| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| Good morning to our friends on the West Coast. | ||
| And well, I guess it's afternoon now if you're joining us on the East Coast. | ||
| It is the Ask the Doctor Show brought to you by the wellness company, twc.health slash Owen. | ||
| We've got some big Cyber Monday specials we're going to be telling you about today. | ||
| But first, I want to introduce my doctor guest today, Dr. Alejandro Diaz. | ||
| And if you want to follow him on X at Alejandro Diaz MD. | ||
| And we really want to get into things when it comes to pediatric care. | ||
| Now, he's not just a pediatrician. | ||
| He's an allergist, immunologist, and an immigration center doctor and global health specialist. | ||
| So a lot of different topics in our hour for Dr. Alejandro Diaz today. | ||
| But doctor, as I was saying before, before we get started here, as we were making our introduction, I really want to talk about if there's a new parent listening to this, a first-time parent listening to this, or maybe you're a mother or you're about to be a mother, you're pregnant. | ||
| And there's probably a lot of things you're thinking about when it comes to the healthcare for your child. | ||
| And there's a lot of pressures that come when you kind of get into the system when it comes to vaccines and tests and all this other stuff. | ||
| And you're just kind of sitting there. | ||
| You're kind of vulnerable, right? | ||
| You're a new parent, maybe a first-time parent. | ||
| You want to make sure that your child is getting everything that they need, but you also need to be concerned that you're not doing something that you might regret later, or maybe you're being pressured into a vaccine or something else that maybe the child doesn't need. | ||
| And so I really want to focus on that today, doctor. | ||
| And I guess let's just start right there. | ||
| Let's start right there. | ||
| Let's say for first-time parents, you're about to have your baby. | ||
| What type of pressures are they going to start getting immediately when it comes to shots or health care or anything like that? | ||
| What are some of the things that they're going to get introduced to immediately and some of that pressure? | ||
| And what information do you like people to have before they go into that situation so that they can make an informed decision? | ||
| Well, first of all, Owen, thank you so much for having me on your show. | ||
| It's a privilege to be here and to be able to deliver, you know, a message to your audience that it's, I think it's very relevant and important for these days. | ||
| So, I mean, just imagine coming to this world and in the first 24 hours of being in this brand new world, brand new life, you get a shot and you get a shot of hepatitis B. How is that sound for you, Owen? | ||
| That's number one. | ||
| And how about if we understand that hepatitis B, which is a communicable disease, infectious disease, the route that you will get that disease, two main reasons, two main forms. | ||
| One, through sexual contact intercourse. | ||
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Two, needle drug users, like, you know, needle users. | |
| There's very unlikely, virtually impossible, that a 24-hour newborn kid will have, will be engaged in those activities. | ||
| So why are they giving an hepatitis B vaccine in the first 24 hours of being born before they get discharged from the hospital? | ||
| It just doesn't make sense. | ||
| So that will be the welcome to this world in terms of vaccination. | ||
| And then you go to your first month and then second, four, six, 14, 15, one year, four year, six year adolescence, and so on and so forth. | ||
| There's a lot of vaccinations. | ||
| When I was growing up in the 70s, Owen, we used to get at the most seven vaccines. | ||
| Now, the current CDC schedule, you're talking about when a kid turns 18 years old, at least 72 vaccines. | ||
| It just does not make sense. | ||
| Well, and I want to focus on two of the things you just said. | ||
| And I guess I'll kind of introduce it like this. | ||
| And you asked the one question about the hepatitis B vaccine, but let's go towards kind of the normal experience I think that people are going through from being born to 18 years old. | ||
| It seems like a lot of that pressure comes from access. | ||
| You want to get access to, say, the public school systems, whatever it is, right? | ||
| You have to prove your vaccine status. | ||
| I remember there were times for me as a non-vaccinated person where you kind of have to go through extra hoops. | ||
| And I guess depending on your, you know, your local community, your local state, that'll kind of determine the different levels of hoops you have to jump through just to get access to these things if you're not vaccinated. | ||
| So do you think that parents are looking at this situation and maybe they have healthy skepticism, but they want that access? | ||
| Do you think that the pressure that parents are getting, whether it's an infant and newborn or even somebody they're about to send to college, do you think that the pressure from the medical industry here to vaccinate or immunize with any of these different shots, do you think it's pressure over health? | ||
| Do they feel more concerned that it's a health issue for their child? | ||
| Or is it an access issue? | ||
| Are they trying to weigh those two things? | ||
| Because to me, it seems like these are introductory thoughts that they might not have had if they weren't pressured into these situations. | ||
| So do you think it's access? | ||
| Do you think it's health? | ||
| How do you think parents are feeling pressured most when it comes to taking these shots or giving their kids these shots? | ||
| Oh, and that's a great question. | ||
| All of the above. | ||
| Unfortunately, there's a lot of pressure from the medical industry, from the pharmaceutical industry, from social media, from media outlets. | ||
| And let's go one step before, even for pediatricians. | ||
| I mean, pediatricians are the number one vaccine pushers in the medical industry, in what I call the medical religion. | ||
| And unfortunately, if we, I mean, if we're going to, we're going to talk the truth about this. | ||
| And I've been delivering the truth for many years as a pediatrician, allergist, immunologist, as a father of four, as a global specialist. | ||
| It's a medical religion. | ||
| So we have been, as physicians everywhere in the world, we have been indoctrinated since day one, medical schools. | ||
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You're not allowed to ask questions. | |
| You're not allowed to ask hard questions. | ||
| Yet you have to understand everything that they taught you at medical school when it comes to vaccines. | ||
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You're not allowed to ask questions. | |
| And then you, with a high level of ignorance, you are pushing all these vaccines. | ||
| I can tell you that being a pediatrician for over 20 years and a doctor for over 30 years, I haven't vaccinated a single kid in my practice, a single kid in my practice. | ||
| Yet, I have to admit, Owen, that I feel very sorry that I did vaccinate my kids. | ||
| Like the first round of vaccines, because, you know, when you're a doctor, Owen, you're so busy studying. | ||
| You're so busy with patients. | ||
| You're doing your internship. | ||
| You're doing your residency, your sub-specialty. | ||
| You're busy with patients. | ||
| You don't have time to think. | ||
| You don't have time to develop critical thinking. | ||
| And when I was busy at the hospital and my wife called me, hey, we need to get the shots to our kids. | ||
| Yes, yes, because I was busy. | ||
| Yes, get him. | ||
