Pearl Daily’s call-in episode critiques modern women’s embrace of alternative medicine, citing cases like Amanda Lewis (died at 51 after rejecting stage three breast cancer treatment) and Michaela Cleveland (four-year-old with stage four Wilm’s tumor denied chemotherapy). Guests Doug MPR and Eric Wade mock trends like feng shui, crystal stores in Sedona, and absurd remedies (e.g., burnt hair, tree bark), calling them financially appealing but medically reckless. RJ from El Salvador defends distrust of conventional medicine after his autistic sons worsened from Tylenol and Skittles-based therapy, while Doug MK counters with skepticism toward holistic cures for cancer or childbirth. Ultimately, the hosts argue that unproven alternatives risk harming women and children, urging caution over blind rejection of modern medicine. [Automatically generated summary]
Most answered very quickly, no, because men are useless.
This headline from The Hill, it caught my eye.
Most young men are single.
Most young women are not.
Young men have fallen faster than any demographic in America over the last 40 years.
It's a different world now.
Like, we don't need men the way that they used to.
I need men!
The future is female.
Men and women are drifting further apart, and society is crumbling because of it.
A fascinating debate has broken out about the value of marriage.
You've kind of got the Trad COD versus Red Pill thing.
This men's rights crowd that sometimes just goes too far the other way.
Oh, you need to stop acting like grown boys and infants and actually become men.
Marriage is a bond, and it's a sacred bond.
It's a machine designed to extract resources from you.
Now, many of the red-pilled have taken the position that it's bad for men to get married.
Hannah Pearl Davis, or just pearly things.
One of the most controversial faces in all of the internet.
She goes on to say that marriage is a terrible deal for men.
Because if me and you were in a business contract, you would never sign a contract where I am paid to leave.
Gee, what could go wrong there?
74% or something of divorces are initiated by women.
Men have everything to lose, primarily their own children.
Men get killed by the courts and by divorce laws.
I had no idea that courts of family law were courts of equity, not courts of law.
Because in family court, you don't need evidence to accuse someone of abuse.
You need no evidence.
When you guys say get married young, a lot of these men don't know what they're signing up for, and you're not going to be there when their entire life falls apart.
I interview them on the other side.
I didn't meet my son until he was 15 months old.
How much did you spend trying to get him back?
The legal fees alone was about $200,000.
Before you know it, you're homeless, you're in the tree, just thrown out into the street.
We absolutely reinforce bad behavior from women.
Wives are taught to leave their husbands, and then daughters grow up without their fathers.
Family is the foundation of the society.
Every problem in society comes from single mother homes.
A lot of women will just chase this negative rabbit hole of happiness, endless happiness.
Feminism's biggest failure is it lies to women.
We tell women to date as many guys as possible.
We tell them to put off family into marriage.
You are allowed to leave your perfect husband.
You are allowed to end a relationship with a really great boyfriend.
Oh, freeze your channel, she have an abortion.
What?
You're evil.
I don't think there's anything else in life that we actually ever go into preparing to fail.
Like if you have the mentality of this is going to go wrong and be pessimistic, naturally the outcome is going to be that it's going to fail anyway.
It's self-sabotage.
And that's the thing.
Like women are so willing to leave marriages because they're not happy.
This is not about happiness.
The most important thing is the children.
And the problem is we have a modern society where it's me, me, me, my feelings, leave when I feel like it, instead of doing what's best for the kids.
This myth that we live in an age of male privilege.
Where's my male privilege?
They think, well, men have all the rights.
They have all the power.
Privilege, patriarchal system that we have.
Why doesn't our society care about men's rights?
I have no friends, no wife, and no social life.
Men are alone in this situation.
Men are homeless.
Men are thinking about eating guns.
I've seen so many men on the brink of suicide and they didn't do anything wrong.
How are you equal if the men are the ones that have to fight and die to defend the country?
The men are the ones that build and maintain all the infrastructure.
Women are helplessly dependent upon men.
The so-called deaths of despair from suicide, overdose, or alcohol, three times higher among men than among women.
Culture is telling men, you are no good.
You gotta get your act together.
I think men have failed themselves.
What kind of a man are you?
What kind of a woman are you going to attract?
If men are in trouble, so are women.
Everybody knows this is a huge problem, but nobody wants to admit it.
Every single woman at the table said they wanted a man.
500K, 500, 300K, 300K, 200K.
Am I crazy?
Everything is really set up against you to fail as a man.
If men make less than women, women don't want to marry them.
So, you know who wants more economically and emotionally viable men?
Women.
I don't want to be an independent woman anymore.
I don't want to be a strong, independent woman.
I'm over it.
When is it going to be my turn?
Where are we meeting the men that don't stop?
I can't keep having these same conversations.
The only simp here is you, Pearl.
You simp for me.
No, I think you simp for women.
She's a provocateur.
She says stupid stuff, but Pearl is right about this.
It's already happening.
It's just not out in the open yet.
See, now it's just hookup culture is going to be our fairy tale ending because men don't want a wife and women can't find a husband.
The future, if everybody follows your path, is there is no future.
We go into population decline and our economy goes into decline.
Civilization will crumble.
The American story does not end well.
This is an existential crisis, failing young men.
What is up, guys?
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily.
I am your host, Pearl.
And today we are going to be talking about modern women are addicted to holistic medicine.
But before we get in the topic today, I want to give a shout out to one of the simps on the internet that really keeps me employed.
By the way, before I get into it, if you guys do want to donate to the divorce documentary, the link is the second link in the description.
So feel free.
We can't finish it till we get to roughly 100K when we're at $26,000, which is awesome.
Thank you guys so much.
But we got to get to about $100K in order to finish the documentary.
Okay.
So I want to give a shout out to a man on the internet that is keeping me employed.
Not everybody is capable of being a super simp.
Most men can do it.
They're tired of lying to women 24-7.
They're tired of appeasing women.
Many men would rather just walk away from women altogether rather than simp.
But there's some men that say no.
I must simp.
I need to simp.
I need to get laid and I will be a super simp in order to get there.
So this man, this man has dedicated years of his life.
So I'm going to give you a little preface.
I do think that this man has a very intelligent, very smart guy.
But as you guys know, you can be very intelligent and smart and be a super simp.
That doesn't stop you from the simp.
You can't, you could be the president of the United States like Obama and super simp, right?
It's not necessarily.
He's got great political takes at times.
But he did get bamboozled.
He did.
He did.
Now, I'm not against men.
Let me take off my headphones for a second.
I'm not against men taking an unfavorable deal if that's what they want to do.
But what the difference is, the super simps.
If a non-simp marries a 30-something year-old woman, he says, Bitch, first date you're putting out.
And you better earn my commitment.
You better like kiss my feet and do whatever I say, or I'm just going to go get a younger, hotter.
I know a woman like that, okay?
She was in her mid-30s.
And when she met her now husband, I promise you, I really do promise you, she knew this was her last chance, and he knew it too.
She was still hot, right?
She wasn't innocent.
And she did whatever, if he said jump, she said, how high?
If he said, I want to do backdoor, she said, when the difference is a super simp, he finds a used woman and he worships her.
And what he does, many times these men, they tend to profit off of women.
And you see this with conservative men.
You know, it would be a lot more profitable for me if I just came out and I said, ladies, it's your fault that he dumped you.
Oh, sorry, sorry, not that.
Ladies, he just didn't appreciate you.
Don't let a man determine your worth.
Not, instead, I say, lose weight, you were probably annoying.
Figure out what it was.
Try to be less next time and maybe you won't get pumped and dumped.
Good luck out there, Chica's.
We fought for this.
So as you guys know, Charlie Kirk is a super simp.
He really is.
And Charlie Kirk married a woman at about 31, 32 years old who was a pageant queen who flew around the world doing pageanty stuff.
Now, I don't know if she's pure or innocent, okay?
She very well could have been a virgin when she met Charlie.
But I got to do the math here.
I got to do the math.
And the reason I say this is because I want you guys to do the math too.
The average age of first losing your virginity is 16.
That's on average.
And remember, by 25, only like 2% of women are still virgins.
Eric says, just ranging.
No idea what the stream is about, but here's a super chat.
Thank you, Eric.
What a nice guy.
So, sorry, let's say in good faith, she waited till she was 21.
And we would agree women are going to pound town freshman year, sophomore, year, junior, year, senior, year.
21-year-old virgin.
She's probably fat or ugly or just so socially awkward that cooked.
But fine.
Let's say, let's say that she was a virgin till 21.
What were you doing for a decade?
That's 10 years.
Let's say, okay, let's do the math.
Let's say for 10 years, you had two year boyfriends and you had a 100% commitment rate.
Which let's just be like accurate.
Unless you're like, she was a pageant queen.
But remember, if a guy can get her as a pageant queen, he can get other pageant queens.
So the women that those like level of attractiveness are dealing with, like the women those men are dealing with, the beauty is common, right?
Because anyway, so one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
So that's five at least.
At least.
Nobody's pure if you've gotten your back blown out by five people.
But the thing is with Charlie and his wife, they got to build the brand.
And so they had this woman's leadership summit.
Now, I don't know why conservative men are having, like, why do we want women to lead?
Like, what would be the purpose?
But essentially, women's leadership summits are just sort of play pretend.
And I saw this clip, and I just got to thank Charlie.
Thank you for keeping me employed.
So we're going to watch a clip of Charlie and his wife.
Now, remember, Again, if you're going to sell me that you are holy and pure, I expect, and I'm not saying that women shouldn't use Botox or all that stuff.
