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March 30, 2017 - Radio Free Nortwest - H.A. Covington
01:12:47
20170330_rfn
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Oh, then tell me, Sean O 'Farrell, tell me why you hurry so.
Hush, a woogle, hush and listen, and his cheeks were all aglow.
I bear orders from the captain, get you ready quick and soon, for the pikes must be together by the rising of the moon.
By the rising of the moon, by the rising of the moon, for the pikes must be together by the rising of the moon.
Oh, then tell me, Sean O 'Farrell, where the gathering is to be.
In the old spot, by the river, right will known to you and me.
One word more for signal, token, whistle of the marching tune.
For your bike upon your shoulder, by the rising of the moon.
By the rising of the moon.
By the rising of the moon.
With your bike upon your shoulder, by the Many a mud-walled cabin eyes were watching through the night.
Many a manly chest was throbbing for the blessed warning light.
Corners passed along the valleys like the man she's lonely croon.
And a thousand blades were flashing at the rising of the moon.
At the rising of the moon.
At the rising of the moon.
And a thousand blades were flashing at the rising of the moon.
Greetings from the Northwest Homeland, comrades.
It's March the 30th, 2017.
I'm Harold Covington, and this is Radio Free Northwest.
Our show's going to be a bit different this week.
Now, let me explain.
For the past several years, we've intermittently had call-in shows on Radio Free Northwest, although basically what they were is pre-recorded conference calls on Skype.
Now, my ultimate goal, as those of you who receive the NF organizational letters know, is to have a proper Rush Limbaugh-style for real call-in show from a properly equipped internet radio facility, complete with an IT-trained sound engineer so that I can concentrate on content, and a 17-second cutoff so I can take live calls and still keep idiots and trolls and goat dancers off the air.
And it's kind of an open secret by now that our call-in shows have been, um...
Plagued by technical difficulties of various kinds, as well as me being an old dog who doesn't learn new tricks very well, and so a lot of times I fumble the software and get distracted when somebody's talking in my ear and I click on the wrong thing, and then there was the time the whole internet in this neighborhood went out, right at the beginning of a show, and Don and I ended up just talking to each other, so forth and so on.
And what I'm going to replace these with, hopefully at least once a month or so, It's controlled panel discussions where we have only four or five people on and so the number of contributors is manageable and we have a specific topic of discussion.
This week we're going to be talking about alternative medicine and health issues.
When I put out the email invitation list for this show, I referred to it as the Kodger Call.
One of the things that the world enemy maintains about us, one of the cores of their propaganda, is that us right-wingers are all just a bunch of old, old bitter clingers and fogies and we're about to die off of old age and then the world will be theirs, all theirs, yahaha!
Well, that's not totally true.
There are a lot of younger white people of both genders involved in the alt-right and white nationalist movements.
Unfortunately, almost all through the internet, but they're certainly there.
However, in this case, there is a certain truth to the stereotype.
A lot of people who are involved in our kind of politics are older, for reasons I've gotten into on this show before, basically having to do with what incredible slow learners us white boys are.
To us geezers, these things we're going to be talking about are much more of a concern than they are to most younger people, so you may want to listen with amusement as we talk about vitamins and chiropractors and aging-related stuff.
Yeah, well, don't worry.
Your time will come.
Hi, this is Radio Free Northwest.
We're going to have a special panel discussion this week on issues of health, alternative medicine, and the general white experience with the healthcare system and other medically related issues.
So I guess we'll be sounding a bit like an issue of the American Free Press here.
When I was sending out the invitations for this discussion, in my header on my email, I called it the Kodger call-in.
These things will probably be of more interest to the older people among us, and it's an unfortunate fact, and the lefty loons do have this a little bit right, that a lot of our demographic that the white nationalist movement appeals to are older people.
There's a number of reasons for that.
A lot of us, like Don and myself, are old enough to remember what things were like before the whole country went to hell in a handbasket.
And also I've noticed that white people, white males in general, have a tendency to wake up at a rather late age.
They get up to about the age of 42, 43, 44, and they're on their first or second divorce, and they get laid off and find they can't get another job, and all of a sudden, a little light bulb comes on over their heads, and they understand that America has screwed them royally, and they start looking around for answers, and eventually they find them on the internet or wherever, and after about three or four years, they might actually know a little something, and by then, of course, they're in middle age, and the health problems start settling in.
They have their first major encounters with the healthcare system.
And so this is, I think, why you see in a lot of right-wing publications all these ads for alternative medicine of various kinds.
Because even before Obamacare, the American healthcare system was certainly nothing to write home about.
And now, of course, it's an even bigger mess than it was before.
And so we're waiting for some of our callers here.
Okay, well, this is Don Welke, your co-host, and my experience with alternative medicine began in the early to mid-1990s.
Here we go.
You're on Radio Free Northwest.
Who am I speaking with, please?
This is Rich, Richard, and I'm in...
Hey, Rich.
Hi.
Well, you're the first one.
I just gave a little intro.
As to what the show's going to be about, medicine, alternative treatment, etc., etc.
And Don was talking about his first encounters with the concept.
Go ahead.
I was starting to say that my first experience with alternative medicine was in the 1990s, the early to mid part.
I can't nail down the exact year, but I found someone, luckily, who was very, very good.
And he took care of several problems that I had, and that really opened my eyes.
And he was also a teacher in the sense that he taught his patients.
I don't mean that he had a job as a teacher.
He was an MD, and he was a board-certified cardiologist, and this was in the...
Stanford area.
He was the graduate of Stanford Medical School and he was associated at Stanford Medical Center, but it seemed like half the other doctors who worked there regarded him as crazy and the remaining half thought that he was very advanced.
So I thought that was interesting that there was a variety of opinion about him and about what he did.
My experience was that he was very, very good and really did me a lot of good.
I had what was called the yuppie flu, that's chronic fatigue syndrome, and he got rid of that in a month.
I had food allergies, I had systemic candida infection, all the stuff that I didn't suspect and nobody else did either, and no other physicians, but he identified it and got rid of it.
And it was like a switch was turned.
At the end of the first month, I got all my energy back, and it was amazing.
It really opened my eyes as to what alternative, so-called alternative medicine can do, and the limitations of conventional medicine.
I have not looked back since then.
I have had consultations with conventional MDs since then, but they haven't been very satisfactory.
And the alternative guys are not uniform.
And we've got another call coming in.
Here we go.
You're on Radio Free Northwest.
Who am I speaking with, please?
Hi, this is Claudia.
Hey, Claudia.
Hi, Claudia.
Don was just going over some of his experiences in his first encounters with alternative medicine, and we've also got Richard from Florida on the line, and now we've got you.
Don, you want to wind up?
Sure.
I think I was saying that I've had a few consultations with conventional MDs since then, which have been disappointing at the very least.
The very last thing I was saying was that my experience with very alternative medical practitioners has varied a lot.
And the lesson I learned from all this is that you just have to try a lot of things to find out what works.
And you also just have to try a lot of practitioners to see who's really good.
