | |
| But of course, your course is going to go into much more detail from an expert where people can ask questions and participate. | |
| But for background reading, this is a great resource. | |
| It's completely free. | |
| Yeah, I think it's great. | |
| You know, I think of all those books that we should be Bride Tion's bestseller, you know, for what you and I have done here, Mike, for our AI writers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Except they're free. | |
| They're not even. | |
| They're totally free. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So you guys, I think to kind of start wrapping up, you know, one thing I love about SLOOP to just circle back to another point that I wanted to make mention of. | |
| Many of these toxins that we are going to be testing for, if you guys join us for the root cause reset, we have open enrollment until February 5th, but you guys can use the code on Mike's website that we've shared before to get $500 off up until February 1st, it is. | |
| And then we start the second Thursday of the month. | |
| And if you guys mix it, then you guys have replays. | |
| You'll have everything that you need. | |
| You'll have the Warrior Cleanse course. | |
| You'll have everything that you need to learn about peptides. | |
| And I'm bringing it all together because we don't take shortcuts. | |
| This is a holistic approach to becoming your own best doctor. | |
| And the reason I'm saying all this is that the obesogens, the xenoestrogens, the carcinogens, these are the toxins that drive up estrogen in the body. | |
| But not only that, these toxins are up to a thousand times stronger than your own menestrogen that both men and women make. | |
| So we literally don't stand a chance when you don't get rid of these toxins because they are that powerful. | |
| And then people end up wondering why they have man boobs like men and you know, gynecomastia, this is not fun, or they can't get pregnant or they have fat in areas they don't like lymphedema or women who think they need HRT at the age of 30 because they're feeling premenopausal or of crazy periods. | |
| These toxins are the greatest reason we have hormonal problems and hormonal chaos. | |
| And that's another thing that I love when I talk about realistic peptides that we can talk about. | |
| We're going to talk about it midway in the eight-week reset. | |
| I'm going to talk about the best peptides to consider when you're on this detox journey, because there's no reason to take a bunch of things to start air quotes healing your gut when you have toxins in the body. | |
| You know, there's an order to healing. | |
| There's an order to chaos and there's an opposing order to restoring your body. | |
| And so that's what I want to teach you guys. | |
| So you don't have to spend a ton of money over and over and over on another protocol, another protocol. | |
| When we get to the root, then your body can rebuild itself again. | |
| And the last slide I wanted to share, which is the most serious of all, and this is about our immune system. | |
| The real problem is zero immunity. | |
| And what we're seeing is the signs of immune collapse. | |
| People who have crazy food, chemical, and environmental sensitivities, Mike, you and I just don't like them. | |
| I will start sneezing if I walk into an area at one of these big box stores and there's fragrances everywhere. | |
| That is also possibly mass cell activation syndrome. | |
| I'm seeing this across the board with so many people. | |
| They're taking anhistamines thinking that's going to fix it, but just fixes your pain, but it doesn't fix the root cause. | |
| So autoimmune disease now affects us one in five Americans, chronic fatigue, pain, anxiety, brain fog becoming normal, frequent infections or slow recovery. | |
| We have all kinds of people getting ill from these fogs or whatever the heck they're spraying, escalating cancer, neurodegeneration, inflammatory disease. | |
| Going back to my first slide, we have cancer spikes that are increasing, even if you didn't get the jab, and then multiple diagnoses treated as separate problems. | |
| So we are in world war of our bodies. | |
| And the end game for them is zero immunity. | |
| And they can keep you a customer for life by getting you codependent on a lot of these medications that do nothing to fix the root cause. | |
| They never will. | |
| They weren't intended to. | |
| When we get to the root cause, this is actually how you can not only bankrupt, well, it's the opposite. | |
| You won't need to use so much money and resources to buy more supplements, more peptides, more medications. | |
| Your body starts restoring itself. | |
| And you won't have to chase things. | |