I'm really not.
I'm not against it.
I'm not for it.
I don't care.
But you just have this idea that if there's like a pure, conservative, godly woman, that she's not dressed like an ethot.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, I just don't like the virtue signaling purity, like with the fake hair, fake lips, fake bow toxic.
You know, I don't really care, but okay.
Anyway, so I'm going to react to these clips and we're going to get into the topic today, but I just saw these on Twitter before the show and it was too good.
How do you tell young ladies to navigate the pressures of hookup culture on a college campus where they feel pressured that if they don't get into yeah, so now he's saying, again, remember, the conservatives are super simps.
So Charlie at this age, I don't, he's most likely had women hunt him down trying to get him to cheat on his wife.
So I don't understand why I'm just assuming, right?
I mean, he's a guy on stage.
Women love men with microphones.
So I just can't imagine he hasn't experienced this yet.
But women are the apex predators.
You met 18-year-old women.
They're giving it out to everybody.
They're like, you get some coochie.
You get some coochie.
You know, it's not till women take some L's when they're more stingy with it.
But when they get to a college campus, they're ready to go.
So again, they're framing this as the women are pressured when the women are the ones throwing it, you know?
To say sexual situations with a male counterpart, then they will not be able to find a boyfriend or a husband.
He's not meant to be with you.
Like, he needs to honor your purity.
What purity?
What purity are women bringing?
Erica, you didn't bring fucking purity.
And this is what I'm so tired of these conservatives making me pretend I have to believe this.
Just because your simp husbands fell for that BS, it doesn't mean I will.
What purity are you selling when I spot Botox, I spot fake hair, I spot a very bad spray tan?
Do you know what I mean?
You're telling me you weren't throwing it.
Come on.
For your husband.
That's simple.
All right, where did you go to college, man?
Where did you go to college?
Erica Kirk went to college where?
Oh my gosh!
Oh my gosh.
Fuck you.
Oh my.
Oh my gosh.
Oh, I'm so mad.
I'm so mad right now.
You were about to lecture me on purity when you went to Arizona State University.
I am pissed.
I am pissed.
Shut the fuck up.
Oh my gosh.
How do you bruh?
Here's another one.
Blaze a trail of glory.
So, my mission for all of you after you leave here, please go confuse the culture.
Confuse the crap out of it.
I don't even know if I'm allowed to say that, but confuse them.
Go and confuse them.
Do not conform to it.
Let them stare at you.
Let them write the meanest Instagram comments.
Let them wonder.
Let them whisper.
And while they're doing all of that, because that's just noise, build your family.
Go raise a family.
Go build a life of holy defiance.
You didn't do it.
You met Charlie at 32, Erica.
And you went to Arizona State University.
And if I Google this woman, hold on.
Let me see what pictures come up.
I know there's one of her in like a half-naked bikini.
I've seen it before.
If they got rid of it, these people have money.
They might have scrubbed it by now, but I have a screenshot somewhere.
Erica Kirk.
What is it?
Pageant.
But, oh, yeah.
See, do you guys not think that I can Google this stuff?
Like, you're giving me a lecture on purity.
Truly.
really uh come on can we just Can we just stop with the go love your husband?
Go love your babies.
Go teach your children how to blaze a trail of glory.
Go lead in truth and go be the light.
You don't have time for their noise.
Don't seek their applause.
It's not even worth it.
Not even worth it.
Go fulfill your purpose.
You just need Jesus.
It's all you need.
So while the world is watching, heaven's cheering for you.
Cheering you on.
Because just like the women before you, that blueprint, God is within you and you will not fail.
Yeah.
So my okay, now the Israel stuff.
Oh, here's another one where they're selling.
Whenever you feel that, now it's again conservatives selling women they're going to be young forever.
Here we go.
Oh no, hold on.
You need to go viral for this on Instagram.
You're falling behind.
Whenever you feel that, I want you to say out loud, I don't care if you're looking at a mirror.
I don't care if you're writing it down.
I want you to say, I am not behind.
I am becoming.
Do not feel like you're running out of time.
The enemy loves to make you feel like you're running out of time, but you can always have a career.
It is not going anywhere.
LLCs will always be able to be created.
But children.
You did the same thing.
You waited because you wanted to be a model.
I don't blame you.
You got to fly over the world.
You got to go party at ASU.
I don't blame you, Chica.
But can we just stop pretending this isn't what it is?
Family, your husband, marriages.
That is not a renewable resource.
That is not.
Don't delay the eternal for temporary and do not sacrifice the sacred for the secular.
It is not worth it.
Okay, I'm going to react to these full things this week.
They do love this alternative meds, astrology, yoga, after being in Eastern Europe and London for a bit of time.
Spiritual is just a bit much for me.
Then we got Alex Clark, another e thought.
Whatever.
Okay.
I'm gonna, well, I'm gonna react to a lot of these because this is just too much.
Thank you, Charlie, for keeping me employed.
Thank you.
I do appreciate it.
Okay, so welcome to another episode.
Today, we're gonna get into the actual topic.
Modern women are prideful, selfish.
So much so that nobody can tell a woman anything.
Not their husbands, not their family members, not doctors.
And this pride has led many women to honestly believe that they know better than the experts, especially when it comes to medicine and the healthcare field.
Too many women are foregoing the advice of conventional medical practitioners to practice some kind of alternative medicine to the detriment of themselves and their children.
Crazy diets, yoga, herbs, teas, acupuncture, and strange spiritual practices are ways that modern women avoid treatment.
If you go on social media, there are way too many influencers pushing this garbage to women, especially mothers.
Nothing gets me more mad than seeing a young woman pass away from something that could have been treated, but if they just would have went to a real doctor and got real treatment.
This is a problem that is only getting worse, unfortunately.
How many women and children are going to have to pass away until something is done about this?
So Amanda Lewis, a TV personality, says that cancer has spread after she decided to keep her tumor.
The former talk show host has reflected on her decision to go against her doctor's recommendations for a mastectomy after her 2020 breast cancer diagnosis.
I thought I had this.
Former MTV Ananda Lewis has shared that breast cancer has metastasized and she is now in stage four.
Lewis, 51, previously shared that she had been diagnosed with stage three breast cancer in a 2020 Instagram post, saying that she'd refused managrams for years due to fear of radiation exposure.
But during a roundtable discussion on cancer with CNN Stephanie Ellum and CNN's anchor Sarah Sidner, who was diagnosed with stage three breast cancer early this year, Lewis shared that she went against her doctor's recommendations for a double mastectomy following her diagnosis.
My first plan was to get the excessive toxins out of my body.
I felt like my body is intelligent, and I know that to be true.
Our bodies are brilliantly made, Lewis explains.
I decided to keep my tumor and try to work it out of my body a different way, she shared.
Looking back on that, you know, I go, you know what?
Maybe I should have.
So this is her.
Elam explains in a voiceover that Lewis pursued homeopathic remedies as well as medication and radiation and better sleep and diet.
While she says Lewis improved for a while, last year, the MTV alum discovered her cancer had spread.
My lymph system really flared up, Lewis said.
It was the first time I ever had a conversation with death because I felt like this is how it is.
I was just like, fudge, man.
I really thought I had this.
I was frustrated.
I was a little angry at myself.
And I said, man, listen, I know you're coming for me at some point, and I don't want it to be now.
And if you could just wait, I promise when you do come, I'm going to make it fun for you.
I literally had that conversation laying in my bed.
I couldn't get out of bed for like eight weeks.
Sidner shared that her diagnosis made her seek more joy in life while Lewis reflected on her decision not to pursue the double mastectomy, saying, My quality of life is very important to me.
I want to want to be here.
So I had to do it in a certain way for me.
Meanwhile, my 51-year-old CNN anchor who underwent a double mastectomy in May said that her cancer diagnosis made her realize I want to be here.
I want to thrive in a way I've never thrived before.
As Elam shared an Instagram post about their conversion, I'm forever grateful for their willingness to have this conversation to fully open up for the world.
If we could just get one woman to get their mammogram because of this conversation, that's a success.
I want everyone to live long, healthy lives.
So there it is.
She likely could have survived this diagnosis, but instead she chose to do this wacky voodoo stuff.
And now she died.
Here we got another article talking about her death.
Amanda Lewis, former MTV and BET host who publicly shared her breast cancer journey, dies.
Ananda Lewis, the former MTV and BET host who became a beloved television personality in the 1990s with her warmth and authenticity, has died.
She was 51.
Her sister confirmed Lewis's death in a Facebook post Wednesday.
Lewis had been battling breast cancer.
She's free and in his heavenly arms, Emery wrote.
Lord rest her soul.
Lewis, a San Diego, can you guys stop making this full screen?
Just make it like half.
Made a name for herself on hosts on BET, a team summit which tackled issues facing youth and featured community leaders, entertainers, and politicians.
She landed big interviews with Kobe Bryant, Tupac Shakir, and Louis Farrakhan and the first lady, Hillary Clinton, which earned her an NAACP Image Award.
After a few CAZ, Lewis took her talents over to MTV in 1977.
She was a host and VJ on MTV Live, Hot Zone, and Total Request Live, a daily top 10 video countdown show.
Lewis told the Associated Press that she felt some backlash after moving from BET to MTV.
I wouldn't say in a strong way because I think most people who are my fan base at Teen Summit understand that growth is necessary, she said.
One of the main things we dealt with on a consistent basis was the underlying themes of the show that you've got to get out there and live your life.
Okay, so, I mean, this kind of just reiterates the same story.