But that's the same as when you're looking for any professional help.
And so I don't think it's different in the world of alternative medicine than it is anywhere else.
Yeah.
Well, Claudia is a lady who refers to herself as a yongevity specialist, and she's also my vitamin lady.
She loads me up with all kinds of vitamins, and by the way, I am pretty much run through that last batch you sent me, Claudia.
Thank you very much.
So, what's your take on all this, and how did you get involved in the alternative medical scene, and so forth and so on?
Well, I was fortunate enough to have been raised by a health food nut.
That's what they called people who were into alternative medicine back in the 60s.
So, it's been a lifelong thing.
And, you know, I've been at it now for quite a while.
And I like to thank that the fact that I haven't had all the numerous joint replacements that other boomers have had and a lot of the same problems that seem to be plaguing my peers is somewhat due to the fact that I've been cognizant of that field for a while.
I grew up listening to the radio.
The New York station had a pioneer of alternative medicine named Carlton Frederick.
And my mom always had that radio station on with him talking about supplementation.
I wanted to say that, you know, it may be unpopular with people who like to think they can "get everything from their food" to dispel hopefully that notion because they've discussed that if someone is on a 2000 calorie a day diet or if they're trying to take off weight and they're on a 1200 calorie a day diet, there's no way that you can get the adequate amount of nutrition from your food.
Even though medical doctors don't often prescribe nutritional supplements, they'd much rather give you drugs with side effects that can kill you.
Chances are, if the doctor is halfway intelligent, he's probably taking supplements for himself and his family.
But you're either going to spend money on supplements or you're going to spend money on drugs.
And the good news is supplements won't kill you, but, you know, pharmaceutical drugs very well might.
So take your pick.
But you're not going to be able to get all your nutrition from your food.
You're going to have to supplement if you want to stay healthy.
And if it means one less pack of cigarettes or one less beer, I'd suggest spending the money on the supplement.
Richard, how long have you been involved in the alternative scene and how did you get into it?
It actually started when I was young.
My mother was a, in the morning she used to listen to radio and there was a guy on Carlton Fredericks.
This is a long, long time ago.
He was one of the first nutritionalists that made the general public aware of what was going on.
I had noticed I just took a generic, she had me taking a generic multiple vitamin.
I think this is, I'll tell you what my first awakening was.
She had me taking a multiple vitamin.
And, you know, I get out of the house, I stop taking them.
And I look at myself in the mirror one day, and I was kind of tired, and I said, "Maybe I should start taking vitamins again." So I took a multiple vitamin.
About two days later, you know, I'm like a different person.
So that was my first awakening.
But this is a long, arduous task to really find out what's happened to us and why we're in such a state of bad health in general.
And most people aren't even aware of it.
But along the way, over the years, my ex-wife, she was into it.
She got me a little further along.
And as I got older, you experiment enough to know what's good for you, what's not.
But what Claudia said is so true.
You get this generic thing that the medical establishment says, if you eat correctly, you won't need vitamins.
Well, our soil's been exhausted.
There's minerals missing in the soil.
When you grow a crop in the soils, you absorb the minerals in the soil and the vitamins in the plants.
And when you're all done with that and you start excreting things, we flush it down the river and it goes into the ocean when it should be going back into the land.
So the land gets depleted.
Selenium is one that's missing in the soil.
Iodine's another one.
So, Cody is right.
Can I bite in right here and agree with you and particularly add that magnesium is missing in the soil too.
Something like 70 to 90% of the U.S. public is deficient in magnesium in their diets.
I ran into this myself when I was living in LA.
I had a checkup and I had all these heart rhythm issues.
I went to three different doctors.
Two cardiologists and one guy who wasn't board certified but did a lot of hard work.
I got three different diagnoses and nobody could do anything for me.
When I went up to the Bay Area and got involved with this alternative practitioner who was also a cardiologist, I told him about this.
He immediately said, "Show me your fingernails." And so I held up my hands.
He looked closely and said, "See those spots?
You're not getting enough magnesium." And he told me to take chelated magnesium.
And so on the way home, I stopped at Whole Foods, got some.
When I got home, I took two.
And 20 minutes later, my heart rhythm normalized.
That was the problem.
And those three other doctors, conventional doctors, two of them board-certified cardiologists, did not see that.
Did not suspect that.
And that really opened my eyes.
I said, this guy was good.
That was like, immediately he did this.
He solved that one problem.
And he solved problem after problem after problem.
And that was all from the alternative viewpoint.
And I'm agreeing with our two people who have expressed their admiration for Carlton Fredericks.
And I agree with what you're saying about nutrition.
Let me add a very important aspect of nutrition.
This chelation business.
Back in the 1950s, the veterinarians discovered how to cure a lot of common diseases that were common in animals as well as humans by nutritional supplements.
And they found out that in order for the bodies to absorb the nutrition from the supplements, you had to use chelation.
The basic minerals weren't absorbed and even some of the vitamins weren't absorbed.
But when you chelated it with an amino acid or something else that the body would absorb, it pulled in the other nutrition that you were trying to get in.
And in the 1950s, the veterinarians figured all this out and began curing and preventing these diseases in animals with nutritional supplements.
And this leads to a very personal experience.
My sister had a spina bifida baby in 1980 and veterinarians figured this out in the 50s that this was caused by the nutritional efficiency in folate or folic acid.
And so they knew that in the 50s, and the MDs completely ignored them for 30 years.
And so my sister had a spina bifida baby that she didn't have to, and all its other people did too.
And then finally, after 30 years, the MDs caught up with the veterinarians, or listened to them or something, and then got the word out, and then there was folic acid supplementation in foods.
And then the rate of spina bifida babies plummeted to where it's not an issue anymore.
That's another personal experience, and it just made me very angry with the traditional MDs for their arrogance in ignoring the veterinarians and allowing this to continue for 30 years when it didn't have to.
Ida Bro, you're probably about the youngest one of us here.
How did you become involved in the...
Well, I can't remember off the top of my head what got me into it, but the book that I read that got me started on this was a book called Nutrition and Physical Degeneration by Weston A. Price.
And it all, like everyone else has talked about, it all boils down to nutrition.
It was written by a dentist named by Weston A. Price in the 1930s, who is one of the big Midwestern cities.
I want to say Chicago.
But everywhere he saw white people just had terrible teeth, terrible bone structure, all sorts of health problems, very susceptible to diseases, and they thought it was a racial thing because he had heard of many primitive tribes of various races were usually pretty robust and healthy.
So he decided to investigate and see what the problem was.
And found out that many of these different peoples had varying diets, but what was common between them all was that they got a lot of physical activity and they ate a lot of wholesome food that provided all the nutrition they needed.
And whenever they had switched to what was at the time the civilized Western diet, probably mostly of sugars, white flours, rice, vegetable oils, and canned vegetables, we found even these primitive people had the same problems as whites did with cavities, poor jaw formation, which led to problems with their teeth.
They're much more susceptible to diseases.