| Yeah, absolutely. | |
| I agree. | |
| I agree with what you just said. | |
| But your phrase zero immunity, it kind of triggered this interesting retort, which is that Bayer is seeking zero immunity for the glyphosate lawsuits since they purchased Monsanto a few years ago. | |
| The U.S. Supreme Court has just agreed to hear the case where Bayer is arguing that since the U.S. government says that glyphosate is safe, therefore no one should be allowed to sue Bayer for the cancer, especially non-Hodgkin's lymphoma that they allege is caused by glyphosate exposure. | |
| So the entire pesticide mass murder chemical industry also wants zero immunity, but in that case, it's legal immunity. | |
| And if that is granted by the United States Supreme Court, folks, they're going to, part of my language, they're going to spray the shit out of everything you eat with every chemical imaginable because there's no liability for doing so at that point. | |
| They're going to saturate your food supply with toxic, deadly cancer-causing poisons and say, ah, legal immunity. | |
| So there you go. | |
| That's coming. | |
| I'm so glad you brought that up, Mike, because there was a $2 billion lawsuit that came out. | |
| This started like five years ago or no, seven years ago, I think. | |
| We're still talking about it, but they came out with eight less toxic glyphosate replacements for Roundup, but they're even more toxic. | |
| And oh, atrazine. | |
| But guess what? | |
| The two most common toxins that we see in at least the yellow or the red, if you're in the green, it's not as impactful maybe on you, or maybe you're not detoxing that well. | |
| But people who live on golf courses or people who live close to GMO farms or people who are eating without thinking about what's being sprayed on their foods, which is glyphosate and atrazine, those are two very, very common poisons we see on virtually all of our patients' lab results, and especially the ones that have brain-related diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's and brain fog. | |
| So even if you're not eating them, you might be just inhaling them. | |
| So even though there was a lawsuit and we thought they were doing something about it, we are at zero immunity with a lot of these things. | |
| And we had a $2 billion lawsuit that we're now seeing with Osempic. | |
| There's been many, many lawsuits, but guess what? | |
| They keep coming back for more. | |
| And the corporations always get their way on these things. | |
| And, you know, it's buyer beware. | |
| And that's why we, in our lab, we test for atrazine. | |
| So we see atrazine for certain crops, certain types of things, such as pineapples, for example, are just routinely sprayed with atrazine. | |
| If you're buying non-organic pineapples, you are eating gender bender chemicals in huge doses. | |
| And that's a genderbender. | |
| That's the chemical that turns the frogs gay, by the way. | |
| Like literally, you know, to quote Alex Jones, that's the chemical that does that. | |
| It's known as a genderbender chemical. | |
| Yes, it is. | |
| And actually, if you look at what's in a lot of these herbicides, pesticides, and they're antibiotics. | |
| That's what they were first classified as before they started using them as herbicides. | |
| You know, glyphosate is an antibiotic. | |
| It's also going to contain aluminum in it, a lot of heavy metals. | |
| So a lot of these toxins are not just one classification. | |
| They actually meet two classifications of toxins. | |
| And then the more metals and the more toxins you have in the body, the more your body is actually going to recruit parasites to mop up the mess that you can't drain out well. | |
| Some people get parasite infections. | |
| And then they've got several of the parasites like the Toxoplasma gondi, which a third of the population has because our body is so toxic. | |
| That's another gender confusing thing that's happening in the body and in the brain. | |
| And remember that Monsanto, before they were pushing glyphosate on U.S. crops, they were the maker of Agent Orange that was dropped all over Vietnam with 2,4-D and a bunch of other chemicals in it as well. | |
| So, you know, actual chemical weapons just got turned into things sprayed on your food. | |
| And now the Supreme Court is going to say, yeah, no liability for you because the government says it's safe. | |
| Just like Botox, you know, Botox was botulinum toxin. | |
| They used it in the Gulf War to poison people, but now it's a beauty product. | |
| I make it makes sense, medicine, Mike. | |
| Make it make sense. | |
| And you said earlier, buy or beware, but I'd say beer beware. | |
| Bayer, beware. | |