Lewis said doctors recommended a double mastectomy, but she opted for alternative methods.
She eventually realized this was the wrong measure, but became an advocate for the up-to-date Managram checkups.
Okay.
We got another, a woman who wants to stop chemo for her child and give the child alternative treatment.
So not only do women push these crazy alternative medicine things on themselves, right, put themselves in danger, they also put this on their children.
Jax is investigating your rights following a call from a local mother with a dying daughter.
I'm Tanika Hughes.
I'm John Bachman.
Says DCF is threatening to take her daughter away from her because she wants to discontinue chemo and use natural remedies for her child.
Action News Jacks, Ben Becker is live at DCF.
Ben, you're pressing DCF for answers and looking into the rights that parents have.
John, that's right.
You know, parents often believe they know what's best for their families.
And that's been a big crux today in this discussion I've been having with this family and also with DCF.
But often, DCF has different ideas.
Breakfast brings the Cleveland family together where they worry cancer and DCF will tear them apart.
When you look at these pictures, what goes through your mind?
Sadden is like, I want to be able to help her.
Jessica and Mike Cleveland's four-year-old daughter, Michaela, has stage four cancer.
She was diagnosed with Wilm's tumor in June of 2018, the most common type of kidney cancer in children.
The tumor was removed after a long hospital stay, but the cancer came back in March of 2019.
What was it like when you first found out that she had this?
I was shocked.
I was devastated.
I didn't know what to think or how to feel.
Michaela has been through multiple rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, but her mother wants to seek a natural remedy.
It's because her prognosis isn't as good this time.
When she told doctors no more chemo, she received a visit from a DCF caseworker.
She said that she is being advised to tell me that if I don't take my child to chemo, that they're going to take all my children away from me.
Not getting the chemo could fall under DCF's definition of neglect.
According to DCF, neglect includes when a child is deprived of, among other things, medical treatment.
You're the parent of the child.
But in today's world, you don't own the child.
Dale Carson is Action News Jack's law and safety expert.
He says DCF has broad authority.
In some cases, it doesn't even need a court order, which puts parents in a difficult spot.
It's a hard choice for a parent to make.
And I'm not so sure everyone agrees that the Department of Children and Family Services knows best.
I went to DCF and later they sent me a statement that reads: There are multiple factors involved when it comes to making decisions of whether or not to put children into protective custody.
As for Cleveland, what's your message to DCF?
They need to mind their business unless somebody is actually being harmed because she's not being harmed in any way.
All right, John.
So I spoke with a look.
Now, look, I think that's a tricky.
When when when does the government pick if they intervene with a child?
I don't know.
My point is more: these crazy women push these alternative treatments onto their children.
And what tends to happen is the kids are the ones who suffer.
All right, here's another natural health doctor, basically.
Okay, here we go.
Doctor, basically, a holistic doctor that offers me an alternative way of supporting whatever medical issues I'm having within my organism so that I can avoid getting sick and going to the doctor.
And basically, what she does is she does a whole body scan.
It's actually really cool.
It's kind of wild.
So are you guys going to want to pay for these full body scans?
Yep.
This is how it's done.
It is so extremely cool.
She can just tell everything that is wrong with you at any point of your body.
If you're having any ailment, any issues, she can offer you an alternative way to heal it through supplements and other methods.
So I've been doing that.
And guys, every single time I leave her office, I have like a whole bag that weighs like five pounds full of stuff.
Let me know if you guys want to know everything that I have to take.
I'll gladly share.
But it's just wild.
And she gives you a whole schedule of when to take it.
And honestly, a lot of my issues have gotten so much better.
But then, you know, other ones will pop up.
So I'm constantly having to adjust my supplement intake and what I'm taking.
But honestly, just ordering whatever you want off of Amazon because you read that it's good for your health or for a certain condition doesn't necessarily mean that it's going to help you.
You need like a certain dose of it for whatever is wrong with you or you need a certain brand or a certain kind because they're not all made the same.
So before you say, you know, supplements or vitamins don't work, maybe you are just taking them incorrectly.
Do you know what's another one?
I don't really buy this organic BS.
They just convince us that everything's wrong.
Like you need organic food.
Do I?
Oh, the pesticides are going to kill you.
Are they?
Truly?
Okay, woman says that there are natural substitutes for antidepressants.
This one I kind of agree with.
I got to agree.
I don't know about the anti- Okay, hold on antidepressants.
I was personally Here are a couple natural alternatives for antidepressants.
I was personally on Prozac for a year and I need to disclaim that if you are on antidepressants and that's working for you, that's amazing.
I'm not talking to you.
I'm talking to the people that are on antidepressants and they feel like a zombie and you feel like your soul has left your body.
Because that was me.
Okay, omega-3s are amazing and have proven to be equally as effective as antidepressants.
When I'm saying omega-3s, I'm talking salmon, I'm talking cod liver oil, I'm talking fish oil pills.
Saffron has proven to be equally as effective as antidepressants.
Exercise has proven to be equally as effective as antidepressants.
Going on an anti-inflammatory diet and healing your gut microbiome has proven to be equally as effective as antidepressants.
Please take everything I say with a grain of salt.
Talk to a naturopath, a holistic healer, someone who can work with you on an individual level.
These holistic healers have to be making so much money.
I bet they are just raking in the dough, just convincing women that there's there's just something wrong with them.
Diagnosed now at 34 years old.
There's no doubt in my mind that I have ADHD.
Hold on.
Sorry.
You know, Doug MPA, you said this mouse.
The same thing happens.
Hey, I have ADHD.
I was diagnosed when I was 34 years old.
There's no doubt in my mind that I have ADHD.
Hey, I'm also a mom with ADHD, late diagnosed too.
I've been on Byvance, and ByBance worked the best for me.
Dead, there's this.
When I was in college, they just gave Byvance out to everybody.
It's a supplement, but it worked better for me than literally any other ADHD medication I've ever tried.
And it doesn't make me feel anxious.
It doesn't make me feel like I'm going to jump out of my skin or more irritable or lose my hair.
You should really check it out.
I highly recommend them.
Okay, let's see what's next.
their alternative treatment methods.
I was diagnosed when I was 34 years old.
There's no doubt in my mind that I have ADHD.
Hey, I'm also a mom with ADHD.
Oh, wait, I played this one.
Okay, let me see.
Okay, well, I think that one is just the same one linked twice.
Okay, guys, so we're going to do a call-in show.
We're going to put the link in the chat.
Did your mom ever try some other treatment for a condition you had when you were young when she should have taken you to hospitals?
Have you ever dated a woman that was into alternative medicines and what was the craziest thing you saw her do or take for a treatment?
Or did you ever have a mother that just always thought she was sick and something was wrong with her?
Like you saw that one woman a couple of years ago that she, what did she do?
Her mom like put her in a wheelchair and would give her chemo treatments and she wasn't even sick.
By the way, I'm not against alternative treatments or whatever sometimes, but it's just when they're doing that instead of getting chemo.
When I was in college, fine ales, magic mushrooms, and LSD cured just about everything.
Well, if you want to try it, how did it work for you?
I'm not here to say one way or the other.
I'm here to get you guys's opinion.
So call into the show.
A couple things if you are going to call in, please get to the point.
So if we have further questions, we will ask you, but try to keep it under a minute when you do your initial beginning, middle, and end.
I may ask you where you're from, something like that, but then we're going to get into it.
Please don't come on and ask me what the topic is.
I'm going to get annoyed and just kick you.
We're really trying to have a good quality call show where we get the information from the people.
Make sure YouTube is not playing in the background and please stick to the topic.
If you were a fan, I really do appreciate you watching and I'm very grateful.
But there's a time and a place.
So if you love watching me forever, that's really thank you again.
But for the show, I'm just trying to keep it like on topic.
So please, that's what I'm asking of you guys to do.
Doug MPR, you on the line?
I am here.
How's it going?
Good.
How are you?
I'm fantastic.
This is a great topic.
So did your mom always think she was sick?
Was she into the holistic stuff?
What was it?
So, so someone I know went off to college and moved in with this co-worker of theirs.
And first off, this woman believed in that whole feng.
She moved into a room into this person's house, right?
And this woman believed in like feng shui, where you put things in different places in your house to direct like energy in your house.
So the person that my friend was renting from hired a feng shui designer, like interior designer, where they move all your furniture around based upon the energy in your house.
And this person put a book, a bookcase in front, like in the pathway in front of the front door.
It's crazy.
And so anyway, so it started with that.
Then she went to this holistic healer person that said, if you gave this woman some bark from this tree and told her to cut off some of her own hair and grill it in a pan and then eat some of it.
So it was, so she put oil in a pan, this bark, and then part of her own hair and it was trying to eat it.
And so for weeks, her house, it smelled like burnt hair.
You know how bad burnt hair smells.
I would love to be a holistic medicine person.
I could just say anything and get paid.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
You know how big your TikTok following would be?
Oh, yeah.
I still have an account.
Fazelle says, Pearl, congrats on 2 million plus subs.
Happy B-Day to the president.
DJT, no, Mariachi is above the law.
Deport them all.
And Dustin found actually found the cure to depression.
That the most popular alternative medicine to depression is being a whore.
Thank you, Dustin.
That's great.
Sarah Steppe says, my mother has done it all.
She's even tried to put nails in my house floors.
Sarah in the chat.
I didn't think I had any female watchers.
Thanks for getting in the chat on the website.
Guys, if you want unlimited supers and access to all my old content, please go to the website.