I think it's a good read for our movement, too, because since there is that racial element there, he actually managed to track down a couple of isolated white people in Switzerland and then the Scottish Brides and found that they had their own particular traditional diets that provided all their nutrition, and they were all very robust, healthy, had very few cavities, even though they didn't have dentists or didn't even brush their teeth that much.
It's really not a strict this or eat that.
It's more of a guideline as to what you should be eating, which includes things like pasture-raised animals.
It doesn't shy away from fats.
Butter from pasture-raised cows is a pretty big key component of the diet.
Of course, plenty of fruits and vegetables.
And I find that when I can actually stick to it, I always feel significantly better.
I find it's easy to lose weight.
I have more energy.
The problem is that in modern-day America, finding those kind of foods is...
Yeah.
find them when you can they're also murderously expensive as opposed to the junk foods and the mac and cheese in the box and all that sort of stuff that's right because all the food at the time in the Western world were made to be cheap and made to sit on a shelf for a long time and to do that you got up pull out any Well, there's no question that Americans not only eat crap, but they eat way too much of it.
But there are certain substances that are just deadly.
I personally don't eat refined white sugar and refined white flour, if I can at all avoid it.
High fructose corn syrup is another big thing, and you will find that in a lot of foods.
Ketchup, for example, is mostly just tomato paste and high fructose corn syrup.
I'd like to respond to what Don said about magnesium.
Don, you're exactly right.
As a matter of fact, a nutritionist told me one time it's actually a crime that doctors don't prescribe magnesium for people because that's the leading cause of heart failure.
And Don, if you want a good night's sleep, an hour before you go to sleep, take a high-potency magnesium tablet, pill, powder, whatever.
It relaxes you, calms your nervous system.
Yes, I want to add that not all forms of magnesium It can cross the blood-brain barrier, like magnesium citrate is quite good for your heart, but it doesn't cross the blood-brain barrier, but magnesium threonate does, and so if you want to do what you suggested, by the way, I do that, you need to do it with magnesium threonate.
Claudia, what kind of regimen of...
What supplements are you on yourself, personally?
Well, I take a lot of supplements, to the point where most people would just think it's not.
But I do, and I feel great most of the time, so there's something to...
I take a wide spectrum.
Magnesium and calcium are super important, but there's like a bajillion other trace minerals that are also important.
So I take a wide spectrum plant-derived mineral supplement.
I take a lot of antioxidants because I'm over 60. And I take essential fatty acids, fish oils.
I'm really fond of pycnogenol, which is a pine bark from France that also was touted hugely about 20 years ago.
It's still one of my favorites because I feel more mentally alert when I take it.
I'm really into herbal supplements as well, tinctures and powdered herbs.
I'm really fond of olive leaf extract.
I take a lot.
I take collagen to try to keep from getting wrinkles because I'm vain and to help joints and ligaments.
I take a ton of stuff.
In addition to your basic...
Supplements and plus all the stuff that you send me, like the grape seed extract and whatnot, I also take CoQ10.
Very important.
Very important.
Your box is on the way, Harold.
I mailed it today, by the way.
But yeah, CoQ10 is good, and they say for older people there's a stronger version of CoQ10.
It's called ubiquinol.
One of the more expensive supplements, but I figure since they say it's critical for heart health, and I don't want to do what you always call cack.
You always say you're going to cack.
I don't want a cack.
So that's why I take the ubiquinol in CoQ10.
And I don't want to be a carcass either.
By the way, the ubiquinol form, some people call that the reduced form.
Yes, that's much more absorbable by the body and it is more expensive.
And another thing that I take along with it is called PQQ.
And the interesting thing about them is that they both...
are related to mitochondria and energy production and the CoQ10 provides the raw materials that the mitochondria need to produce energy and the PQQ causes your cells to produce more mitochondria and this is critical in two areas that have a lot of mitochondria in their cells: the heart and the brain.
Something that you gave me once that I'm still taking is carditone.
Mm-hmm.
There are some of these sort of combined super supple and the beta prostate as well.
I also take salt palmetto.
On the racial thing, I just wanted to add that they say a lot of times your best bet if you're confused about what to eat is to eat what your ancestors ate.
But still supplement, of course, because what you eat is only as good as the soil it's grown on.
So even if you're eating the most beautiful, organic, harvested by monks who are chanting Gregorian chants while they're harvesting it, it still doesn't matter if it was grown on crummy soil.
So that's why everyone should supplement.
But, for instance, I think Richard mentioned selenium.
There's a city in England where they have a lot of selenium in their soil naturally.
And they have like the lowest rate of cancer of anywhere, just about.
And they found that all the societies and cultures where people live to be over 100, 120, are cultures where they have huge amounts of minerals occurring naturally in either their soil or their water.
They call those the blue zone.
That's a hot term right now, studying the longest cultures of the world.
But that's why it's not a one-size-fits-all diet.
If you came from, say, Scandinavia, where wheat wasn't really eaten a lot, but they ate rye instead, they grew rye because wheat doesn't thrive up there in the cold, you know, maybe that is something you should consider.
Yes, and Eastern Europeans eat a lot of root vegetables.
Yeah.
One thing I noticed when I was living in Europe, the poor folks over there eat a lot of turnips, which you almost never see here in the United States.
Turnips are really good because they're actually a really delicious substitute for potatoes.
They're just unfortunately more expensive.
It's because everything in America is geared towards making it as cheap as possible, which usually doesn't mean good for you.
And they're finding out that meats are awesome.
Beets, you know, another Eastern European favorite, awesome for heart and kidney and circulatory health and all that.
You're going to get the Russians in their borscht.
Yeah.
Yes, borscht is a very delicious dish.
I wanted to mention, too, on the ancestral diets that, again, in the book, was meant to the Swiss.
They were up in the Alps, and their diet consisted primarily of rye and dairy.
They only ate meat about once a week on Sundays, and then they'd use the bones to make soups to extend it for the rest of the week.
The Scots on the islands ate a lot of oatmeal and cod, and on that island they had a very, very...
very poor soil but they had ways of burning, they would burn heat in their houses and the spoke would get infused into the thatch on their roofs which would then be put into the soil at the end of the year and that would provide the nitrogen to actually grow the oats in.
I actually kind of believe the opposite of what Claudia's been saying, is that you can get all the nutrition you need from food, assuming it has been thrown in proper soil.
It's just that stuff doesn't exist really in America anymore.
Unless you go to things like farmer's markets.
I'm a huge fan of those, because usually people grow them without pesticides.
They usually use a lot of manure in their soils, and it comes out with much tastier, much more wholesome food.
So if you get plenty of exercise and you have a healthy appetite, you can get everything you need from the quality food if you can find it.
It's just important that you're going to pay quite a bit for it.
That would have to be soil that has been tended with love and care for generations.
I don't think you can put it all back.
I mean, there's a lot of gardening guys on YouTube who talk about adding powdered rock Powdered dolomite and stuff to their garden soil, and I think that's great.