| But then I realized that that was not, I mean, that was not right. | ||
| And I can, you know, I don't want to say, I don't want to say that I am anti-vaxxer because that's a very hard, it's a very hard thing to say, but I'm very aware of what vaccines are as an immunologist. | ||
| So I think that this is important, important and valuable information that every single parent out there, they need to ask questions. | ||
| You know, like one question will be very interesting to your pediatrician when you are at the, you know, at your first visit. | ||
| Doctor, can you tell me about that specific disease that we will get the vaccine for my kid? | ||
| Can you tell me what will happen if my kid will get the disease? | ||
| How safe and effective are these vaccines for each disease? | ||
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And can you tell me the epidemiology of the vaccine? | |
| And also, can you tell me the ingredients of each vaccine? | ||
| You know, unfortunately, 99.9% of pediatricians, they will go blank and they will know, they will not have an answer for that. | ||
| And I guess that's just the kind of assumed nature of the whole thing, which it really shouldn't be that way when we're talking about, I mean, these are, these are injections. | ||
| These are penetrative injections. | ||
| So it's a little more intimate than say, you know, maybe something topical where you might be able to say, okay, let's just give it a run. | ||
| I want to get back to the hepatitis B shot and I want to tie that into the flu shot because I think that there's something there that'll really awaken people's minds to start asking the right questions. | ||
| But I want to go back. | ||
| You were talking about your healthcare education. | ||
| And I couldn't help but think this because I think it's a story for so much of the corruption we see in this world, let's say, where we're just so damn busy, doctor, right? | ||
| We're just so damn busy. | ||
| We don't have time to deal with it. | ||
| It almost feels like the days are getting shorter sometimes. | ||
| I think I'm going crazy. | ||
| But it sounds like you're going through this process. | ||
| We know there's a lot of pressure inside the medical institutions as well, inside the hospitals, the insurance companies, all of it. | ||
| There's already a lot of pressure on healthcare providers to just go along to get along. | ||
| It sounds like it's that way right out of the gates, even when you're trying to finish and become a doctor, when you're trying to actually get that degree. | ||
| Is it almost like, okay, here you are, you're about to get your degree. | ||
| And let's say you have a question about childhood immunization. | ||
| Well, do you just not have the time? | ||
| Do you just not have the energy? | ||
| You've been working for six years to get this degree. | ||
| It's kind of like you have to stay in the straight and narrow. | ||
| You've put so much time into this. | ||
| You don't want to veer off at the right second. | ||
| Is there a bit of a, is there kind of a human psychology that goes into that where doctors that might have an instinct to ask questions or push back, instead they say, I've worked so long to get this degree. | ||
| I just need to go along to get along right now. | ||
| Oh, and you nail it. | ||
| I mean, that's the question that I've asked for so many years. | ||
| And you just said it in five seconds. | ||
| And that's the question that every single physician out there should be asking. | ||
| And like you said, you know, it's so hard to get to medical school. | ||
| It's so difficult to get there. | ||
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Once you're there, you don't want to lose that chance. | |
| You want to stay there. | ||
| You want to be the best doctor. | ||
| And that's fantastic. | ||
| That's phenomenal. | ||
| I think it's a wonderful profession. | ||
| You are able to help a lot of people. | ||
| But unfortunately, the system does not allow you to ask hard questions. | ||
| And, you know, it has been very difficult to me, but I ask those questions and I have paid the price. | ||
| Let me tell you that. | ||
| And I have paid the price in different in different levels. | ||
| But for me, like the Hippocratical, in Latin, it says, primum non nonchere, which is first to do not do harm, no harm. | ||
| And unfortunately, the system is it's towards doing harm. | ||
| And that's, that's the part that I don't like about medicine. | ||
| Well, and it's like you said, there's so much institutional pressure that it's like, I'm sure many doctors feel, maybe they feel that this is the rock and the hard place they're in between. | ||
| It's like, okay, do I need to maintain the straight and arrow to continue to do the good work that I'm doing? | ||
| Because if I continue to ask these questions or if I continue to push back against the establishment, who knows? | ||
| I might not be able to help anyone. | ||
| Is that kind of a tight wire that doctors feel they have to walk at times? | ||
| Many, many doctors do and feel that way, but many doctors, they are just following so hard the system. | ||
| They are trying so hard to fit into this medical religion, what I call the medical clergy, that they don't even want to think about that. | ||
| They just want to follow guidelines, articles that most of them, if not all, they're sponsored by big pharma. | ||
| And they want to show to all of their colleagues that they are up to date. | ||
| They're reading all the guidelines, all the articles. | ||
| They are up to date in medicine, but through a very biased kind of information. | ||
| And one of the single thing that doctors lose during their career, it's critical thinking. | ||
| Look what just happened during the COVID operation. | ||
| I never called it pandemic because it was not. | ||
| It was a COVID operation. | ||
| It was an Intel op. | ||
| And doctors, they were not allowed to ask questions about not only the propagation of the virus itself, but the mass formation of what happened worldwide, but also the application of this toxic injectable products of experimentation, so-called COVID vaccines. | ||
| Obviously, they are not vaccines. | ||
| They are just experimental products. | ||
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Yeah. | |
| Well, and it's funny that you bring up big pharma. | ||
| And so this is why I love having the doctors on from the wellness company because you guys really separated yourselves from big pharma during COVID and the tyranny and everything that came along with that. | ||
| And it's like I said I wanted to talk about new parents and what you're going to get with your newborn baby and the immunization. | ||
| And I can't help it. | ||
| I just, these doctors, they just know so much. | ||
| But folks, you can't, you don't have to rely on big pharma. | ||
| And so we've got to tell you, if you did miss the Black Friday sales at the wellness company because I took Black Friday off, we do have Cyber Monday sales for you happening right now. | ||
| These are good till December 2nd, 25% off all supplements like recharge, not to mention scripts for ivermectin, peptide products like SMILE, 25% off all of that, 20% off all emergency kits so you can stay fully prepared, your family, your household, 20% off one wellness memberships. | ||
| I should probably have one of the doctors explain what those memberships are all about. | ||
| But I got to tell you, folks, 20% off the all-emergency kits. | ||
| This is so important. | ||
| If you don't have an emergency medical kit at home, I don't know what you're waiting for. | ||
| It should be a household necessity. | ||
| Don't go to the grocery store, buy some band-aids, buy some wraps, maybe some topical creams and some other stuff like that. | ||
| Get something from the professionals. | ||