We're also on both app stores, so you can do that too.
And if you want to be a part of our learning community, click the first link.
It's pearlinvite.com.
You do have to apply for that, though, because we are going to do events.
And I have to, it's an interview process.
So if I meet you guys at some point, it's like normal.
You know what I mean?
I mean, the internet's a strange place.
So, do you have any stories about anyone that you know that was eating some weird stuff or taking some weird medications?
Not eating some weird stuff, but there's someone I know that always thought she was sick.
Always, always, always.
Like it was one week she's gluten-free.
The next week, she's got it.
And it would just always be really her problem was a poor diet and things that would be like symptoms of a poor diet.
She would find these like obscure diseases or whatever to say that was the real problem.
Does that make sense, Doug?
MP.
So, for example, she may have said, oh, I can't sleep and I just don't get good sleep.
Well, she didn't get good sleep because she ate terrible.
You know what I mean?
So you snore.
And so then it would be like this disease or that.
Oh, my gosh.
It never ended.
One of my friends, his nephew, was like, Mr. Duncan Pierre, like, hey, guess he's Gen Alpha.
You know, he's like, I think he's 18, 19.
He's like, what do you think of sungazing?
Oh, is that the balls with the like sun?
It's where sungazing is a meditative practice that involves looking at the sun during off-peak times.
So if you meditate while you're staring into the sun, sungazing is a method of meditation that attempts to harness the healing power of the sun.
And this is a guy.
I was like, don't ever, I should be the first and last person you ever have this conversation with.
Don't.
Sungazing.
Are you serious?
Oh my gosh.
All right.
Let's leave.
You ready for some guests?
Yeah.
Bring them on and make sure you hit that like buttons.
Subscribe if you haven't already.
Thank you for getting us to over 2 million.
We are on the way to 3 million.
So hit the like buttons, subscribe, share the video.
Donnie, are you there?
Hey, Doug, it's me.
Yeah.
I'm surprised.
I didn't think I'd be the first one on.
Hey, Pearl.
Hey, Doug.
Hey, how's it going?
Where are you calling out of?
Jersey.
I'll get to the point.
The topic was this whole holistic medicine craze stuff.
Uh, I guess it all falls under the whole appeal to nature fallacy where natural means good, man-made must be evil and oppressive and capitalistic.
And I mean, it's majority of women in this craze, but not just women.
Like, I guess the worst example would be Steve Jobs.
Like, his inspiration for Apple fonts and art and stuff came from that hippie-dippy go-to-India alternative movement.
Yeah, that was great for marketing and computer designs and art.
But when it came to him getting cancer, if you got the money, get the chemo and save your life.
Don't listen to these.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that killed him.
I had no idea.
Yeah, he died in 2011, 2012.
He had cancer, but the problem was instead of just going to a regular Western doctor, paying the money, which he clearly had, he listened to his holistic, hippie friends who were on the no, Juice Cleanse and other stuff.
Like, yeah, like snubbing Western white man's medicine is what killed Steve Jobs.
If he had just got the chemo, he would probably be alive today drinking Cokes with Warren Buffett.
No way.
I did not know that.
Go ahead.
Before he started working for, well, before he started Apple, he worked at Atari for like five years, right?
And he never showered, so he smelled terrible.
And then for a couple of years, he was on a fruit, a fruit-only diet where all he'd eat was fruit.
I mean, he was part of that baby boomer 60s, 70s, hippie-ish counterculture.
And yeah, that works for marketing crap.
And most of the organic stuff is just pure marketing.
It's largely not science-based.
A lot of it is just marketing, appealing to frustration, appeal to nature fallacy where we think something organic means good, but do you know what?
That's not always true.
I used to just, I don't know, this kind of gross, but I used to just chop up salmon and like eat it like raw, like sushi or whatever.
And I did this for years.
And people told me I would get parasites or I stopped doing it because so many people told me that I was going to get sick or whatever, but I was literally fine.
I did this for like two years.
I would just eat raw salmon.
Was it the good salmon or the gas station salmon?
I mean, it was good.
It was like good salmon.
Like it was from like Jewel or like a grocery store, but it wasn't like sushi grade.
And I don't, I was fine.
Okay, I'll wrap it up because there's other people probably on the line, but I just got through watching King of the Hill.
And I saw the one when Dale Gribble was selling bee stings.
You know, he had bees that almost killed him.
But he was at this booth at some organic farmer's market and some dumb, liberal, trendy white woman.
I guess they exist in Texas too.
They're like, how many bees can I, how many bee stings can I get for 150?
He's like, the going rate is 12.
It's like, that's such a good deal.
But I mean, men are into this stuff too, but it seems like so many women just love that stuff because they want to feel earthy or they just hate modern academic capitalist society.
But I want to split because there's other people in the chat.
Thanks for having me again.
Bye.
Thanks for calling in.
Oh, it's good to have you.
Man, see, Donnie, he sets the gold standard.
Comes in here, drops some tooth bombs, deuces out.
Yeah, that was great.
He, um, okay, yeah, keep going.
Cool.
All right, we're gonna bring up AJ, are you next?
Wait, AJ, are you there?
Hey, what's up, guys?
Can you hear me?
Yeah, I can hear you.
How are you?
Hey, really, really fast.
I know a guy whose brother's wife went to, instead of medical school, went to, she's an ND.
She's a naturopathic doctor and not a medical doctor.
So she said all this time, they put off having kids and everything.
Got like $230,000 in student loan debt, right?
And then once they started having kids, wanted to stay home.
So he had to work all these extra hours as a lawyer to pay off the debt, buy a house.
And then she figured out that she didn't want to do naturopathic medicine.
So now she's a nurse.
What?
Wow.
Are they still in a whole bunch of debt or no?
They just managed to pay it off and their kids are like almost like all grown.
But yeah.
So she was, so she spent like all these years doing the naturopathic thing.
I went to some private school.
I'm like, yeah, almost quarter million dollars in debt.
And then stopped working.
And then now she's a nurse.
Wait, she got $4 million in debt?
No, no.
A quarter million.
$250,000.
Oh, my God.
Why didn't she just take the money from these fat women that go to these places?
Because I guarantee that 90% of the time, it's not that it, come on, it's their diet.
Like 90% of the time, it's you eat too much sugar, you drink too much wine, stop doing that, you'll feel better and walk more.
Yeah, but there's all this trendy stuff on TikTok now.
Also, and witchcraft.
Now, that witchcraft is the fastest growing religion with young women now.
So it's a combination of like all these, all these, all these witches on TikTok.
And I don't know if you guys want to look into this, but all these chicks that claim they have the cure for the hurt dirt, you know?
Oh, I've seen them.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Alternative cures to STDs is a big one, too.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
I just want to tell a story.
Have a good one, guys.
Okay, bye.
It's a minefield out there.
They'll make it more complicated than it is.
Most health is just common sense.
Like, eat less sugar, eat less carbs, eat more fruits and vegetables and meat.
And you'll probably feel better.
Like, you know, if I've ever had a health issue, and I've never had anything crazy, but it's always the consequences of my own actions.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, every person I know with like a liver problem drinks too much.
You know, it's like, I don't know.
I think there's some people do get it like by surprise and they're super healthy.
But a lot of the time when people have issues, it's like things you would kind of expect, you know?
Yeah.
I'm right there with you with the whole organic food thing.
So there's a heavyweight boxer named Shannon Briggs.
He was heavyweight champion.
And he's the let's go champ, guy, let's go champ.
Anyway, so he was on Joe Rogan.
He has a wife and like and three kids.
And he said that his wife only shops at Whole Foods, right?
Now, for a wife and three kids and him, try and guess how much she spends a year at Whole Foods.
Try and guess.
Oh, um, a wife and how you said three kids?
Yep.
Two grand a month?
Two, five?
She spends $68,000 to $70,000 a year.
What is that a month?
Holy shit.
On groceries.
Yeah.
He said on Joe Rogan, you have got to be kidding me.
Yep.
He's like, all we do is shop at Whole Foods.
I won't, he won't allow any other kind of food in his house.
That's almost six grand a month on food.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
Do you know what?
I'm going to tell you guys, I'm going to start opening up a little more.
Some of this people might find this weird, but I've never washed like fruit.
I'd always just eat it.
Because I'm like, back in the day, people would just eat like apples off of trees and stuff, and they're fine.
I don't think the pesticides are that like, I don't know.
I don't really care.
All the stuff because people don't understand all the stuff that you put in your mouth as a kid.
Come on now.
Like, people are washing chicken.
Like, that was when Maggie came, or maybe I was someone came and did like a cooking show with me when I was in London.
And I just, I was like, why are we washing chicken?
Like, I don't, I don't think it makes that much of a difference, but maybe it does.
And I'm just, like, I'm just like, you're going to cook it.
You're going to kill everything on the chicken by cooking it, right?
That's what I think.
I'm like, I just, and even with the washing fruit, I'm like, you're telling me putting a little bit of water for like five seconds over the fruit is going to like kill the germs.
Yeah.
I mean, maybe it does, but I've never done it and I've always been fine.
And everyone, everyone's always said, oh, you're going to, they said I was going to die from the sushi.
I was fine.
They said I was going to die from the chicken and the fruit.
Now, I could be wrong.
Maybe I'll eat my words in 10 years and these pesticides will kill me.
I don't know.
But yeah.
Let's bring.
Wow.
Yes.
Hit that like button and subscribe, please.
And thank you for all the super chats so far.
And thank you for everyone on the website, too.
Always get to see you there.