I just don't know how quickly you can fix soil that's been screwed up.
In the meantime, you know, I mean, you know, I'm all for it.
If you're going to eat something that you grew or something you know grew on beautiful black soil, great.
And I would still say, you know, be on the lookout for any signs of any nutritional deficiencies.
But your average American is not eating like that.
I want to comment on eating like our ancestors did because that feeds into something that both Harold and I are doing right now and has been researched by the University of Southern California and that is called intermittent fasting.
Apparently our ancestors weren't always well fed every day and they had periods of feast and famine.
And it turns out that the periods of famine, if they're not prolonged or too extreme, are actually good for your health.
And the University of Southern California has done experiments which show that intermittent fasting cures both type 2 and type 1 diabetes.
And the way it works with type 1 diabetes, where you don't have the cells that produce insulin, is that this apparently stimulates the stem cells in the pancreas to produce beta cells, which are the cells that produce the insulin.
And they've done this with mice or laboratory rats, I forgot which.
But this completely cures type 1 as well as type 2 diabetes.
There are other benefits of fasting, and it's fascinating if you experiment with things like this, what you can discover and what you can accomplish.
I'd like to interject something about what we're talking about here, you know, regional eating.
There was a doctor who did the research, and I think his last name is Adamo, and their blood types are regional.
Not right now, because everybody's moving all over the place in different countries.
But type A and AB blood is Northern Europe.
That's where that blood type originated from.
And I think B and some of AB is Alpine blood, Central Europe.
Type O is the southern part of the world.
Each one of those different blood types, as someone said, I forgot who said it, that was the regional diet in that area.
So this doctor created a list of foods you should eat, and ones that are beneficial, ones that are neutral, and ones that are bad for you.
Like me, I'm type B. I'm not supposed to eat a lot of chicken or beef.
I mean, you can eat it once in a while, but don't make a steady diet of it.
Wild game, fish.
Lamb, that type of thing, the vegetables, I can't remember offhand.
But if you look up your blood type, and I think this guy's got a website, and you can print out the list.
His name is Dr. Peter D. Adamo.
He's from Stamford, Connecticut.
And Harold, I'm going to wag my finger at you right now, because in 2003, I gave you a copy of the book, Live Right for Your Type or Eat Right for Your Type.
Yeah, I remember that.
I do.
Dr. Peter Diadono, he's brilliant.
He's brilliant.
I want to interject again on traditional supplements.
One thing I like to take is cod liver oil, which is very similar to fish oil with all the different omega-3s that it has, but it's also extremely high in vitamin A in the retinol form, which is very easily absorbable and extremely good for your eyes.
And it's also very high in vitamin D. And as anyone who lives up here in the Northwest would know, During the winter times, vitamin D supplementation is very, very important.
We tend to get a lot, very little sun.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I take, like I said, multivitamin.
I take CoQ10.
I take all the stuff Claudia sends me, but I also take lutein and vitamin D to make up for the lack of sunshine.
And also, there's another topic I wanted to bring up.
I'm fairly heavy on the vitamin C. Not only do I eat a lot of fruit, but I take a fairly heavy supplement of that per day.
I couldn't give you a milligram.
I like the gummies.
I'll take about five or six of those per day.
Can I ask you, you lived in Ireland.
Did you see people eating seaweed at all?
I know they would do that along the shoreline.
Yeah, it's called gathering rack.
And they would go down onto the shores on the west coast and they would get the seaweed that kind of washes up on the rocks there.
And they would use it for a number of things.
Part of it was diet and dietary supplements.
Part of it was other stuff.
if I think they'd sell it for dyes or various chemical compounds or something, but that's kind of a tradition in Ireland.
In Ireland, the traditional diet of the poor Irish person back in the days of the A lot of buttermilk.
You usually had a pig or two in your hut, but you had to save the pig because you had to get him nice and fed on the potato rinds and whatnot, so you'd use the pig to pay the rent to the Englishman.
They apparently, according to the accounts of the time, just on that very simple diet, They were noted throughout Europe as a very tall, handsome, good-looking, physically fit people.
I can tell you that's still the case.
I think a lot of Ireland's problems in every sense of the word came from when they started getting Americanized, and that unfortunately includes the Americanized diet.
When I got to Dublin in 1982, the first thing I saw when I went down O 'Connell Street was a Burger King and a McDonald's.
Harold, I'd like to go back to, you sent an email, and there was an article in there on being younger, getting younger, and I want to make a comment on that.
I think a lot of people look for the magic pill that's going to correct things, and as far as getting younger, I read an article a long time ago on Scientific American about cell replication, and they came up with the average cell replicates like 50 times before you die.
The cell dies, makes another one.
I think it's 57. Well, whatever it was, yeah.
It's like making a copy of a copy of a copy on a copy machine.
Eventually, the cell gets worn out and its identity and what it's supposed to do gets attenuated.
Well, I don't know whether people realize it or not, but our bodies are under attack big time, from cell phone radiation, to background radiation, to pollutants in the water, to missing minerals.
So there is no magic pill.
The magic pill, you have to change your lifestyle to get back to the natural way, which is what we were just talking about.
About supplementing our food because the things are missing.
You've got to supplement it with the minerals and vitamins you need.
So, I guess my bottom line is it's a many-faceted thing to extend your life and have good health.
It's just not popping vitamins.
There's new immortality things coming up in the news all the time.
My favorite is this Jew, whose name escapes me, who says we're going to become immortal through nanobots, little tiny microscopic robots that we inject into our arms and they immediately run through all our body repairing all our cells.
Yeah, no, no.
Let him go first.
I'll see how that works out for him.
Yeah, I think our immortality is going to end up as robots.
I remember a book I read by David Icke called Revolt of the Robots, and that's solely what we're becoming.
We're not only losing our physical health, we're losing our mental health, too.
And it's due to the same things we're talking about.
Talking about extending your lifespan, there's a simple way that for most people costs absolutely nothing to extend your lifespan by five years.
And that is to give blood.
It turns out that they studied that people who give blood live five years longer and they've investigated it and they found out why.
And the reason is people who give blood, when they give blood their body has to manufacture some new red blood cells to replace the ones that were lost.
And it turns out that if you don't give blood, you have a lot of old red blood cells which are stiffer than young red blood cells.
So these stiff red blood cells irritate the linings of arteries and they also have a harder time getting through capillaries.
And they're more likely to clot.
Basically, if you give blood, your rate of cardiovascular and stroke problems goes down significantly enough to extend your lifespan, statistically speaking, by five years.
I'm so glad you said that, Don, because I never gave blood in my life.
I tell you why, because that's my way of rebelling.
I rebel against the society.
I don't cooperate.
So I never gave blood.
And the other thing that bothers me is when somebody goes in the hospital and gets a pint of blood and they get charged, I don't know, probably $2,000 for it.
I go in and get blood and they give me a donut.
So if they would pay me, maybe I would do it.
I've done it a lot because I'm an O negative.
And of course, when I walk in, they act like I'm a celebrity.