| Well, but think about it. | |
| The FDA is going to is going to try to crack down on therapeutic peptides while the EPA will say, eat more herbicide. | |
| You know, it's insane. | |
| It's completely insane. | |
| Everything's upside down. | |
| But that's the way that you're going to food food pyramid. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, and that's been turned upside down now. | |
| But if you aren't protecting your health and detoxing based on what you're eating, if you're not eating organic, and frankly, if you're not choosing lab-tested products like what we sell, healthrangerstore.com, we have the lab. | |
| I'm going to give people a tour soon. | |
| I'm going to actually do a video tour of our new lab facility. | |
| We have a, it's a 5,000 square foot lab now with all kinds of millions of dollars of instruments. | |
| And I can't wait to show people that. | |
| We do the testing and the things we see are just shocking. | |
| Heavy metals, glyphosate, atrazine, microbiology, E. coli. | |
| We see off the charts insane stuff from cadmium in cacao to lead in turmeric and ginger, things like that. | |
| It's just, it would blow your mind. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, some days are hard because I see these things and it's hard for me to see patients struggle as much as they have. | |
| And some people come to us on, you know, their last leg. | |
| They've seen dozens of doctors. | |
| They've spent tens or if not hundreds of thousands of dollars. | |
| And the question I ask them, Mike, I say, when's the last time your doctor ran a toxic burden analysis on you? | |
| And they say, never. | |
| Never. | |
| Right. | |
| And we have a problem. | |
| So speaking of everything being upside down, it's upside down. | |
| You are not going to find an MD that's going to look for anything maybe other than lead in your blood, but they're not going to run an urinary toxicity test to see if you've got mold mycotoxins. | |
| They're not going to talk to you about if you have mold in your environment. | |
| They're not going to talk to you about environmental toxins because they are the ones prescribing the very poisons, the very prescriptions that contain the very poisons that show up on your urinary analysis. | |
| You know, we do see poisons for prescriptions on people's urine tests. | |
| And if you need to stand up prescription, okay. | |
| But we at least safeguard you on and protect you with things that maybe can facilitate the excretion of these things and really just get you back to as close to baseline, if not better. | |
| Because like Mike said, what did you say? | |
| You feel better than you did when you were a teenager? | |
| Me too. | |
| I'm 47 and I look like I'm in my 30s, if I must say so myself. | |
| And you look like you're in your 30s. | |
| Well, no, I doubled that. | |
| You look very energetic and healthy and vibrant. | |
| And also, you know, your cognition is clearly working extremely well because just your grasp of knowledge and able to synthesize information. | |
| And that's critical because I see a lot of people suffering from brain fog even right now. | |
| And I'm so also people that are jabbed are suffering from brain fog a lot. | |
| But I'm glad you mentioned that part of your advocacy for your group, your course is the urine testing, the toxicology. | |
| And I have a joke about that. | |
| Doctor says to the patient, hey, we looked at your P and you're in trouble. | |
| So yeah, going to need some detox here. | |
| In any case, let's wrap it up. | |
| Let me give out your website again. | |
| It's dianekayser.com/slash ranger. | |
| If people want to take advantage of the signup for your course, here's the discount code right here. | |
| It's 500 Ranger. | |
| And then also, if you want to go to rangerdeals.com here and you can scroll down and you can click on limitless peptides if you want to take advantage of any of the experimental peptides offered at a discount with discount code Ranger. | |
| We are an affiliate of both the Limitless Company and with Diane Kayser. | |
| And we did sponsor Diane Kayser's recent TV show as well. | |
| And we're proud to represent the way you're teaching people how to take responsibility for their health. | |
| So keep it up. | |
| Love what you do. | |
| Thanks, Mike. | |
| Yeah, we're a good team. | |
| And you guys were hoping to help you become a good team for yourself, a good team for your family. | |
| You know, one, I always say one person transformed in the house. | |
| Is a whole family transformed? | |
| Is a village transformed? | |
| Is a city transformed? | |
| Is a state transformed? | |
| Is a community? | |
| Is a country transformed? | |