| Get something from the professionals. | ||
| In fact, if I pull this up right now, let's see. | ||
| If you go to the emergency kits, go to TWC.health slash Owen, TWC.health slash Owen. | ||
| In fact, I can put that link up so that everybody can see it right here. | ||
| Folks, I'm telling you, now this is the this is just your standard, your gold standard medical emergency kit that they have right here. | ||
| Uh, but there's so many other options that they have, but you can go see everything that's in these. | ||
| These are 20% off, folks. | ||
| If you don't have a medical emergency kit at home, what are you waiting for? | ||
| Go to TWC.health/slash Owen. | ||
| You can get 20% off all emergency kits happening right now for Cyber Monday, good through December 2nd. | ||
| And then this sale will be over. | ||
| If you don't have medical emergency kits at home, folks, I'm telling you, go look at all the different ones that they have. | ||
| They have so many different ones: the medical emergency kit, the contagion emergency kit, the field emergency kit, all of them. | ||
| But if you don't have one, folks, what are you waiting for? | ||
| What are you waiting for? | ||
| This is a household necessity. | ||
| Go to TWC.health slash Owen. | ||
| And hey, these guys push back against the corrupt medical institutions. | ||
| They push back against big pharma and they want to make sure that you have a good option for a medical emergency kit at home. | ||
| Twc.health slash Owen, 20% off for Cyber Monday through December 2nd. | ||
| We hope that you will take advantage of that. | ||
| And I appreciate Dr. Diaz opening it up so that I can do a nice smooth plug for the products there. | ||
| Whenever you guys bring up Big Pharma, I got to remind the audience that it was you guys, the doctors at the wellness company that were pushing back against that, especially during the COVID scam demic, pandemic, however you guys want to phrase it. | ||
| I do want to try to get back, though, to what we wanted to talk about, and that's with parents. | ||
| So you're a first-time parent, your baby's just been born. | ||
| You know, I won't give my medical advice out there, but it seems to me from my experience that the best option is a birthing center. | ||
| And usually at a birthing center, you get a lot more freedom to choose. | ||
| There's a lot less pressure at a birthing center than, say, at a hospital, but everybody can make up their own mind with that. | ||
| But let's say, doctor, that you are in maybe a high-pressure situation and you're a parent that hasn't really been considering this stuff too much. | ||
| You're kind of just going through the pregnancy, making sure that the mother is healthy, the baby is healthy. | ||
| Okay, now here it is. | ||
| The baby's born. | ||
| And it's just like immediately things start speeding up. | ||
| They start to introduce, like you said, the Hep B vaccine, all these different vaccine trials. | ||
| There's a lot of pressure. | ||
| A lot of this happens right there, right after the baby is born. | ||
| A lot of this pressure is applied when parents are at their most vulnerable. | ||
| So you mentioned some of the ones earlier, but if you could tell a first-time parent that's about to have a child all the different pressure that they're about to receive when that baby is born, you know, what types of things would you tell them maybe to ease some of that pressure, ease some of that stress and say, hey, you can have an informed decision. | ||
| And maybe most importantly, it's okay to say no. | ||
| It's okay to say no. | ||
| And that doesn't make you a bad parent. | ||
| That is absolutely right, Owen. | ||
| One of the things that I tell tonight patients, because this is a very difficult and complex profession, you have to be very careful with your words because your words will impact a lot of people. | ||
| It will impact society. | ||
| So one of the things that I tell to all of my new parents is that get as much information as you can. | ||
| Just read meaningful books with great information. | ||
| Just read the book of Dr. Paul Thomas, vaccine from Dr. Peter McCalla and John Leak. | ||
| You know, the brand new book of Attorney Siri, Aaron Siri, and so many other books. | ||
| So you will get information, important information that it will make you decide what will be the best outcome for your kid. | ||
| Every parent in the world wants the best for their kids. | ||
| And they have to have this information. | ||
| And obviously one of the best tools, and this is when it gets very political, and this is why I speak all over the world about biopolitics. | ||
| It's informed consent. | ||
| Look what it's going on in the state of Florida with Dr. Ladapo. | ||
| He, with the help of Governor DeSantis, they have been able to convince the legislators in the state of Florida so they will have no mandates for vaccines starting next week. | ||
| So that's going to be very, very important. | ||
| I mean, those are brave doctors that are willing to risk everything and go out there and help, you know, the betterment of the future of society. | ||
| And I think this is one of our biggest tasks. | ||
| You don't have to be a follower all the time. | ||
| You just have to be brave and have enough information to deliver the right message. | ||
| It's important who is delivering the message. | ||
| So these are the kind of things that I tell to all of my new parents about vaccines. | ||
| And, you know, you bring up, because you have a lot of experience with this and you said it earlier that when you were a younger man, maybe expressing some regret with the vaccine schedule with your children, do you, how much experience? | ||
| Because my experience is just through some friends of mine that have a lot of kids. | ||
| They've been blessed with a lot of kids. | ||
| And they'll have, they were maybe in a similar situation where when their first kids were born, they weren't as informed or maybe they weren't as anti-medical establishment, however you want to put it. | ||
| They didn't really think much about the vaccine schedule. | ||
| For their first, I think it was two kids. | ||
| There's a bunch of different families I can think of that have gone through this. | ||
| And then they kind of get a little skepticism, vaccine skepticism, medical establishment skepticism, and they stop vaccinating their kids. | ||
| Well, they've noticed a difference. | ||
| They can see a clear difference between the children that they got vaccinated multiple times when they were infants growing up and the children that they didn't. | ||
| And from their experience, from what they've told me, they see that the children that did not get the vaccine schedules as predetermined, they found that they are more healthy. | ||
| They found that they are a little more healthy, a little more even mentally advanced as well. | ||
| Have you seen similar results? | ||
| Have you ever been able to kind of compare and contrast anything like that with your patients or other families? | ||
| Have you seen a similar phenomenon? | ||
| 100%. | ||
| There's no question in my mind, not only for personal experience as a physician, as a parent, because I stopped vaccinated all of my kids up to a certain age, but I can see it daily on my practice. | ||
| I see that and I read a lot of books and information and articles and so on and so forth. | ||
| And one of the things that everybody needs to know is that the vast majority of diseases that vaccines are trying to prevent are self-limited. | ||
| They're self-limited. | ||
| You don't have to, I mean, the kid is getting a fever, you get him something for the fever. | ||
| It's getting vomiting or diarrhea, you give him hydration. | ||
| It's, you know, all those different things, you can treat those diseases. | ||