So I'm a sucker for that.
I'll tell you something else I've been doing that's helped me a lot.
I don't know how you guys feel about it, but a friend of ours has a rather serious spinal problem, and he got hooked up with a good chiropractor up here, and I started going to him at least once a week, and I find that I feel better.
I mean, the combination of the fasting thing that Don's got me on and the chiropractor, I have to say I am feeling better than I have done for quite a while.
I know chiropractic is not supposed to be a legitimate medical science and all that, but it makes sense to me that a lot of the aches and pains, especially from old age and other poor health factors and strains and whatnot, if you're...
Let me tell you about the chiropractors.
I've been going to them for years.
There's good chiropractors and there's bad ones.
And this is what the bad ones do.
They'll help you, but you're going to go buku times.
You're going to be going three times a week for the first three weeks, two times a week for the next six weeks.
I found the chiropractor.
This is the best chiropractor ever found up in Virginia.
I had fell and my back was in the kink for quite a while.
So I went to this chiropractor, Blue Mountain Chiropractor.
It's an older guy in there, didn't have the big fancy office.
He says, I can't do anything without taking an x-ray.
I don't like taking x-rays, but I let him take it because I had to get, you know, I had to get this straightened out.
So anyway, the guy adjusted my back twice and I was feeling better already.
I said, when do you want me to come back?
He goes, only if you have a problem.
One time.
That's a good chiropractor.
These other guys, they have you going forever, you know, the bad ones.
But there's people in between, too.
But that's the secret.
When you find a good one, hang on to them, because they're hard to find.
Harold, you have a resource there that I really hope you'll take advantage of, and that is there's only five naturopathic colleges in the country, and you have one up there in Bastyr, where is it Kirkland, Kirkwood?
Is that where we went that one time?
Well, I went, yeah, and I coped it out when I was out there.
And then I have one right here in my backyard in Bridgeport, University of Bridgeport has one.
I've been going to their chiropractic school and getting cheapy adjustments from the kids who are learning.
So they have a clinic.
I searched it online.
They're few and far between, and you've got one.
The clinic, there's one in, I think, Seattle, across the bay from you, and you don't have to go all the way up to Bastyr, but Bastyr has a clinic, and they usually charge very little, and you can get, like, a full workup.
They'll look at you from every angle, you know, the naturopathic angle.
They'll look at you from the herbal angle, the chiropractic angle.
I don't know how many different schools they have at Bastyr off the top of my head, but you might consider that, too.
When the Northwest Republic becomes a reality, it's nice to have a naturopathic school there.
Oh, yeah.
One of the things that I think the Republic will be able to do is get to grips with a lot of these medical and health issues that modern-day industrial, polluted, crapulous America has inflicted on us for the past 50, 70 years.
The health of Americans has definitely been deteriorating.
For example, in World War II, when they had the draft, they actually had the first SCATs, basically men who were being drafted into the military who were simply unfit, and they had to go to a special sort of fat camp and health camp just to get worked up to the point where they could go to basic training.
In World War I, they didn't have that.
I think the health problems in this country started significantly in the 1890s when you had two things that came into the general diet and consumption which weren't there before.
You had refined white sugar in large quantities, and you had cigarettes as opposed to cigars and pipes.
I smoke a pipe.
I'm not claiming that that's the healthiest thing in the world.
A lot of the health problems I think we have these days, are due to just the general garbage of modern life, and you add to that an immense amount of just stress from day-to-day living, from having to deal with all the crap that America lays on us, especially white people, and I'm surprised we've survived at all.
Back in the Middle Ages, okay, they had some bad health problems.
They had starvation.
They had the Black Death.
They had the doctors that thought that health was due to the balancing of the four humors in the body.
In the 17th century, they had surgeons on the battlefield who treated gunshot wounds with little blue pills.
So the past wasn't exactly healthy, but they didn't have a lot of the problems that we have today.
For example, if you look at anthropological remains that have been excavated from the Middle Ages and the Roman times, etc., one of the things you notice is their teeth are almost perfect.
Because they didn't eat all this sugar that rotted their teeth.
That was one thing that was talked about in nutrition and physical degeneration was they went and dug through a lot of these old skulls and jaws from ancient civilizations and found that their, because of their diet and their nutrition, that their jaws tended to develop to be very wide.
All their teeth came in.
They never had to worry about the impact of teeth.
They found that cavities actually healed themselves.
Even bone fractures were very hard to detect because they healed so well.
Once again, it just boils down to good nutrition and the body can pretty much take care of itself.
Most of these things we have nowadays such as supplements and all this dental care are really just band-aids just to cover up underlying bad habits.
Yeah.
I just want to interject about sugar.
You mentioned sugar.
I found a substitute for sugar.
It's xylitol.
But xylitol made from birch trees up in Canada rather than corn cobs, which are GMO.
But I keep it.
It's about $7 a pound.
Tastes like sugar.
Cooks like sugar.
You might find it interesting.
Try it.
Xylitol.
Same thing.
Even looks like sugar.
No sugar at all.
The white flour and the sugar, that's the one that disrupts the arteries and causes the problems with the plaque, which leads to the bypasses that are $50,000 and whatever.
I think the best bet for us, just as you described, the people years ago, they didn't have these problems.
I think that's our best defense against bad health is living preventively rather than...
Well, the old saying that an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Because who knows, the medical procedures they're using today, tomorrow they find out that they were damaging.
Another thing I'd like to interject too, doctors, they don't, look, we were talking about magnesium before.
These doctors, they're licensed.
They have protocol they have to follow.
So you come in with an alternative cure and you tell it to them.
If it's not in their protocol and they don't tell you what the AMA tells them you should be doing, their license is in jeopardy.
So that's why you get a lot of resistance from doctors, too.
Yeah, I have to add that every alternative practitioner that I have gone to has had legal problems with his state medical board.
Well, the medical profession as a whole is in bad, bad shape in this country.
I guess I can mention this.
It's kind of open secret that I'm getting my system medical treatment such as it is from the VA, which I have to because basically there's simply no way that I could afford Obamacare.
I could have gotten a plan with like a $2,500 deductible for $751 a month, and I could have gotten one for a $500 deductible for something like $1,200 a month, which was just absurd.
It was out of the question.
But because I'm white and male, and I'm not one of the Democratic Party's constituencies that qualifies for all the subsidies in order to buy my vote, I just could not basically afford Obamacare at all, and fortunately I did a stint.
I've been in the Army many, many decades ago, and that was enough to get me on the VA.
Now, I will say this for the VA, I have never been treated there with anything other than courtesy and professionalism.
I got no problem with the people there, frankly, any race that I've had to deal with, but it's still, I'm getting my health care from a federal bureaucracy.
I'll tell you another problem I've had is trying to deal with them on the phone.
They get a lot of these HAPA women, these mystery meat Asiatics or something, and their English is so poor that I can't understand what they're telling me.
For some reason, the VA hires all kinds of strange mystery meat for their clerical workers, and most workers are clerical, but basically it's a huge bureaucracy, and so it doesn't really work.