We're bringing up Eric Wade.
I don't know if he's everybody.
She doesn't know how the chickens are processed.
I just don't care.
Do you know what I mean?
I know.
I don't.
When Pearl's hungry, she's hungry, dang it.
Yeah.
It hasn't killed me yet, David.
And this is what they're going to show me.
And the vegans do this too.
They'll show me some video.
I don't care.
I don't.
Okay.
Yeah.
He dropped out.
So we're going to bring David.
Are you there?
Yo, what's going on?
Hey, David, how are you?
Hey, good as always, y'all.
So what's your thoughts on the topic?
Do you know anyone that was into the alternative medicine or always thought they were sick?
Or did your mom stop you from going to the hospital to do some alternative medicine?
Was she taking you to the hospital?
No, so I actually have a kind of a heavy story that it's like kind of the opposite of what you just said, Doug.
But like when I was really little, my mom, I think I was probably like six, maybe.
My mom, she like thought I was, she thought I was like really sick or something.
And she took me to the hospital.
And like, normally I would just go to like the doctor and like get a checkup or whatever.
But this time we went to like a hospital hospital.
And I was like really, really young.
So I didn't know what was really going on.
And to this day, like I wish, I wish, I wish my dad had taken me because what happened was I went to the hospital and like they were trying to take my blood and I never had got that done before.
I was still like, I was really, really young.
And I remember this.
Like, this is like a core memory because I remember it so vividly.
They took me, they strapped me down into this hospital bed, like literally strapped me down because I was like, you know, like I didn't know what was going on.
And they were like, oh, we're going to take his blood.
We think he's going to freak out or whatever.
And blah, blah, blah.
They strapped me down and they started doing all this stuff.
And I pass out.
Like, I just completely passed out.
And what I, all I remember was like, my mom was like laughing.
Like, she wasn't like trying to like help me through it or like anything.
She was just laughing.
And like that, that memory stuck in my mind so hard.
And I think to this day, that's why I have this, like, I have this like vaso-vagal syndrome where like anytime I go to the doctor and get blood drawn or like get a shot or something, I immediately pass out.
Like it's completely involuntary.
Like I have no control over it.
And I've looked into like hypnotism and stuff like that, but nothing works.
Like even to this day, like I'm like terrified of that shit.
And I think it's because my mom like she like imprinted this memory into me and like made it to where I'm incapable of dealing with these types of things.
You know what I mean?
Like if it had been my dad there, he would have been like, you know, toughen up, blah, blah, blah.
You know, told me to do the right thing.
But instead, my mom's just there laughing.
So I think that's probably a negative thing.
It's not really an alternative medicine story, but I don't like stuff touching my feet.
And like, I always wear socks except for when I'm, you know, at the beach or in the shower.
And like, I always wondered why we grew up poor while my parents were going to school.
And my AJ, who is on here, that's my twin brother in real life.
And so we grew up poor.
And we used to, we lived in this really poor neighborhood while my parents were going to school.
And we used to run around barefoot a lot.
And I remember I stepped on a glass bottle and broke a bunch of glass into my foot.
Right.
And so we didn't have the money to go to the hospital.
So my mom took a sewing needle and like a sharp, you know, a sharp edge and dug the glass out of my foot, dude.
Yeah.
Hell no.
And I had a bunch of, because I broke the glass and then I jumped up and then like I stepped, you know, how you do the, you, you jump up and down with your feet.
Anyway, so I stepped on the glass multiple times and she had to dig that glass out of my foot.
And I think that's why I always have socks on my feet.
I don't like anything touching my feet to this day.
Yeah, man, it's, it's those core memories.
Like when you're young, like those memories get imprinted on you and like they actually do like people can, I see people in the chat saying, oh, you're being dramatic.
It's like, no, dude, this is real.
Like you can look this stuff up, man.
This is like scientific shit.
Like, like, I wish that it wasn't this way.
I wish we could, you know, get rid of our childhood memories that, you know, and they usually involve women.
That's what I've noticed is like any type of like traumatic experience typically involves women or your mother instead of your father.
Your father actually sorry to me to laugh, but it's like, it's so true.
But it's just traumatic.
The paralym says, my dad was an alcoholic and got drunk one night and made me pull one of his teeth out.
I was like 10 years old.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Unless your dad's like doing like, you know, like illegal stuff, you know, and like actually harming you, it's typically going to come from your mother because what happens is like a lot of the simp fathers, they just let the mothers do whatever they want.
And the mothers are just going to, you know, run free with whatever dumbass idea they have.
And like in my case, my dad was like barely around because he was working all the time and shit.
So like, you know, my mom, she, whenever it came to me and my sister, like it was like 99% just us hanging out with mom.
And like, I just, I look back on it and I'm like, this was so bad for us.
I always say the mothers inflict so much more damage on their sons, but especially their daughters.
Because if you ask any girl, who was the first person to tell them that they were too tall, too short, too thin, too fat?
Their hair is too stringy or nappy.
You know, their boobs are too big.
Their boobs are too small.
They're dressed like a whore.
Who's the first person that anyone hears call another woman a bitch or a whore?
It's your ma.
Yeah, Jesse Lee Peterson talks about this a lot.
He says that you're as a man, you're supposed to turn away from your or forgive your mother and turn to your father.
Like return to the father and forgive your mother because your mother is putting the traumas into you.
Your father is the one that, you know, is going to fix them.
Yeah, I agree.
Yeah, I just wanted to say that.
You guys have a good one.
I was going to talk to you, David.
How are you doing, buddy?
Thanks for calling in.
I like when David calls in.
He always has good stories.
Yeah, he's a good caller.
Okay, next up we have...
We had a good run of, like, good callers recently.
Up we have Will is coming in.
Will, you're on mute.
Are you there?
Will, you're on mute.
He's probably listening to the YouTube chat.
It's a couple seconds behind.
Will?
Hey, can you hear me?
Yeah.
Hey, yeah, I was listening to the stream.
Sorry about that.
How are you?
I'm good.
Long time first time and all that.
Yeah.
So what's your thoughts on the topic?
You got a story for us?
Yeah, yeah.
About a girl I was trying to date in 2023.
So two years ago now.
I'm a white dude.
I'm from Ohio, but I'm pretty big into Asian chicks.
And so I was looking around online and started trying to do the past Port Bro thing.
Eventually started talking to this girl from Singapore.
Well, she was living in Singapore.
She's actually from south of China.
And as you know, China is all about TCM, traditional Chinese medicine, which is exactly what you're describing.
It's all holistic stuff.
It's, you know, no pills.
It's all teas and acupuncture therapy, oils, hot rocks, you know, whatever, all sorts of different things.
And so she was a really unique medical case because she had the worst eczema of anybody I've ever met.
And she was real self-conscious about it.
It didn't bother me too much.
But it made her skin.
I don't know.
Like, I've got family members with eczema and their skin just looks discolored.
Her skin was like flaking off constantly to the point where I'm convinced her body was like regenerating skin at an abnormally high rate.
She would eat a ton of food every time we went out.
It was the strangest thing I've ever seen.
And she wasn't like super overweight or anything like that.
So I'm convinced that was because of the eczema.
Her body was like trying to regenerate cells quicker or something like that.
I'm not a doctor.
I'm an engineer.
I don't know anything about medicine, but I say all that to say that she worked for a medical company.
She was a graphic designer.
She would design the labels on their packaging.
But her boss, who was a big believer in TCM, but also Western medicine, he was kind of split between the two.
He had recommended for her eczema to take.
Shoot, I looked it up earlier.
I'm going to have to double-check now.
It has a funny acronym, but it's like a steroid you take for eczema.
I can't remember what it's called now.
She wouldn't take it or she did take it.
Sorry, say that again?
She wouldn't take it or she was taking it.
The boss recommended that she take it, and she agreed to do so.
And the problem was that when you take the steroids, if you have extremely severe eczema to begin with, it'll make it worse because it's a steroid, which kind of makes sense.
I don't know why it's sold as a cure.
But in any case, if you get a flare-up, you get like crazy bad depression.
Your life is over.
It's like genuinely the worst thing that could possibly happen to you if you have the super bad eczema to begin with.
So she tried it.
All of that happened.
She had a massive flare-up.
She was like down and out for months and months.
She couldn't even function.
And I guess because the culture over there is so different, she was too polite to be like mad at the dude and actually come back at him and say, hey, you ruined my life or whatever.
But anyway, moved on, stopped taking the steroid, obviously, recovered eventually.
And then, so that's like half of my holistic medicine story.
The other half is I did eventually go to Singapore to meet her.
We hung out for like two and a half weeks.
We were in Singapore for a week.
We traveled to Thailand for a week, which I was very thankful that we were spending some time in a place where food was cheap because, like I said, she ate a ton.
But anyway, at one point she had me try Essence of Chicken, which for some reason I thought was going to taste like chicken noodle soup.
And it absolutely was not that at all.
It is.
It is like a, it's a little, it's a little box.
It comes in a box.
It's a cube shape.
It's maybe like two inches square.
And then inside the cube is like a glass jar with like a plastic screw cap.
And it is the most bitter, most foul thing I've ever tasted in my life.
I'm convinced that they take like in a chicken factory, once they're done with the chickens, they take the bones and mash them up and turn them into this stuff.
It's the only way I can imagine they would end up with that taste.
And she was adamant that this was like the healthiest thing you could possibly drink.
I used to run before the cough cough, I used to run half marathons all the time.
And there was a while in the late 2010s where running companies were trying to push beet juice.