| But the side effects of the vaccines, we have seen, we have seen an increased risk of different side effects like autism, like cancer, like neurological diseases, like autoimmune diseases, and a huge catalog of problems. | ||
| You can see and you can read the inserts of many of the vaccines and you will see the side effects, the list of side effects. | ||
| It's incredible. | ||
| I mean, it's incredible. | ||
| And they know that. | ||
| They acknowledge that, yet they are pushing the vaccine still. | ||
| I mean, let's put, for example, tetanus. | ||
| Tetanus, it's a disease, but it's super rare, not only in the United States, but in the world. | ||
| Yet you will get at least five shots until you turn 18. | ||
| And then every 10 years, you'll get a boost. | ||
| So by the time somebody turns 80 plus years, they will have at least 13 shots of tetanus. | ||
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If you ask any pediatrician, can you tell me about dyssteria? | |
| Can you tell me about tetanus? | ||
| Can you tell me about pertosis? | ||
| Any of all these diseases, polio, they don't know even measles, mumps, rubella. | ||
| They don't know because they haven't seen it. | ||
| You know, I've been a doctor for so many years. | ||
| I haven't seen a single case of measles in my life. | ||
| And I've been training the U.S., Mexico, Europe, everywhere. | ||
| And I've been traveling the world. | ||
| So where are these diseases? | ||
| Yes, they can be some outbreaks every here and there. | ||
| But to be honest, I really think there's a lot of manipulation there, a lot of kind of conspiracy theories behind that. | ||
| Well, I think it's driven by fear, and I think it's an irrational fear. | ||
| And I remember I was staying with somebody who had mumps and the doctor was basically in a panic because this girl, this was probably about 10 years ago. | ||
| Not to get off on a jag with a story here, but context might be necessary. | ||
| I was dating this girl like 10 years ago. | ||
| Her roommate had mumps and her face was swollen and they had like a little wrap over her or whatever. | ||
| They were telling her to wear this mask everywhere. | ||
| Well, so she was living with an old girlfriend of mine and her boyfriend was also living with her. | ||
| And so she told the doctor this and the doctor was, you know, the doctor was panicked. | ||
| It's like, oh my gosh, you know, you can't be living with anybody. | ||
| You can't be around your boyfriend. | ||
| You definitely can't be kissing. | ||
| No, no, no, no. | ||
| You can't be kissing and cuddling with your boyfriend. | ||
| You can't be having dinner with your roommate. | ||
| Well, anyway, I end up hanging out. | ||
| I hang out there a couple, a couple straight nights and never got sick. | ||
| Never got sick. | ||
| Her boyfriend, who I think is fair to say that they were kissing, I'll leave it at that. | ||
| Her boyfriend, her roommate, they never got sick. | ||
| Now, that's not to say, hey, there's no danger here. | ||
| That's not to say, hey, let's not be smart, right? | ||
| Hey, go cough on me. | ||
| Let's play a game. | ||
| Let's see if I can get mumps, right? | ||
| No, it's not to say, let's be stupid, but it's like, hey, let's not have irrational fear and let's not treat these people like lepers that are going to kill everybody around them. | ||
| So that was kind of a weird thing when I was a much younger man. | ||
| And I was already kind of skeptical, let's say, of establishment healthcare. | ||
| But I remember she was like, oh, well, you know, my roommate's sick. | ||
| Are you sure you want to come over? | ||
| And it was just, it just felt so irrational to me at the time. | ||
| I was like, no, I am going to come over and I'm going to prove that I'm not going to get sick. | ||
| And it turned out that nobody got sick. | ||
| So it does seem that there's a lot of irrational fear that drives this. | ||
| And I mean, again, it's like, I don't know how conspiratorial we want to get, but a lot of this seems to be aimed at children. | ||
| A lot of this seems to be aimed at children. | ||
| And you know what? | ||
| Hey, maybe sometimes, maybe sometimes it's a good thing. | ||
| Maybe sometimes it's a good thing. | ||
| Like I remember growing up, they do the sex ed class and they show you images that you never want to see. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Nobody wants to see that stuff, but okay, maybe it puts some fear into the children not to do something stupid that you could say it's irrational or not, but all right. | ||
| It serves a purpose. | ||
| But I think when you start to get into some of the other fear-mongering, it's like, all right, well, what surface, what purpose does it actually serve? | ||
| Is it serving the purpose of the overall health care needs? | ||
| Is it serving the purpose of the overall understanding of health care and sickness and disease and recovery and wellness? | ||
| Or is it serving the purposes of the medical establishment to make sure you're scared so that you get one shot, two shot, three shot, four shot? | ||
| I mean, you said how many people get, how many tetanus shots are lined up on a schedule before you're, you know, before you die? | ||
| And I'm sitting here, I'm saying, how do you even get 13? | ||
| How do you even get tetanus, doctor? | ||
| Well, you have to be in close contact. | ||
| You have to pinch your, you know, an important wound. | ||
| And then that, that object, it has to carry the Clostridium technique, the bacteria that causes tetanus. | ||
| So it's very difficult. | ||
| But you nail it again, Owen. | ||
| That's exactly, it's through the agenda of fear. | ||
| It's through the agenda of fear, of irrational fear, that people, they will go and vaccinate or parents, they will go and take it. | ||
| Do they do that to doctors? | ||
| Like when you're going through your education, do they show you like the most gruesome stuff and they say, this is why we have to have a tetanus shot, just as one example? | ||
| Yes. | ||
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Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| There's a famous, there's a, and it happens. | ||
| I mean, that happened before. | ||
| And it's, it's proven that that happened before. | ||
| But there's a famous in every medical textbook, whatever, you know, whatever country that is, in every country in the world, infectious disease, internal medicine, there's a famous photo of somebody having tetanus that it's bending like 180 degrees because the muscles get so rigid. | ||
| And whenever you are taking, imagine you're taking your infectious disease, your ID class, you want to ace it, you want to be a good doctor, you see that, and you get, you just get scared. | ||
| You say, I will never want any patient to go through that. | ||
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Yeah. | |
| So that's, that's exactly how it works. | ||
| They kind of, it's a, it's a, they program you, they program you to follow the rules, to follow big pharma, to never ask questions, to be, to be, um, you know, to be someone that will say yes to everything they say. | ||
| So it's important to understand. | ||
| So in this time, we have to relearn how to practice medicine for the betterment of society. | ||
| First, do not do harm. | ||
| Just first, do not do harm. | ||
| That's the main, that's the name of the game in medicine. | ||
| You know, I want to get back to that because there's things for me when I try to, let's say, enlighten people or inform people. | ||
| Sometimes it can be difficult, right? | ||
| People are stubborn, they're callous. | ||
| So you try to find the methods that are the most effective. | ||
| You try to find the means that can make people think for themselves because sometimes that's the challenge. | ||