I won't get any more into my own personal situation, but I think if it had not been for some of the alternative stuff that I've been doing for the past few years, I'd be in a lot worse shape than I am.
In my case, I've got a combination of a very high-stress lifestyle and extreme poverty, which is not a good combination to have if you're getting old.
Another thing I've learned down through the years is that the medical profession, these people don't know half the time what's wrong with you.
You can tell sometimes they're just guessing.
We've also got this influx of third-world doctors into this country.
When I had my mini-strokes in 2004, I ended up going to the only free clinic in Olympia that would take me, and I went in there, and of course all the patients were white.
My doctor was a Burmese, as I recall, judging by his name, and his English was so poor that I had to help him read his physician's desk reference.
It's almost impossible for a poor white person to find a white doctor anymore.
From the subject of doctors, I have to say that the third leading cause of death in this country is doctor-prescribed pharmaceuticals used as directed.
I'm not talking about street drugs here.
The doctors essentially are the third leading cause of death.
And there's a statistic circulating right on the top, as you mentioned, Harold, about how middle-aged white people are dying in increasing numbers, statistically.
And they say, you know, some people are saying it's economic stress.
I think it's the stress of just living in a multicultural society and having to smile at people when you really want to spit in their eye.
We're living in an unnatural world, and the stress of it, I think, is responsible for the fact that white people are now basically a bunch of mental basket cases.
This is a little bit off topic, but I'm on Twitter now, have been for about a year, and so I've been getting a good look at a lot of the younger white nationalist types, and their hearts are in the right place, but I might say most cases, their heads are really screwed up.
These kids literally don't know how to act because nobody's ever told them.
They're like the third or fourth generation since the degeneration started, and no one was ever around like my grandfather, and to some extent my parents were, to teach me the right way that things should be, the right way to live, and how to think instead of feel, etc.
And so all of this is bound to have a bad effect on every type of health, mental, emotional, physical.
And then, again, when you look at the fact that we eat crap, we breathe and walk around in all kinds of weird gases and pollutants and carcinogens and every other darn thing.
I'm surprised we don't all just drop dead.
You know, Harold, I'll tell you something about just what you said, my experience.
Back in the late 90s, when I lived on the East Coast, I took health classes with this guy, Gary Null, who's pretty well known to the alternative medicine field.
And anyway, I went there for two years, every other Saturday morning for two years.
And one of the things he said stuck in my mind.
He said, you know what they say?
You are what you eat.
And he said, it's more importantly.
You are what you think.
That affects your health even more than your food.
And this goes right along with what you're saying.
These kids, they're born with a genetic program, but it's been altered in this unreal world for them.
They're lost.
I don't think they have any security.
You know, they're desperately trying to fit in somewhere, you know, so they take the strongest stimuli that comes along, and it happens to be the blacks, so they turn into wiggers, what do you call it, transsexuals, which are trying to push down their throat in school.
That's affecting their health.
Richard, have you heard of the new German medicine?
No.
Okay, that's a name for this new school of thought, and it claims that the root cause of at least 90% of all disease is emotional.
It's either, well, basically either chronic or an acute emotional problem is at the origin of almost all somatic disease.
And that's certainly considered very controversial, yet.
I'm going to mention a word.
Homeostasis is...
When you're completely tuned in to your distresses, you take the stress out of your body, metal, you take it out.
And when you're in homeostasis and your body is balanced chemically, like when you're frightened, your body changes chemically from your emotions.
So if you can search for the state of homeostasis, that's the healing mode.
That's when your body heals.
That's when it's not being damaged.
You can do it partially through meditation.
I take yoga.
I don't do as much as I did, but meditation and yoga does it, where you just focus on the breath.
But that takes all the stimuli that's floating around your brain.
And as they say in Zen, the thoughts in the mind are like the clucking of hands.
It's just utter nonsense, and you're on this loop, or these things that are bothering you keep circling and circling and circling in your mind.
Well, your body is responding chemically to these thoughts.
Hence what I said before, your health is more affected by what you think than when you eat.
Yes, and stress takes many forms.
Some of it is emotional, some of it's physical, some of it's, as you say, pollution, foods we eat, the information we take in, the interactions with other people.
All these are stressors.
And there's a very interesting book, and I don't think I still have it, but basically the author said that Hans Selye, the guy who invented the idea of stress, had it wrong.
Hans Selye defined stress as the body's generalized response to demands placed upon it.
And then he had to complicate it by saying, well, there's eustress, which is good stress, and there's bad stress.
And he says, that's totally wrong.
He says, what stress is, is the inverse of control.
If you feel like you're in control, you're not stressed.
You're not bothered.
On the other hand, no matter how trivial the challenge, if you feel like you're out of control, then you are stressed.
And the so-called good stress or you stressed was simply a situation where, yeah, the stressor, the challenge was there, but you felt in control.
And so it didn't bother you.
It's like the executive versus the secretary.
The secretary has all these what appear to be trivial demands, but she has no power, so she has no control.
Whereas the executive has all these big issues, but if he has the power, then he feels in control, and so he's not stressed out.
And you can really see this difference between when you're flying or driving a car if you're subject to motion sickness.
If you're the one doing the driving, you're in control and you don't get motion sick.
But when you switch drivers and you become a passenger and someone else is driving, you start getting motion sick.
It's amazing the psychological effect of control versus no control has a huge impact on your health.
Well, Americans live in a state of paranoia constantly, and I think due to that very feeling that they're not in control and they're not.
I've always figured that within our wee little movement, one of the main reasons for the prevalence of some of these more bizarre and outlandish conspiracy theories is that all Americans seem to understand on some deep subliminal level that we are governed by people who are not Competent, one thing, they are acting on hidden agendas and do not have our best interests at heart.
And most of us have something in our personal lives that lead us to distrust government, lead us to distrust the media, etc., etc.
And basically, Americans have this, I think, subliminal feeling that the world is out to get them, and they're right.
There really are bad people out to get us, because I think it's pretty clear now that there is a worldwide globalist agenda of genocide, and so when you have a people who everybody's out to get, and they know it, yeah, the resulting stress has got to be something just...
Absolutely cataclysmic to every aspect of your health, mental, emotional, and physical, and medical.
To what Don said about stress, which begs the question for me, Don, is can you imagine the subliminal stress?
A white guy that's happy with himself, can you imagine him living in a black neighborhood, the stress that man's under, or that woman, or that child?
Unbelievable.
I could never do that.
That kind of stress also has other bad side effects, like, for instance, when you're worried about your house being burned down or your home invaded, when you're worried about losing your job, when you're so poor because you've lost your job that you can't afford to eat decently.
All of this has an effect on your health as far as your diet goes, as far as your activity or lack thereof.
If you live in a dangerous neighborhood full of niggers and illegal aliens, you can't really afford to go out jogging every evening like your typical yuppie in a protected zone can.