Oh, hell no.
So imagine it looked like a monster can, you know, like a can of monster.
And it was 75% beet juice, like 25% grape juice, because that was the only way to make it half palatable.
So I just got done with the 5K and at the finish line, oh, yeah, try this, try this can of stuff.
And I just popped it open, and I should have known the smell because beets have that particular smell.
I took a swig of that, almost choked.
Yeah.
Yeah, sounds pretty similar to my experience.
Yeah.
The only funny extra to that story was she was making fun of me at the time.
I guess, you know, Westerners aren't used to it, but she was telling me there was a sweet version and a particularly nasty regular version of this essence of chicken stuff.
And I should have started with the sweeter stuff because that's what they quote unquote give to kids to get them trained on this stuff when they're young.
So that by the time they're adults, they're used to it.
And I can't even imagine.
I had a sweet tooth as a kid.
It's not as bad now, but I can't imagine trying to choke that stuff down as a kid.
That would have killed me.
But anyway.
I've been looking to see what essence of chicken is.
And like, okay.
How to make essence of chicken.
Place the skinless chicken legs around the rice bowl.
Wrap the bowl with food-grade plastic film to prevent the steam.
Steam for 60 minutes.
Remove the wrap, then boil and serve up.
I don't think that's what you're talking about.
That sounds like a whole meal.
Yeah, the stuff I had wasn't rice or any food or anything like that.
Oh, it says essence of chicken powder, maybe is created by drying out chicken broth or essence, followed by grinding it into powdery form.
Is that it?
Maybe.
That sounds a lot more palatable than what I had, but maybe if it's like super constantly, all of it sounds awful, dude.
Yeah, I mean, if it's super concentrated, you might end up with that stuff.
Yeah, I don't know.
That's a good question.
Cool.
Yeah, anyway, I gotta go, guys.
Sorry, I'm making dinner, but thanks for having me on.
Thanks for calling in.
Calling anytime.
Okay, okay.
Okay, Eric dropped out before, but he's here now.
I told him he'd be next.
Thanks for sharing all your stories in the chat, guys.
This is great.
Yeah, some of these are pretty funny.
If you see any that are funny, feel free to read them, Doug MPA.
Eric, how are you doing?
Hey, Eric.
Eric.
He's probably listening to the YouTube.
Oh, we can hear you.
He's probably listening to the YouTube sheet.
I'll bet.
Yeah, how many.
What just happened to the guy who was on the Zoom call?
Who was talking about chicken and stuff?
Oh, he left.
Yeah.
He said that he.
Oh, okay.
I must be a few seconds behind you guys.
I thought I was still in the queue.
Sorry.
You're okay.
So, what's your story for us?
Make sure you turn off the YouTube chat in the background.
I can hear an echo.
So just make sure it's paused.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Okay.
Let me pause that.
I muted it, but I guess that doesn't work, huh?
I don't know.
I can't see your set, but I don't hear an echo now, so I think you fixed it.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, I live in Sedona in Arizona, which, I mean, this place, everybody is so wealthy that they just thrive on luxury beliefs, right?
So there's very little religion going on here.
Most of them are all looking for like these, you know, metaphysical alternatives.
And I mean, you cannot swing a corn dog without hitting a crystal store in this town.
You know, like I first moved here in 1982.
And then, you know, I joined the Coast Guard shortly after that and went all over the world.
Meantime, my entire family moved here.
So when I retired from the Coast Guard, I was like, God, I guess I got to go back to Sedona and, you know, spend, you know, whatever their Twilight years are, you know, with my parents and stuff.
And, you know, but the thing is, my impression of the whole metaphysical, you know, Holistic thing is that there's a whole lot of people trying to figure out how to make money by preying on those who don't want to, like Steve Jobs,
who don't want to do, you know, like the standard medical thing, right?
So they come up, I swear, every week, there's a whole new trend.
You know, it's like it used to be like Noni juice from the South Pacific.
And then it was, you know, well, you got to, you know, you got to find a wild gopher, shave his balls, and suck on him, and you'll be fine, right?
Listen to this, listen.
I remember this was in the late 2000s.
There was a coffee company that would go to this island where bats would eat the coffee beans and then poop them out.
So they would go through bat poop and get the coffee beans and then sell this, sell these coffee beans for this god-awful amount.
And certain coffee places would have that coffee and charge like $10, $15 a cup for this coffee that they had to dig out of bat poop.
That's how much money people have.
Yeah, I remember that.
Well, I suppose that probably dropped out of popularity after COVID got blamed on battle.
It was like, it was like, oh, I used to drink bat, you know, bat shit coffee.
And then, you know, when Fauci told us that COVID came from freaking bats, I gave it up, you know.
But the thing is, the, you know, I mean, these are people who believe that there are like universal portals in some of the rocks around Sedona where you can connect with the essence of the creator, you know.
And, you know, it's like some of them will like climb to the top of Castle Rock and meditate, hoping to attract UFOs and our space brothers.
I mean, and these are all of this shit, all of the holistic medicine, the whole connecting with the Space Brothers, that's all based on luxury beliefs.
These are people who have no real problems.
Do you think that it's kind of survival of the fittest in a way?
Yeah, it's kind of like the delusion of the freaking dumbest.
You know, it's like, it's like, all right, you know, here, I mean, here's what I do.
The only reason I live here is because my family wound up moving here and they're all older than me.
And I was like, I'm going to have some hang time after they're gone.
So despite where I would prefer to live, I'm going to come here and I'm going to make the most of the years that they have left, my older sisters and my mom and dad.
And dad's gone.
Mom's not in the greatest shape.
My sisters actually aren't in the greatest shape either, quite frankly.
But so my time here is probably limited.
I don't know where I'm going to go next.
But the point being that, you know, these most of the people who are able to live here in Sedona, they don't have to worry about, I mean, they don't even bother to track their budget because the money comes and it goes.
And they're, you know, they never lack any of it.
They have so much money, they can just like waste time with this BS.
Also, only 40% of women budget anyway.
Well, yeah, well, it's difficult, you know.
I mean, I'm one of those guys.
You know, if I go down to the dollar store and, you know, drop five bucks on laundry detergent, it winds up in my daily log.
I mean, well, it's a monthly log, really, but you know, I'm super OCD.
I've always tested out under the Myers-Briggs, which I, you know, I don't know if it's completely accurate, but I've always been an INTJ Sigma male ever since I can remember, ever since I've taken the Myers-Bridge survey.
And I never wind up red in the bank and I never fuck up my bills because I track that shit daily, every day.
And like I said, if I even spend five bucks on laundry detergent at the dollar store, it goes in the lock.
I know exactly how much money I have on a day-to-day basis.
My sister, on the other hand, my eldest sister, she's one of these people who, you know, I busted her out on my method for budget keeping.
And she's like, oh, I don't bring enough money in to bother tracking it.
Just screw it.
You know, and I'm like, well, then you're, you know, and no wonder you wind up in the red every three days.
You know, and she's always frugal, except for I have my couple things that I don't keep track of, i.e., i.e., coffee money.
I'm one of those people, Pearl and I have had many conversations about that buying coffee every single day.
Yeah, right.
You know, the thing is, you know, it's like I think the most important thing I do, and I know we're way off topic here, but the most important thing I do is I'll, you know, I'll look at my bank and I'll look at my log.
I'll figure out what hasn't come in yet bill-wise.
And then, you know, I subtract every bill that I, you know, have set up electronically that's about to come in over the next couple of weeks.
And that will tell me exactly how much money I have.
I call it burn rate per day.
So, you know, like it may say I can burn $110 per day until next payday.
So I'll probably only spend like at the most 20 to 40 bucks a day, except when Pearl's on or Christine Gray Smith is on or Alexander Grace, and I have to cough up some fucking super chats.
Yeah, keep doing that.
You know that Pearl, Pearl put Christine Gray Smith on, right?
Yeah, I saw that one.
And Christine's channel grows because her channel is awesome.
Yeah, she's great.
I'm really happy she's been doing well.
So well, she's like you, Pearl.
She's one of those rare voices of reason on YouTube.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So hey, everybody, go to Christine Gray Smith's channel and subscribe, like, do all the YouTube jazz.
Thanks for calling.
Thanks for calling in.
All right.
Yes.
Call it anytime.
All right, Doug and Pearl.
Yeah, Sedona's got its head totally up its ass.
I fucking hate this count.
Yeah.
I recommend Charlotte, North Carolina, man.
Really?
Never been.
You got to go.
It's great.
Oh, I know.
Yeah.
Charlotte is great.
I'll probably wind up in South Dakota, actually, but I'm going to clear off of here and let someone else come on.
All right, Eric.
I'll get talking to you call at any time, buddy.
All right.
Cool.
All right.
Well, guys, hit that like button.
Subscribe.
Thanks for being here.
We appreciate it.
Next up, we're letting Scott in.
Make sure to have the YouTube off.
So there's like a five-seven second delay.
So, Scott, are you there?
Scott?
Scott.
Hey.
How's it going?
You there?
Hey, I'm doing great.
How are you guys doing?
Good.
You got a story for us today?
Holistic medicine, or maybe your mom is neglected.
Go ahead.
I'm super old.
So I don't know if you guys remember.
Doug, you might be old enough to remember this.
I don't know how old you, but where girls could share alternative holistic medicine ideas with each other on TikTok and whatnot.
Every girl that I knew was really into what was it?
Cocaine What they use to try to make them so That was a holistic medicine.
That is not what I was thinking he was going to say.