| It's like, hey, I can't think for you. | ||
| You know, you're going to have to think for yourself. | ||
| We are halfway through here with our guest, Alejandro, Dr. Alejandro Diaz. | ||
| And man, I just, I love talking to these doctors. | ||
| We end up kind of getting off track sometimes. | ||
| But folks, I got to remind you, the Cyber Monday sale happening right now, twc.health/slash Owen, save up to 25% site-wide, including 20% off all emergency kits and memberships. | ||
| I'm telling you, folks, these kits, don't go to the store and try to buy some band-aids and stuff and put it in a kit and say, oh, I've got an emergency medical kit. | ||
| No, get one from the professionals, 20% off right now from the wellness company, part of the Cyber Monday deal, good through December 2nd. | ||
| That'll end Tuesday night, though, and then that's it. | ||
| They're going to go back to full price. | ||
| Go to TWC.help slash Owen. | ||
| By the way, right now you see Cyber Monday, first 1,000 orders get a free whipped tallow cream. | ||
| You're saying, what is the whipped tallow cream? | ||
| Well, go to TWC.healthclash Owen, folks, and you can find out all the different products that they have there. | ||
| And I have to tell you, it's quite an array. | ||
| When I made this partnership with the wellness company, I was actually shocked at how much products they have, including beef. | ||
| You can literally get your beef delivered from the wellness company. | ||
| So I didn't have that on the docket, but it's there. | ||
| Incredible stuff that they're doing. | ||
| TWC.health slash Owen. | ||
| Take advantage of the Cyber Monday sales. | ||
| All right, our guests, we go back to Dr. Alejandro Diaz. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Here's where I think, here's where I think I want to go next. | ||
| Do not do harm. | ||
| Now, it seems that there are practices now in the medical industry, in the medical institution, it's almost the definition of hyperbolic when you talk about do not do harm. | ||
| I mean, I could sit here and point to, I mean, but both of us, you probably more than me, could point to a bunch of different examples of how do not do harm. | ||
| It was like we're throwing that out when it comes to the COVID treatment, whether it was the injections, whether it was the ventilators. | ||
| It seems like do not do harm was completely out the window. | ||
| I mean, I look at a situation, and I don't know if you have any experience with this one, but you know, Anthony Fauci, in maybe now in his later days, he's kind of become famous for the torturing of animals. | ||
| So maybe you could say, all right, there's room where we need to run tests, but it seems like some of the stuff Fauci was doing was just strictly to do harm. | ||
| And I'm not sure if anything beneficial even came out of some of these things that we heard about with the puppies with Fauci. | ||
| How much do you, or how many times do you think doctors, as they're going through the process, how many times do you think they're maybe sitting there, kind of there's something internal happening and they're saying, do not do harm. | ||
| It seems like this is doing harm. | ||
| Does that happen a lot when you're, when you're coming up and uh, getting your degree, and then when you're in the field practicing? | ||
| That's a great question, oh and uh, but I really think that it comes through every uh individual, like for myself, when I was going to medical school I I, you know I ask all these questions because some of those, some of these things didn't make sense to me. | ||
| But you know, you have to, you have to graduate, you have to get your degree in order to go and and continue with your, with your medical career, and have your specialization, your residency your, your subspecialty, like myself um, but I, I started to ask these questions and I think it comes to a personal decision. | ||
| Um, one of the things that I know for a fact and I think it will be extremely beneficial, but again it comes very it it turns into a very political thing is that, if we are true to ourselves, We really think that we have to change the medical syllabus, how we are teaching medicine to our medical students. | ||
| It has to be changed. | ||
| It has to change because, you know, the traditional way, what we call the allopathic way of medicine, it has, you know, it has shown that it doesn't work that well. | ||
| So, you know, like, for example, nutrition. | ||
| It's very few things they taught me in medical school about nutrition. | ||
| Everything it's about medications, drugs, antibiotics, you know, different things for the endocrine system and, you know, all the organs and system and all the diseases you can imagine under the sun. | ||
| But how about holistic approach? | ||
| How about nutrition, sleep well, exercise, supplements, things like that? | ||
| We never see that in medical school. | ||
| Everything is towards the disease. | ||
| So when I think about the healthcare system, where's the health care of that system? | ||
| It's more sick care system, if you think about it. | ||
| But whenever you try to engage to a regular doctor about these topics, they just turn away and they walk away. | ||
| They don't want to engage in this type of conversations because it's against the system. | ||
| And it's very difficult to have a conversation with regular doctors about this because they just don't get it. | ||
| It's very hard for them to understand. | ||
| Well, the good news is, and you mentioned Florida earlier, what Florida is doing right now, and maybe we can revisit that, is, dare I say revolutionary. | ||
| I mean, it has the potential to kind of change everything that we've known in the healthcare system for the last couple of decades, should they be successful. | ||
| And obviously there's going to be people that are going to try to make it not successful. | ||
| And you just brought this up, which to me is like, this is for somebody like me that is really into natural ways and organic foods and stuff like that, allopathic versus homeopathic, both of these things can work congruently and beneficially. | ||
| And it seems like at some point, and you bring up sick care, and maybe this is kind of, maybe this is where it wedged its way into the difference between allopathic and homeopathic is this idea of sick care. | ||
| Well, if you're going to have a system of sick care, then what do you need? | ||
| You need people sick, right? | ||
| I mean, that's just part of the formula. | ||
| You need people sick. | ||
| And so you don't want to actually address the root cause. | ||
| And, you know, I guess healthcare becomes political nowadays, no matter what. | ||
| But this is what I deal in. | ||
| This is what I deal with in politics, Dr. Diaz. | ||
| It's like everybody looks at the surface issue and they just respond to it. | ||
| And I'm like, hold on a second. | ||
| There's something that caused this surface issue, right? | ||
| Something caused this issue. | ||
| Let's find the root cause. | ||
| Let's not just look at the surface. | ||
| Well, it seems like that's kind of the case with what you describe as sick care. | ||
| They say, okay, here's your symptom, right? | ||
| I'm going to address your symptom and I've got a product, a big pharmaceutical product, maybe that I can sell you that the insurance companies are making good money off of, the pharmaceutical companies are making good money off of. | ||
| And you're just the sucker caught in between it, cutting your monthly checkout to whatever it costs. | ||
| And so it's like, yes, in that practice, you need sick care. | ||
| Now, here's where it's like, we need to be able to separate the two. | ||
| Let's say I get bit by a venomous spider or a snake or something. | ||