This country is divided into what I suppose might be called green zones and red zones or danger zones, and nice wealthy liberal elitists live in green zones, what Peggy Noonan calls the protected class.
Ordinary white people live in the red zone or the hot zone, and it's a whole different world.
And among other things, it's a whole different medical and health situation because the people in the green zones, the people in the protected class, can afford decent private medical care by competent white doctors.
The poor people living outside those zones have to put up with guys like that Burmese quack I had to go to at the Seymour Clinic.
And you move to a new town like I have, and it takes you months to find a new white doctor who's even taking new patients and so forth and so on.
So as part of the overall situation in this country, white people's medical care and health care situation has deteriorated.
I just want to put in a quick plug for the Northwest.
Up here, it's definitely a green zone in the North Idaho Panhandle.
I've been able to find myself a white doctor, a white dentist.
I don't make nearly as much as I used to in other parts of the country, but I can still afford to live here, and I can still afford to eat good food.
And as I sit here, I can look in either direction, and I'm staring at mountains and trees.
The air is cool, clean, and crisp.
Now that the snow is melting off, it's very easy to go out into the woods for a jog or up the mountains for a hike, and it's very, very easy to achieve homeostasis there.
So if you suffer from these health problems, the Northwest is a good cure for it.
Yeah, you live in probably the nicest part even of the homeland.
I've had people suggest to me, well, Harold, forget about the coast.
It's just full of liberals and Mexicans.
We've got to run away, run away to Idaho and all live in some little, you know, whatever they think we're going to live in.
And the thing is that, unfortunately, it's not really practical.
When we do become an independent nation, we're going to have to have the coastline.
Oh, definitely.
And I actually do like the coast, too.
It's a lot rainier, but I do think it's much more lush than it is out here.
A lot less snow, too.
I wanted to mention, there's another mental stress we're not quite aware of.
I have a daughter, she's a psychic, and she counsels people, and she kind of buttresses this up for me.
We have five senses.
It's not five senses we use, touch, sight, smell, taste, whatever.
But we're born with more than that, and society turns them off, or attenuates.
But they're still there in our subconscious mind.
See if I'm not right in this.
Did you ever notice how some people, you just have an aversion to them, and you don't know why, you just don't like them.
You just don't like them.
You don't like being around them.
That's the way I feel about the other races and some of the other nationalities.
They're just not in tune with them.
Well, there's their senses in me that haven't been, what do you call it, nurtured to come up to the forefront, but they're still there causing me stress.
To go back to what Ida Bro said, when you're not in your natural environment with your own people, you're under stress.
It affects your health.
You may have seen the news item a few months ago as to how Google got really embarrassed by their own search engine because people would be punching in a primate or orangutan or gorilla or something and pictures of black people would be coming up.
Basically, the computer, which is taught to recognize certain common points of recognition and whatnot, was actually seeing pictures of heavily negroid niggers and reading them as monkeys.
This led to an article, and I don't even think it was in one of our websites.
Anyway, the upshot of it is, and I think there's a lot to this, is that our lizard brain, our instinctive brain, looks at a negro and sees a primate, an animal.
A potential threat.
And that's why whites have this instinctive aversion to the negroid type of individual and not so much in, say, a light-skinned Hispanic that think it's just a white person with a tan or a little gook China doll, whatever.
Can you imagine what mental torment a liberal goes through when he looks at Serena Williams?
Anyway, we're getting off topic again, but it is all interrelated.
Everything is a totality.
Politics, the economy, We've got our noses rubbed into.
All of this has an effect on collateral damage on the medical and health situation.
Most of us nowadays, if you're young, you're born, and you grow up eating chemical foods of various kinds, that messes you up, and then you absorb all the mental stress of living in a natural society, and you go to school, and you're hyperactive, or you're depressed, or whatever, and some damn school psychologist puts you on drugs.
Now, that's another thing about our health situation.
Millions and millions and millions and millions of people, mostly white people, are on various types of medication for things like depression and psychosis and homicidal mania suppression or whatever.
The society reacts to everything by loading people up with drugs.
And if there ever was a major societal breakdown, and all of a sudden those 50, 60, 70, 100 million people couldn't get their prescription medication for their depression or their mental illness, oh boy, bipolar or whatever.
Well, this is a good point for me to mention a book called The Nazi War on Cancer.
Which was written in the 1980s at some point by someone who was not a fan of National Socialism, but he did the research and it was more than just their war against cancer.
It was the total National Socialist government of Germany's public health program.
By the way, they won their war on cancer, unlike the United States.
They determined that cancer was caused by various substances that we call carcinogens.
And so they removed them from commerce and from contact with people by passing laws against it and enforcing those laws.
They obviously were not corrupted by commercial interests like the United States government is.
I read somewhere that the Third Reich banned asbestos in buildings decades before they did here in America and elsewhere.
It's interesting how broad spectrum their approach was.
For example, well, there's the cancer problem.
They also decided to wipe out tuberculosis, and they did it by giving literally everybody in Germany a chest x-ray, determining who had active tuberculosis, and sending them to clinics in the mountains to be cured.
And they completely eliminated tuberculosis, unlike every other European country.
Another thing they did was, in the research, they determined that the butter from milk from cows Bright green spring grass had something in it that was good for you, although they didn't know what it was.
So they rationed it to make sure every pregnant woman in Germany got some.
That gives you an idea of the scope of their public health program.
I want to hear Jeff real quick on the butters that Weston Price called that stuff Activator X. And this was back when nutrition was in its infancy, but they believe it to be vitamin K, which is one of the supplements I like to take too.
Because it goes along very well with vitamins A and E, and helps with calcium intake as well, or calcium absorption, I should say.
Yes, and it helps keep the calcium out of your arteries and into the bones where it belongs.
So, yeah, spend a little more for that grass-fed butter.
The Kerrygold is what brand you usually see in the stores, but it's worth it.
Kerrygold, Organic Valley also makes some, and there's also the added benefit that it tastes significantly better than any other butter you'll find.
Yeah, anyway, I was just pitching that book because it had a lot of interesting aspects to it.
Harold, I have to say, one of the things they determined was that smoking was bad for Aryans, and so they put up signs in public places saying that, and they also established smoking and non-smoking cars on their railroad system.
And they also discovered that what we call secondhand smoke, they called passive smoking.
They determined that that was a significant problem as well for the people who didn't smoke.
Well, it's beautiful when your government is governing a homogeneous population to actually care about their people.
Isn't that a thrill?
The whole concept is just something Americans can't wrap their minds around, and that's another problem with our health and medical situation in this country.
There are whole, huge, massive industries.
Multi-billion dollar industries as well as government bureaucracies that are dependent for their existence and their incredible profits and their wealth on making people sick, keeping people sick, and so forth and so on.
Like, again, as I said, I'm on the VA, and I can tell just by, I don't know if anyone has ever actually been into a VA hospital, but it's mostly bureaucrats.
It's not like a hospital where everyone's running up and down in hospital scrubs and there's nurses calling out doctor something to the ER stat and all that sort of stuff.