Where I'm from, you know, you know, I'm from Washington State.
So, you know, it was meth.
Meth was what all the girls used to treat all their ailments.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, they still have that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yep.
Oh, my gosh.
How did that work for her?
I was very close for several years with a woman who was vegan because she had been convinced that that was, you know, the best possible way for her to be like a healthy person to stay out of the hospital and all that kind of thing.
And she tried to get me to be vegan.
We'd spend way too much money at like Trader Joe's and Whole Foods and all that business.
She's into all the disgusting like imitation meat burgers and stuff like that.
So long story short, we break up.
I didn't really keep in touch with her, but we would cross paths every so often back in San Diego because we had similar groups of friends and whatnot.
And about a year and a half after we broke up, I ran into her at the gym and she's telling me this story about how she was just getting really sick and everything.
So she went to the hospital and they did a full like blood test panel type of thing on her.
And the doctors convinced her that she was all fucked up because she was vegan and she didn't have any iron in her blood.
It was brutal.
I could never be vegan because of bacon.
And then you're going to laugh, but the Burger King whopper.
Like every other fast food burger I can leave behind.
But every so often I go to Burger King and I don't get anything.
I don't get the French fries or anything.
I just get a burger, I get a whopper with cheese and bacon, no onions cut in half, and just have to eat it every once in a while.
Dude, that's fucking disgusting, Doug.
Hey, you know what?
Hey, you know what?
I eat 7-Eleven food.
I eat those.
Oh, my God.
I eat those Monterey Jack chicken taquitos on the roller.
I eat tuna fish sandwiches from 7-Eleven.
So see, you got it.
You got to know who you're talking to over here.
You are a fucking real man, bro.
I'm not hating on you at all.
I don't need anything like that.
I'm like, I make all my own food.
I bring lunches to work.
Like, I bring a George Foreman grill to work at my job and plug it into the welding machine that I use all day on my lunch breaks and cook steaks and shit like that.
Like, I'm, I have enough experience knowing people in food service jobs where like I don't ever let anybody else make my food.
Back in the day when I was young, I used to work three jobs, and one of them was I was an opener at Starbucks at the Orange County airport.
And I shouldn't admit this on video, but I've been prosecuted for worse crimes than this.
But dude, we used to spit in so many people's drinks.
Just be careful, bro.
Just be careful out there.
You know what I mean?
Ew.
Come on, man.
Hey, I didn't make this shit up.
It's not like I started spitting in people's shit.
I just started working there, and it was the senior like barista dudes that were cool that were like, look, man, when this particular person comes in, that's an asshole to everybody all the time.
We're going to all spit in their drink.
And it was like a game where we could see how many of us could spit and scream pissed off ladies' coffee.
Bro, it was worse than that.
I used to give people decafs.
People would come in and order like a five-shot, whatever, special ass drink, and I would give them fucking decafs, son.
Oh, man.
Come on.
Oh my gosh.
You were a menace.
Absolute menace.
A menace to society, man.
I was an asshole when I was young.
I don't do that kind of thing anymore, of course.
That would be wrong now that I'm addicted to coffee, just like y'all.
But yeah.
Are those?
Have you seen those videos where since you worked in construction where the white guys show their lunches and it's like a ham sandwich with some chips and then like the Mexican guys show their lunches and their wives could cook them up all this good stuff like handmade?
Is that real?
I haven't seen that.
That's 100% true, man.
100%.
I haven't seen that going around because I'm not super deep into social media and whatnot, but like that's 100%.
That's why I'm like an honorary Mexican.
I'm so down with the Mexicans, dude.
The Mexican lunch ladies, you guys already know how I feel about that.
I love those women.
They're my favorite.
I'm in Atlanta right now.
We don't have any Mexican lunch ladies that are allowed to come on our job site because we're doing government work.
So I'm just bringing my George Foreman and making steaks up.
You're not going to see any of them for a while.
Not with Ice Ice Baby doing what they're doing.
No more Tomali ladies anytime soon.
Dude, don't get me wrong.
I want them all deported, but like, I love them at the same time.
You know what I mean?
It's not because I hate them.
It's just because I want my taxes to go down, not up.
I mean, good luck with that.
You know how it is.
Yeah, so no more Tamale ladies, you know, selling Tamales for cheap out of the trunk of their cars.
None of that, man.
Not for the next three years.
I hope so.
I hope some of them stick around.
I hope some of them can dodge ice and show up and hook me up.
Okay, I got one crazy, crazy story for y'all, and then I'm going out to dinner.
So check this out.
Nobody's going to beat this.
This is the craziest shit you've ever heard in your life.
My last, man, I shouldn't even really.
Nah, come on.
The last woman that I was with, we're having a baby, and she got convinced by some podcasters on YouTube that the best possible, most healthy thing that she could do to replenish her own status of being a whole, healthy woman after she gives birth to a child is to save the placenta from baby.
I've heard of this.
I've heard of this.
You know what I'm saying, right?
Yeah, and make tea out of it or eat it.
Yeah, yep.
Yeah.
She was going to make placenta smoothies, bro.
Ew.
This shit's real.
This is, this is, this shit's real.
There's podcasters out there that are into like astrology.
I don't care what to do.
And then they convince him not to take drugs when they give birth.
I don't care.
I'm getting drugged up.
Dude, I told you guys before, but we had this baby in our own.
I delivered the baby.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
We had the baby at home.
She just invited her homegirls over that are like these like farmer type ladies.
There was no actual like professional doctors or midwives or anything.
It was just like me and this circle of like super hardcore granola eating, kind of witchy chicks.
It was, I mean, thank God nothing crazy happened and everything worked out.
Did you have a catcher's made on where you caught that bad boy sliding?
The whole nine.
I caught the baby.
We did the baby pass off.
We did the skin to skin little family thing and everything.
And then this bitch bounced on me, dog.
How the fuck?
How the fuck?
Does that add up?
No, it adds up perfectly.
She's a woman.
I mean, what did you do?
Modern women.
What did you expect?
I think the actual flaw in your thinking was making it to that age and expecting something else.
Like, why would you expect the wife to be a little bit more like a bad person?
You ain't never told a lie in your whole life.
Yeah, I mean, that was just silly.
You might as well just plan for the divorce before the marriage, you know.
I know, right?
I was too worried about placenta milkshakes and shit.
I was like, really trying to quarterback the situation and make sure that didn't actually happen.
So at least that's a point in my category.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Because I did put the kibasha on that.
We didn't actually have any placenta smoothies going on.
But, bro, it was.
Would you have had to drink it if she made it?
Not me.
She was going to drink it.
Okay.
I was just going to lose all respect.
I'm like, look, man.
And if you can see what these dudes look like that are these podcasters that are telling women to do this, they look crazy, man.
They're not even like normal looking dudes.
They're like dudes that wear crystals and t-shirts and shit.
And they ain't got no real job.
They just have a podcast and they're, you know.
Yeah, they have to.
I'm like, you're going to listen to these cats, but you're not going to listen to me.
They have the freaking balding man bun and the freaking dirty white t-shirt on.
And, you know, I was talking about crystals and chakras.
And yeah, man, it's terrible.
They have some kind of some kind of tea business or some kind of like coffee shop or something on the side.
Yeah.
I know exactly what you're talking about.
Yeah, you're right there, man.
Anyway, that's all I got for you.
Watch out for placenta smoothies out there, boy.
And be nice to people at Starbucks so they don't spit you.
Yeah, it gross.
Yeah, bro.
I mean, that shit goes without saying.
Make sure you're not getting spiked decafs.
There's all kinds of loopies talked in it when you go to school or something.
Make sure to tip the people that make your food and fucking be nice out there.
I hear you.
All right, I gotta go.
I'll catch y'all later.
Thanks for watching.
Thanks for calling, son.
The chat is so funny tonight.
Always a good caller, that guy.
All right.
And then, last but not least, we have RJ.
Thanks for being here this evening.
We really appreciate it.
We know it's Saturdays.
We always appreciate you listening in.
Normal showtimes are Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. Central Time.
So make sure to catch Pearl at those times.
RJ, how are you doing?
Hey, I'm doing well.
How are you?
Where are you calling out of?
I'm calling out of El Salvador.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
RJ.
Yes, yes.
As soon as I heard your voice, I remembered.
So, what's your story that you have for us today?
Yeah, so I'm actually going to come in here and I want to simp a little bit actually, because I'm calling in defense of women.
Okay.
And not full defense.
Like, yeah, there's some crazy stuff out there.
But to give my background here, so I have two kids that are severely autistic.
My oldest son, he actually, today is his 10th birthday.
And to get you an idea of what I mean by severely autistic, he doesn't really communicate.
He has a couple sentences that he uses out of context.
So he'll say words, but the words have little meaning.
He needs constant help with eating and even going to the bathroom.
And his brother is very much the same.
And this is something, obviously, we've been dealing with for quite some time.
And one of the challenges that we have run into is we have taken them to doctors.
We have done everything that we were told we're supposed to.
We, you know, we did what we were supposed to do based off of what the doctors told us to do.
And every single medical intervention that we have received has backfired on us.
So some good examples is my wife, she would be taking, I believe it was Tylenol while she was pregnant.
She was told this is perfectly safe.
This is a safe one for women.
And then it's been more recently, it's been said, oh, no, actually, Tylenol may result in autistic symptoms in your children.
We would take them to therapy and they would use this feeding therapy.
And what they would do for feeding therapy is they would basically put a piece of celery on a plate and say, and tell my son, I want you to pick up the piece of celery and just kiss it.