| Well, I want to go to a hospital. | ||
| I want to get the best minds to come and treat me. | ||
| If I break my arm in a car accident, right? | ||
| Whatever. | ||
| We're talking about serious injuries. | ||
| you want to be able to go to a hospital and have a doctor address that stuff. | ||
| But maybe you're sick with the flu or you've got some other chronic illness where there's just something that's underlining. | ||
| You have a weak immune system, you're overweight, you're not getting enough vitamin B, vitamin D, vitamin C, whatever the case is, that's where the homeopathic care, I think, needs to come into the equation. | ||
| But I guess if it doesn't make money for big pharmaceutical companies, the insurance companies, then that's why they don't push it. | ||
| So it's like we don't want to, it's like we don't want to go too far to, hey, everything needs to be homeopathic, but we also realize, I think now that, hey, everything's become way too profit driven. | ||
| And maybe it is time to kind of reevaluate some of these other things that we've put behind it. | ||
| And maybe Florida will kind of be the case, the case study for that. | ||
| For somebody like you, especially, I think with kids, it's the most important. | ||
| I think with children, it's the most important. | ||
| How does somebody that's in pediatric care like yourself differentiate when it's time to say, okay, we need to look at a big pharmaceutical maybe model or method to address a certain problem versus maybe there's something underlining and we can just change their diet, change their exercise routine. | ||
| How does a pediatric doctor like yourself, Dr. Diaz, how do you determine, how do you find a balance between those two things? | ||
| Yes, Owen. | ||
| So one of the things that I do and the way that I look at medicine and my practice and with my patients and the conference that I give worldwide in different forums is that, first of all, you have to be conscious. | ||
| You have to have the knowledge. | ||
| You have to understand the natural process of disease. | ||
| Once you understand that and you have the tools to speak and you are brave enough to speak and to communicate this knowledge to your patients for the betterment, Owen, the betterment of your patients. | ||
| Because number one goal for medicine for any doctor is, I want my patient to get better. | ||
| I want my patient to get rid of that pain or that problem. | ||
| It's when you communicate that. | ||
| And it's where you say, well, there is a balance and you have to break those barriers. | ||
| There's a balance between allopathic medicine, the one that I studied, and homeopathic medicine, but also in chiropractic, but also in holistic approach, but also in naturopathic medicine and so on and so forth. | ||
| So all the tools that you can gather in order to, for your patient to get better, use it. | ||
| But you have to be brave. | ||
| You have to stay open. | ||
| You have to be conscious about it. | ||
| Otherwise, you've got to stay close. | ||
| You're going to be in your four walls and that's not going to happen. | ||
| That's about as good of an answer as you can get on a complex situation. | ||
| I guess, you know, another way to put it, it's like the more information that you have from all the different realms, all the different spheres, all the different spectrums, the better You're going to be able to address any unique situation that you might have in health. | ||
| That's such a great point. | ||
| And I wish more doctors would feel the same way. | ||
| And maybe they will. | ||
| Maybe there's pressure on them to not do that. | ||
| But to me, that's like for anything in life, really, for anything in life, the more information you have, the better decision you're going to make. | ||
| But specifically for doctors and for parents, I think that that's kind of the golden equation there. | ||
| All right, I want to get back, though. | ||
| It's been 40 minutes since we brought this up, but I do want to go back there, our conversation with Dr. Diaz today. | ||
|
unidentified
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All right. | |
| So, as I said, one of the challenges for somebody like me who's, let's say, an ideologue, I like to do political debates, whatever. | ||
| One of my challenges is what is to find the sphere of information that is the most penetrating or to find something that's going to make somebody think, even the person that disagrees with me the most. | ||
| It's like, how can I penetrate that callous stubbornness that you have with something that's at least going to make you think? | ||
| It might not change your mind, but it'll make you think. | ||
| And the two things that we brought up today, you brought up the Hep B shot for kids. | ||
| And I'll bring up the flu shot too. | ||
| So when I get into debates about vaccine safety and efficacy, maybe you can change people's minds, maybe you can't. | ||
| As you were expressing earlier, it's kind of like a religion. | ||
| It's kind of like a religion to a certain degree for a lot of people in the field. | ||
| But to me, these are the two things that if you want to get somebody thinking about vaccines, these are the two things. | ||
| You brought up Hep B, and you can kind of rego down the Hep B, but the flu shot, and I always bring this up too. | ||
| By the time that that flu shot hits the shelves, by the time that that flu shot is actually going into your arm to immunize you from the seasonal flu, you're already getting an outdated virus. | ||
| The flu bug that you're being immunized against is already probably two or three evolution cycles behind. | ||
| So you're basically getting in, you're basically getting injected with a zombie flu. | ||
| It's a dead flu. | ||
| It's not even there. | ||
| And the flu that's going around is, you know, it's adapted so that this vaccine isn't even going to work. | ||
| And so it's like, okay, you're literally getting a shot that doesn't stop you from getting the seasonal flu. | ||
| It stops you from getting last season's flu. | ||
| So that's one that I think people kind of stop and say, hmm, wait a second, maybe there is something to that. | ||
| I might still like vaccines, but yeah, you know what? | ||
| That doesn't make sense. | ||
| And you brought up with Hep B. Why is a newborn baby getting a Hep B shot? | ||
| I'm sorry, I didn't see a newborn baby down at the tattoo parlor lining up to get their new sleeve. | ||
| You know, I didn't see the baby down at the Nudie Magazine Nudie Video Club looking to get some fun time in. | ||
| And so it's just like, yeah, why are you giving a Hep B shot to a newborn? | ||
| Do you think about it like that? | ||
| Are there things maybe in the medical institution like that where you think, okay, I might not be able to change your mind right now, but I can at least maybe introduce an idea or a concept to you that might get you thinking twice about these things? | ||
| You nail it again, Owen. | ||
| This is, I'm very glad that you think this way because sometimes it's hard to find people who can think along this way. | ||
| And you put it perfectly. | ||
| That's exactly what happens with the flu vaccine specifically. | ||
| But, you know, to be honest, with the rest of vaccines, with the rest of the vaccines, we have to be conscious about this. | ||
| Is why I said it before. | ||
| Parents should ask to repeat attrition, doctor, with all respect, obviously, with all respect, doctor, do you know the side effects of the vaccine you're going to put to my kid? | ||
|
unidentified
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Do you know the epidemiology of the disease? | |
| Like, let's say, like diphtheria. | ||
| Can you tell me how bad it can be? | ||