What you got in a VA hospital is it's like you're in an office building where every now and then you'll run into some guy in the corridors who's wearing medical scrubs.
Look in the offices, you see big huge filing cabinets and you see computers.
And you see strange little Asiatic mystery meat people sitting behind the computers going tappa tappa tappa and it's obvious that the entire thing is consuming just god knows how many billions of dollars and once you get into the system you're realizing that you're just not getting any kind of really acceptable result for all that and yet it's kind of like a self-perpetuating system.
People are making huge amounts of money, making their living, making whole careers out of this system that doesn't work and is not providing the type of health care that it's supposed to be providing.
And then you look into corporate stuff like, for instance, the various industries.
Well, I'm from North Carolina and I know a lot of people that made their living and made their families and whatnot off cigarettes, but I have to admit, cigarettes are not a good idea.
You've got just the whole processed food industry that produces all these cheap packaged foods that are mostly starch and high fructose corn syrup and blah blah blah.
And the trouble is we have an economy and a health care system that is at the risk of sounding like a leftist.
It's geared towards profits rather than people.
And when you've got that kind of system, got that kind of society, it's actually an uphill battle for people to be healthy.
It's almost like we live in a society where sickness and illness of various kinds is the norm.
Everybody seems to be at least partly sick.
Everybody seems to be taking pills.
Everybody seems to be on medication of some kind, or have some sort of weird medical condition, and it's just part of the overall insanity of life under whatever you want to call this mess we got, Judeo-capitalism, globalism.
Well, I think the medical problem is a problem of monopoly.
The AMA and the pharmaceutical industry have established a, literally, A government-backed monopoly position.
I think it began with the Rockefellers.
A lot of bad things did.
And the pharmaceutical industry more or less took control over the AMA.
The AMA was originally founded to suppress chiropractic.
And they ended up establishing a medical monopoly with legal privilege.
And it is the root cause of the poor medical treatment that people get today.
And the pharmaceutical industry worked hand-in-glove with them.
And today, the pharmaceutical industry, it appears to me, has co-opted the AMA.
So the pharmaceutical industry is the one in control.
And yeah, their answer to every disease is a drug which doesn't cure the disease but manages it.
So continue to take it.
The media's role in this, they brainwash people into thinking doctors are gods, and so people believe everything their doctors tell them, and a lay person says, hey, why not take a vitamin?
They look at you like, what could you possibly know?
You're not a doctor.
Benjamin Franklin said that all professional associations are conspiracies against the laity.
It's just obvious to me, since I've been having increasing encounters with the system over the past 10 years or so, that, let's say, these people just don't know.
Another thing I've found is the medical industry or the medical community just has this tendency to believe that they do have this super-secret knowledge, and who the hell are you to tell them anything?
You're just the patient.
We say this, this, this is wrong with you.
Don't argue.
Take all these pills, no matter how sick they make you feel.
Just, you know, stuff them in your gob every three or four hours or three or four times a day.
We tell you to do it because, you see, we're the doctor and you're the patient and you just do what we tell you.
I think what dog whistles to me, the power of the medical and pharmaceutical industry, is what's going on right now, which is trying to get rid of this Obamacare bill.
As you said before, Harold, who can afford those premiums?
Well, everything's out of proportion.
How can an insurance company come up with decent premiums when the cost of medical services and pharmaceuticals is so high?
Because we're paying monopoly prices.
The monopoly has to be destroyed.
It's never mentioned.
It's never mentioned.
American medical costs are too high boils down to two basic reasons.
Number one, greedy big pharma that puts out all these unnecessary drugs and charges an arm and a leg for them.
And number two, illegal immigration where you've got 30 million beaners and third world invaders who are using the emergency rooms as their primary care system and then skipping out without paying a bill.
So, the American medical system does have a problem with greed and corruption in itself.
Sure, I mean, that's certainly part of the problem, but bear in mind, we've also got all these damn freeloaders who are leeching off the system like parasites, and they're not putting anything back in, and so, yeah, that jacks up the cost of something stupid.
But that hints to me how powerful they are.
I mean, here's the obvious problem, and they can't even talk about it.
What's that saying?
If you're wondering who's in control, find out who you can't talk about, or something like that.
Well, you can't criticize, yeah.
Well, I will say this, for the Trump campaign and for the alt-right and the internet, etc., more and more, at least in this country, we can talk about it.
In Europe, they're cracking down now, and you can talk about even less on the internet than you could a couple of years ago, but in this country, a lot of this stuff is coming out.
The internet has allowed a lot of this knowledge to be disseminated, including alternative medical knowledge.
I'd like to throw something else out there.
We're talking about health.
Have any of you ever heard about Gerson therapy?
Yes.
My daughter's doing that.
I don't do it, but anybody with any health problems, look into that.
And that's got to do with juicing and cleansing your system.
Yeah, that's something if someone's suffering from.
Well, I would like to make a request to Gretchen, when she listens to that, if she could pick up a copy of Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, again by Weston A. Price, if you could make for a good book review.
One nice thing about it is it was written when political correctness was not in force, and there's one humorous section where he actually compares degroid features to chimpanzees.
If you can send me an email on that, I'll forward that to her.
Okay, will do.
It's also a good read for, I think, anybody who's a white nationalist because of the racial element in there.
And I'd just like to add that one of the most suppressed little bits of information we've touched on it, but it bears repeating, is that the body, given the proper raw ingredients and proper breath, can heal itself.
Modern medicine has taken away the notion that the body can heal itself.
Everything, according to Big Pharma and everything, you need a drug to heal that.
You need medicine to heal that.
The body can heal itself, given the proper raw nutrients and rest and all that good stuff.
Ditto.
Ditto to that.
Yes.
Oh, and don't forget, plenty of exercise as well.
That's just as important as any nutrition program.
Yeah, that's where I fall down.
I know everybody's got an excuse.
Harold, how can you fall down if you don't exercise?
Right.
No, I admit I don't practice a lot of this stuff myself.
I have to spend 10 or 12 hours a day slaving over a hot computer just to keep our head above water.
I'll put in another plug for the Northwest, is that even in the big cities, It's a very, very short drive to get out into nature and to get plenty of good exercise and clean, fresh air.
Well, this is what I tell potential migrants.
The simple fact is that this is still just the nicest place in the country left to live, and it's going to be the last place in the country that resembles the old America.
I'd just like to say one thing.
The Northwest was primarily white.
To anybody listening out there that's young, it's going to start a family, has little kids.
You've got to do it.
Oh, yeah.
You've got to do it.
I mean, I cannot imagine someone trying to start a family in Jacksonville, Florida, or Houston, Texas, or Boston, someplace like that.
I just...
Okay.
All right, guys.
Look, thanks for calling, and I'll probably put this on possibly even this week, but I appreciate your input, and you guys have a great evening.
Great.
Thank you so much.
You too.
Yeah.
Good night.
Be well, everyone.
All right.
Bye-bye.
Good night.
We're good to go.
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