And he would go and grab it and bring it up to his mouth and like, maybe just barely kiss it.
And if you just brought it up closely, he didn't kiss it.
They would give him Skittles.
And so he would come out of therapy just wired on, like, just completely wired from all these Skittles they're giving him.
But he's not actually eating any celery.
He's not eating any food.
And we actually never, like, it was, it was a big problem because, you know, he got really good about eating Skittles.
And I mean, I think most people can agree Skittles is really not the best thing for.
I think he was like five years old at that point.
So they're not a great thing to be giving a five-year-old, especially one who is malnourished and is anemic and has all these upper gut issues on top of things.
But to put this in a, and I'm sorry if I'm rambling, do you want to interject at any point, please do?
I'm listening.
Okay.
So, but to put it in a broader scope, the issue here is that there is a significant lack of trust across the board from medical, from people with their medical professionals.
And a lot of it is justified.
Another good example I have is we wanted to get some genetic testing done because we wanted to see if there was this genetic mutation that may result in some autistic symptoms, and there's a misdiagnosis of one of our sons.
And we brought asked the doctor, hey, can we get to a genetic testing?
He said, absolutely no problem.
We can do that.
And I said, okay, well, are you going to test for this particular genetic marker?
And he said, yes, we will test for that, but we're not going to tell you what the results of that test are because there's people online who sell these pills for like 50 bucks a month, saying that if you take these pills with a genetic marker, it's going to cure your son of autism.
And we don't want you to go and waste your money on stuff like that if it does come out positive.
Now, I understand their position on this, but if I was spending $50 a month on pills that were placebo, and the result was my son stopped having autistic symptoms.
He became a normal child, was having fun, did all these things that normal kids do.
I would not care if I was spending $50 a month.
I wouldn't care why it was working.
I would just say, here, take my money because whatever's happening, I don't want to jinx it.
I don't want it to break.
And the fact that they're saying, no, we're not going to give you this information because we are trying to help you make financial decisions that's not their financial decisions to make is a big problem.
And again, to expand it, I'm not going to go too into this because it's a massive rabbit hole, but a lot of this comes down to just the way that the insurance companies and the way the medical system is set up in the United States.
Because I've been living outside the United States for over three years.
I lived in Europe.
Things are very different in the way people approach medicine in Europe.
And I think this is the big root.
Obviously, it's really bad when you have situations where kids die from these decisions.
But I think the problem is that the medical industry needs to do a better job of building trust and not just telling people, basically gaslighting people about things and just when they make a mistake saying, oops, my bad.
I'm sorry.
Your life sucks now.
Right.
No, that makes sense.
I could see why you'd have that perspective.
Doug MK, you got anything to add on it?
Yeah, I guess I just, you know, I would trust modern medicine more than any kind of holistic medicine.
If I had to, look, I'm all about, you only have limited time and resources.
So I would rather trust in modern medicine than holistic.
But people should make a choice as long as it's an informed choice.
Understand what I'm saying?
Like, make the best choice for you.
So I don't tell people what to do when it comes to this, but you, you know, just I don't like when people just rule out modern medicine.
I guess just do it's best for you.
That's all I want to say.
Well, sure.
But again, I'm not even saying that modern medicine is bad.
You know, I've had some very serious injuries.
I had a skiing accident, tore my ACL.
They put it back together, you know, broke my ankle in the same leg.
They put it back together.
Like, I've had a lot of positive things with modern medicine.
I think there's some certain categories.
Like for example, the therapy that I was going to, it was paid by the state at the point where, again, because my wife wasn't able to work and all these challenges, I was on Medicaid at that time and Medicaid was covering the cost of this therapy.
It was the only way we'd ever be able to afford the therapy in the first place because the therapy, it was going to cost like about $120,000 a year.
I think it's what it was.
Again, we're doing an hour for two kids every single, well, every single business day.
So I think it's like $60,000 for each kid or something like that.
It's been a while since I remember the numbers.
But again, they're covering the Medicaid was covering this.
And if they actually were able to solve the problem and fix the issues with my son, then, or either of them, you know, they're losing a significant source of income that's guaranteed because the state's amazing.
Yeah.
And this is where it, again, like for fixing things like broken bones.
And, you know, that's like, I get it that there's important places for modern medicine.
There's just a lot of other places where it doesn't work as well.
And even when you go and bring up, hey, you know, things like, hey, have we, can we consider this other option?
And the response is always, well, there's not enough data or research to be able to for me to be able to give you an opinion on that.
Like the doctors are so locked in because of what they're allowed to actually say.
Like the amount of times I've heard, oh, there's just not enough research on that.
There's not enough research on that, on any kind of question I have to be able to actually resolve problems.
There's so many times that they say that.
And it just becomes a case where you, like, as a parent and you see your kid in this state of just their suffering.
This is not known, but there's been a lot of people don't know this about autism.
The average life expectancy for autistic people is usually in their 30s.
So I did not know that.
Wow.
Again, one of the things I will say is more recently, like the, we start having this autism spectrum.
And so they can't.
I don't even think of like, like what I thought of as autism like 15 years ago is not what I think of as autism today.
Like when I hear autistic, I hear socially awkward now, where like 15 years ago, it was like a lot of times, like they couldn't function.
It wasn't like, like today, I even think of people that just can't make eye contact or just a little awkward rather than like the people I would think of like 15 years ago would be like they could barely talk, you know.
Yeah, and that's exactly what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about the autism of 15 years ago.
I oftentimes I try to describe it to people.
I say, oh, no, it's not the new modern, you know, cool autism that people have.
It's the old school, you know, debilitating autism that we used to have.
But it, yeah.
And so this is a very serious problem.
Like this is not something that's that's cute like some people make it out to be.
Right.
And so when I'm trying to go and say, hey, can we try these other things?
Can we look for other things?
And I'm also told that, no, we can't.
The best thing we can do is to just have your kids pretend to be normal.
That is the best case scenario.
And I'm saying, well, can we look at doing this other thing that might help?
Can we like, you know, there's some gut issues because of this thing.
Can we look into this?
And they say, well, there's not enough research on that.
So I can't recommend anything about going down that path.
Like you just feel like so stuck and looking for someone to help to give you some hope.
And yes, it does have a downside.
And this is where I think women will tend to go to more of the woo-woo stuff.
You know, like, okay, let's put in some crystals and stuff.
Whereas when you have a man, they give a bit more grounding.
Like, okay, does this actually make sense?
Is this actually a logical thing to consider?
And what's what are the risk factors and everything?
Um, so again, like I said, I'm not going to go and just you know say everything that all the woo-woo stuff is all good, but I think that there this is there.
The bigger issue here is the way that the medical system is in the United States and the way that they're feeling people.
Yeah, cool.
I agree.
Well, thanks for calling in and giving your perspective.
Doug MPA, you got anything else?
No, always good hearing for you, RJ.
Yeah, call in anytime, okay?
Yeah, yep, it's a great day.
That is everybody.
Cool.
Well, I was expecting more.
Um, my mother always thought she was sick stories.
I was expecting a little more of those.
Well, I guess we can do a show on that Munch Hausen by proxy where women have made their kids sick to get attention.
And then there's Munch Hausen is where you act sick all the time.
So we might be able to do it.
You have these influencers who fake a cancer diagnosis to get money or something like that.
Yeah, it's all over the place.
From what I've seen, it's not necessarily they're faking it, but it's like mothers with high anxiety levels and they don't know how to manage it.
So they're just always scared they're sick.
Like always.
And they're just whenever they hear like any symptom that matches their symptoms, that's the that's what I've seen, you know.
But okay, well, thanks for calling in today, Doug MPA.
Any final thoughts on the show?
Yeah, I mean, guys, seek modern medical treatment.
I mean, it's medical practice, but we want you all here as long as possible.
You know what I'm saying?
This whole thing, well, oh, like Ananda Lewis, I'm going to keep my tumor.
And then all of a sudden, she's like, man, I really should have got a double mastectomy two years ago.
Yeah, well, now it's too late.
Yeah.
I mean, I think I want to be alive.
I don't want to die anytime soon.
So do whatever you can to keep me alive, dang it.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I think alternative stuff, maybe early on, you can try that.
But if I'm, if I have cancer, I'm getting chemo.
If I give birth, I'm getting drugs.
Fuck you.
Yeah.
Shout out to all the natural moms out there.
I'm not joining you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I had a friend who they had two sons.
Yeah.
And the first birth was natural.
And then the second birth, she had drugs.
And he's like, oh, man, dude, like, oh, she had so much better the second time, man, because she was a maniac the first time.
Yeah.
Give me the drugs.
Knock me out.
I don't want to feel a thing.
Okay.
Well, what was that you said the other day?
Who said that?
If birth was so painful, why do women keep doing it multiple times?
But that's it.
That's all I got.
All right, guys.
My final thoughts are that I'm not against holistic prevention.
I actually think that's the best way to put it.
I'm not against reasonable, holistic prevention, such as eating clean, eating healthy, working out.
I think that's fine.
But generally, if it's more complicated than that, like we're worried about the plastic, the micro plastics, the water look, I know people that are in great shape and they drink microplastics and they're fine.
So I'm not against reasonable prevention, but I think if I get cancer, I am getting the chemo.
Give me the drugs.
Give me whatever you got.
Well, all right, guys.
Thanks for watching.
If you got any topic suggestions, put it in the comments.
Please like the video on your way out and subscribe to the channel.
And in the next two weeks, there's going to be an announcement.