| What's going to happen if my kid gets diphtheria or tetanus or missiles or mumps or rubella or hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and so on and so forth. | ||
| Please, can you, can we spend some time so you can explain us what can happen, what we can expect. | ||
|
unidentified
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And is the vaccine safe and effective? | |
| Can you tell me the side effects? | ||
|
unidentified
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Can you tell me the ingredients of each vaccine? | |
| There will not be able to answer any of those questions. | ||
| That is the inconvenient truth. | ||
| That is exactly what happens every single day at every. | ||
| pediatrician office in the world, unfortunately. | ||
| I mean, that's the truth. | ||
| Well, and I think that I'm hearing you say this, and many people might have actually experienced exactly what you're talking about. | ||
| Would you say that maybe there's doctors out there, whether it's pediatricians or any doctors, that kind of just, you know, they rely on that pressure. | ||
| They're not expecting you to ask these questions. | ||
| You know, maybe they're informed on it, maybe they're not, but they're not really anticipating that. | ||
| They're not expecting you to ask and them to answer these questions. | ||
| So they kind of just fall back on, hey, this is the industry standard. | ||
| Or maybe in a different light, it's, hey, you don't want your kid to get polio. | ||
| Hey, you don't want your kid to get this. | ||
| So it's kind of like, is that how it is? | ||
| It's like the pressure system. | ||
| And it's like, hey, I don't have to answer these questions. | ||
| I wasn't trained to answer these questions. | ||
| You're just supposed to come in here and accept this stuff. | ||
| And maybe that's why we see, and it really happened with COVID. | ||
| That's why we saw a lot of these doctors starting to get kind of defensive, starting to attack other doctors, like maybe yourself that were going against the grain. | ||
| You know, it seemed like that really got exposed five years ago when we were going through this medical tyranny phase. | ||
| That's exactly right, Owen. | ||
| That's exactly right. | ||
| But we have to ask these questions. | ||
| And any doctor, they would not want to be in a position that they have to say that to their patients, like, I'm sorry, man, Mr. such and such. | ||
| I cannot answer those questions because I was not trained. | ||
| I am not prepared to answer those questions. | ||
| The only thing that I am prepared is to apply those vaccines. | ||
| That is part of my job. | ||
| That is another unconvenient truth, Owen. | ||
| And let's put an example very quick. | ||
| Polio. | ||
| You know, many people, they think that polio is the deadliest infectious communicable disease in the world. | ||
| It's not. | ||
| You know which one is? | ||
| Tuberculosis. | ||
| Why? | ||
| No one is talking about tuberculosis. | ||
| You know, tuberculosis, historians, they found that at least 1 billion people have died of pulmonary tuberculosis. | ||
| In the United States, there is no vaccine for tuberculosis. | ||
| The BCG in 195 countries that are subscribed to the UN, in 23 of them, they don't apply the vaccine, including the United States, because there are so very few cases of that disease in the United States, even though the United States is the country that receives the largest group of immigrants from every single corner of the world, | ||
| because there is a screening program for those immigrants. | ||
| But I just want to put this into context. | ||
| Yet, they don't have a vaccine, but they do have a vaccine for polio. | ||
| So it's important for a doctor to put those elements and those tools for parents and patients to make conscience decisions. | ||
| It's here's the information, read the information, go through the information, try to read as much as you can and come with the decision, and then we can talk. | ||
| I want to be a little more specific, let's say, for new parents or soon-to-be first-time parents when they start to hear about, okay, it's time to give your baby this vaccine, that vaccine. | ||
| We need you to come back in a month, whatever it is for this vaccine. | ||
| Here's your schedule. | ||
| Next thing you know, you got 16 different shots you're looking at before the baby's even one year old. | ||
| Specifically, though, one that I hear about a lot that there seems to be maybe some debate over, let's say, in the medical freedom community is the vitamin K shot. | ||
| What are your thoughts on the vitamin K shot? | ||
| Well, first of all, Owen, we have to see double blind placebo control trials of any vaccine, including the vitamin K shot. | ||
| There are none. | ||
| There are none. | ||
| I mean, you can look in the literature and there's none. | ||
| That's why they start to applying not only vitamin K, but antibiotics, ointments, and the hepatitis B and all this, you know, this intrusive approaches to the newborn that most of them, they're not needed, unfortunately. | ||
| I mean, they're not needed, but still the system, it's equipped to push all those actions to a newborn. | ||
| What started the vitamin K shot? | ||
| Where did this even begin? | ||
| What was the purpose? | ||
| So the purpose of the vitamin K is to decrease bleeding, basically. | ||
| And that was because of sepsis. | ||
| That was because of different, you know, there are the spectrum of blood diseases is very wide and they just want to protect any kid to have an hemorrhagic, like, you know, hemorrhagic disease. | ||
| But not, does that, does that, that means that every single kid, they have to apply the vitamin K or the ointment or the hepatitis B and so on and so forth. | ||
| It has to be for a specific group of kids. | ||
| It's when it comes to public health. | ||
| It's when it comes to epidemiology. | ||
| You know, you have to know your medicine in order to apply specific medications or vaccines and so on. | ||
| Not one size fits all. | ||
| This is very important. | ||
| Well, that's definitely true. | ||
| And maybe this is more of the homeopathic approach to things. | ||
| But this is where it's like, this is where I kind of see that moment of it's like, okay, here's how you can kind of intertwine the two the two ideologies where I would say you don't need the vitamin K shot, but let's say there's a situation developing where maybe you do. | ||
| Then you can say, okay, let's consider it, right? | ||
| It's like, we don't need to force these things. | ||
| You know, I wonder too, because, you know, again, I'm just kind of like, I'm very much contrarian and I like looking into things for myself. | ||
| I've been looking into, I don't know if you ever heard of the wisdom tooth conspiracy, but that's one I've looked into a lot in the past. | ||
| I've kind of been restudying this recently just because it's been trending. | ||
| And it's one of those things where I feel like so much of our natural human growth process that triggers all of these different things in our body, chemically, biologically, all of this stuff, it's like we're neutering that out of the growth process. | ||
| And who knows what the complications of these things might be, but it's like, it seems like so much of the organic human growth process is being stunted. | ||
| Now, if you want to be a real conspiracy theorist like me, I'd say it's being done intentionally. | ||
| I'd say that there are demons that are running this planet that are trying to do that to us. | ||
| But regardless if you think about it like that or not, that's still the reality, though. | ||
| It's like whether it's something that seems like, oh, yeah, take the wisdom teeth out. | ||
| And then you realize, no, there's a purpose for that. | ||