| Is a world transformed? | |
| So you think that you're not that big of a deal? | |
| You really are. | |
| Once you vibe high and your frequency is, you could just feel people who are alive. | |
| That's what happens when we start taking care of your body and removing the blocking factors that are depleting your life to begin with. | |
| So you owe this to yourself. | |
| And I promise that in eight weeks, we're going to be giving you guys so much information that it'll ideally last a lifetime and at least get you thinking twice about the decisions that you make in your life and for your family, everything. | |
| True. | |
| And there's no shame in your course. | |
| So if you're coming to the course and you bring what I would call a toxic lifestyle with you, don't worry. | |
| No one's going to berate you for that. | |
| We've all had toxic lifestyles, myself included, in decades past. | |
|
Wake-Up Call for Transparency
00:03:19
|
|
| That's how I became the Health Ranger after realizing how much damage I was doing from drinking soda and eating fast food. | |
| I mean, we've all been there. | |
| So there's no shame in it. | |
| Wherever you are in your process, it's okay. | |
| You can learn more and you can get better and you can transform yourself every day. | |
| And we all, you know, we're all divine children of God and we all deserve to live out our lives with full health potential. | |
| That's what this is about. | |
| So I just want to ask you. | |
| Transparency can only start with truth and transformation can only start with truth and transparency. | |
| And I always tell people I've done a lot of things that I regret, but I don't regret them now because they helped me grow and they woke me up. | |
| So oftentimes these are your wake-up calls. | |
| I've really struggled with a lot of things that were hard to admit on air, but I want this to be your invitation for you to not feel ashamed of anything. | |
| The more honest that you are, the more healed that you can become. | |
| Well, I still feel ashamed of some airport food I bought the last time I traveled. | |
| What was it? | |
| It was just some, I don't know, crappy sandwich or something. | |
| And I paid the price for that. | |
| I was like, why did I do that? | |
| I know better than that. | |
| But I was hungry. | |
| I was stalled between cities and the flights. | |
| And I was like, oh, I got to have a sandwich. | |
| Not a good idea. | |
| Anyway. | |
| We've all been there. | |
| We've all made mistakes. | |
| We learn from mistakes and we do better. | |
| Yeah, we're not perfect. | |
| It's the wake-up calls. | |
| All of this is the wake-up call. | |
| I'm not perfect either. | |
| I like my organic wine here and there once in a while too. | |
| And I like my coffee, but it's got to be the organic and the type that Mike sells. | |
| If not, I'm not drinking Starbucks. | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| But just healthy boundaries. | |
| Okay. | |
| Well, thank you, Diane. | |
| It's great to have you here today. | |
| And thanks for staying over with us. | |
| We went a little past the time, but I love your information. | |
| Love what you're doing. | |
| Thank you for all your help. | |
| Thanks, Mike. | |
| Fun to be here with you. | |
| See you guys next time. | |
| We'll see you in the reset. | |
| Okay. | |
| Take care. | |
| Bye. | |
| All right, folks. | |
| Hope you enjoyed that interview. | |
| We always have fun with Diane. | |
| She's a joy. | |
| Plus, you know, she's an encyclopedia of knowledge about this. | |
| She knows way more about peptides than I do. | |
| I'm still a beginner in this space, but she's the expert. | |
| So take advantage of her course there at dianekayser.com slash ranger. | |
| And then here it is again, one more time, dianekayser.com slash, oh, and Kayser is spelled K-A-Z-E-R, even though it rhymes with laser, but it's spelled differently. | |
| And then you can go to rangerdeals.com and click on limitless peptides if you want to take advantage of the discount with discount code ranger or check out some of our other affiliate deals there as well. | |
| There's not very many of them because they're very hand-selected. | |
| I only work with a very small number of companies and manufacturers and things like that. | |
| So anyway, thank you for watching today. | |
| I hope you learned some good stuff and had fun. | |
| And we'll talk to you again soon. | |
| I'm Mike Adams here of Brighteon.com. | |
| Take care. | |
| Stock up on the long-term storable Ranger Bucket Set. | |
| 536 servings of clean organic superfoods for your survival pantry. | |
| Certified organic and lab tested for purity. | |
| Order now at HealthRangerStore.com. | |