| Like there's a reason why they come in and they do end up going up straight. | ||
| I know you're not a dentist, but it seems like the same thing happens with these kids. | ||
| It's like this baby gets introduced to the world. | ||
| Do we really need to be pumping them in the first year of their life with what is it, like 72 ounces of foreign chemicals into their bloodstream? | ||
| There's no way that's good for the natural development process. | ||
| There's no way that that's good for the for the organic human baby. | ||
| Now, there might be a complication that pops up and you say, okay, now we need to do this. | ||
| But my guess is for most babies, they probably don't need it. | ||
| And maybe the disconnect is we look at the past and we say, look at all the disease that we've gotten rid of or look at the infant mortality rate and all this other stuff. | ||
| And you say, hey, that's good. | ||
| That's an advancement of modern technology and modern science. | ||
| But that doesn't mean it applies to every case. | ||
| And I feel like that's kind of become the mindset is that, oh, no, this needs to apply to 100% of cases instead of maybe just the 10% where it needs to be applied. | ||
| That's exactly right. | ||
| That's exactly to the point. | ||
| And this is what I share to, you know, in my conferences and in my patients and with friends and family. | ||
| This is exactly the things that I share with them. | ||
| And let me put you, let me put you an example. | ||
| For example, the hepatitis B vaccine, they put it because they want to prevent one of the catastrophe disease, which is liver cancer. | ||
| Cancer is the number one profitable areas of big pharma. | ||
| Do you think it's in the best interest of them to try to prevent cancer when on the other side of the token, the most profitable area of medicine, it's oncology? | ||
| I mean, just think about that. | ||
|
unidentified
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It doesn't make sense. | |
| Well, and you want to get into what we call sick care, you know, the cancer treatment. | ||
| I think that this is one where we can definitely improve our game as humans. | ||
| And there's no doubt it's one of the most profitable for the big, I like to call it the pharmaceutical industrial complex. | ||
| And there's no doubt it's one of the biggest ones. | ||
| But even that one, doctor, it's like, all right, you know what? | ||
| Cancer is a scary thing. | ||
| You're going to be forced to make decisions. | ||
| You're going to have to make hard decisions. | ||
| It's your life on the line potentially. | ||
| So, you know, we are respectful of that process. | ||
| But I go back to the same thing. | ||
| Why are cancer rates skyrocketing? | ||
| What is happening that's causing this stuff? | ||
| That's what we need to be addressing. | ||
| And, you know, there's probably no perfect methodology. | ||
| Maybe everybody knows somebody that lived a healthy life and still ended up getting cancer. | ||
| But it's just like, once you've kind of, once you've kind of taken control of your own health mindset, I do think you can avoid a lot of these things. | ||
| It might not be a perfect success story, but I do think, you know, knowing what to avoid, knowing what's bad for you, the carcinogen. | ||
| I mean, they just, I think I just saw on the news last week it was, and I've been against sunscreen for years, but I think a big company just had to pull a bunch of sunscreen products off the shelves because they found out it was carcinogenic. | ||
| And doctor, I'm shaking my head like you. | ||
| I'm like, hold on a second. | ||
| I happen to know somebody that worked in a sunscreen factory. | ||
| They have to wear hazmat suits when they're running around with these chemicals, right? | ||
| But then they, you know, put it on your body. | ||
| It's just fine. | ||
| It even says on the thing, do not consume, not for human consumption. | ||
| When you put that on your skin, you are consuming it, doctor. | ||
| And I'm not going to tell people to do what I do and not wear any sunscreen ever. | ||
|
unidentified
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Okay. | |
| I'm not, I mean, that's, you know, I don't wear sunscreen. | ||
| I don't wear sunscreen either. | ||
| I don't either. | ||
| My name is not Diaz. | ||
| I don't have the advantage. | ||
| I'm a lot more light-skinned than you might be. | ||
| But the point is, it's like, hey, you don't have to be afraid of the sun. | ||
| You don't have to be afraid of just being in the sun. | ||
| You can get a health. | ||
| In fact, a healthy amount of sun is beneficial for your health. | ||
| Owen, back in the day, you know what? | ||
| What was the first line of treatment on patients with pulmonary tuberculosis? | ||
| The sun. | ||
| That's right. | ||
| Take him outside. | ||
| Take him outside. | ||
| I mean, this is, you know, many things in medicine, they just, it doesn't make sense. | ||
| Owen, it just doesn't make sense. | ||
| And, you know, the less things we consume at that aspect, you know, heart antibiotics and things like that, and vaccines and so on. | ||
| You were talking about cancer, you know, microplastics, nanoplastics, the water we drink, the pesticides, vaccines, turbo cancers after the COVID, the COVID shots. | ||
| I mean, they're skyrocketing everywhere in the world. | ||
| So we have been poisoned, unfortunately. | ||
| And it takes brave doctors like Dr. McCalla, like Dr. Thorpe, Dr. Penske, Dr. Victory, Dr. Rich, all those brave doctors that have been out there, Dr. William Mackeys, you know, the list is important, that they are willing to lose and sacrifice everything for the betterment of society. | ||
|
unidentified
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Those are the doctors that patients need to listen to. | |
| That's right. | ||
| And I'm honored to call these doctors my friends now. | ||
| And folks, remember, ready to make America healthy again? | ||
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| And, you know, I could talk about how important this is for me and why I wanted to do this show and why I want to continue to do this show to get to get just alternative information to people, doctor. | ||
| It's a void. | ||
| I was told once by one of my original inspirations, one of my original mentors, some life advice. | ||
| I'd never forgotten some career advice. | ||
| He said, find a void and fill it. | ||
| And that's what I see. | ||
| I don't see the opportunity for doctors to step into that void and say, hey, here's an alternative option. | ||
| I don't see doctors getting the opportunity to step up and say, hey, here's what you might want to know about this vaccine or that vaccine or just overall health in the United States of America. | ||
| So that's what we're trying to do here on the Ask the Doctor Show, brought to you by the wellness company. | ||
| All right, we're out of time with Dr. Diaz, but Dr. Diaz, just shortly, one piece of advice for maybe first-time parents, they're about to have a kid, bring a kid in this world. | ||
| There's going to be a lot of pressure, a lot of questions, maybe some stress, some unease. | ||
| What is one piece of advice that you would give first-time parents upcoming this year? | ||
| Read as much as you can before you get your kid vaccinated. | ||
| Read through the experience, doctor, like Dr. Paul Thomas, Dr. Peter McCalla, and there are so many other doctors that they speak about this. | ||
| Read their books, read their articles, get informed consent, and then make a smart decision for the betterment and the future of your kids. | ||
| More information. | ||
| It's usually a good thing. | ||
| Dr. Alejandro Diaz, thank you for your time. | ||
| This is going to do it for today's edition of Ask the Doctor, brought to you by the Wellness Company. |