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So everybody, welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International and to today's
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0:00:12 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] Robert O. Young.
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0:00:14 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] over three years ago with the desire to pursue
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truth, ethics, justice, freedom and health.
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I'm Charles Kovest, the moderator of this group.
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0:00:26 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ralasian's passion provocateur and there's lots of passionate people here, including
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Robert Young.
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0:00:33 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]iced law for 20 years before changing career 31 years ago and I've helped parents
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0:00:41 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]rategize remedies for vaccine damage and damage from bad medical advice.
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0:00:46 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] data off scene is now the number one killer of people
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in America.
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I'm also the CEO of an industrial hemp company.
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0:00:56 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] over the years has been a whistleblower and activist.
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His medical specialty is radiology.
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We comprise lots of professions here and we're from all around the world.
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Many of us thought that vaccines were okay.
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Now many of us proudly say, yes, we are passionate anti-vaxxers.
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I now count myself in that group and if someone accuses me of being an anti-vaxxer, I say,
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Yes, I am and I'm proud of it and I would never inject and vaccinate into anybody because
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0:01:28 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]otkin has now admitted that no vaccine ever in history has been properly tested for
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safety or efficacy.
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I now consider it a badge of honor for all of you who are anti-vaxxers.
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It's a badge of being awake, not woke.
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0:01:45 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] time here, welcome and feel free to introduce yourself in the chat
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and where you're from.
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0:01:50 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] or like Glenn, you run a radio or TV show, put
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the links into the chat and keep putting you in there in every meeting because different
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0:01:58 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]e come to different meetings.
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0:02:01 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and we're in the middle of World War III and the medical science battle
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is only one of [privacy contact redaction] world war.
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One of the other battle fronts is the spiritual war that we find ourselves in.
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There's no time to be tired.
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We're four and a half years into a seven year war in my assessment.
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0:02:21 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and that the science is never settled.
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The meeting runs for two and a half hours after which for those with the time Tom Rodman
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runs a video telegram meeting.
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Tom puts the links into the chat if you are able to join.
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0:02:36 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] presenter, Dr. Robert O. Young, for as long as Robert wishes to
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0:02:40 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] Q&A.
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0:02:43 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction], by long established tradition, asks the first questions for 15 minutes.
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This is a free speech environment with appropriate moderating.
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Free speech is crucially important in our fight to preserve our human freedoms.
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0:02:57 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] this week, the Australian government has denied a visa to Candice Owens to come
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0:03:03 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ralia from the States because of some bullshit excuse, literally
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bullshit excuse.
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Don't let this person in.
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And yet at the same time, they're bringing terrorists left, right and centre.
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So the misinformation and disinformation bill, the MAD bill, the MAD bill has been being
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0:03:26 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ralian government again so that only authorized news outlets and politicians
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are not liable to misinformation or disinformation claims.
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0:03:39 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] this nonsense.
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If you're offended by anything, be offended.
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0:03:46 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
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0:03:49 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ry that requires nobody to say anything that may offend another.
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So Robert, don't worry about offending anybody or triggering anybody.
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We're not interested.
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However, we come with an attitude and perspective of love, not fear.
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Fear is the opposite of love.
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0:04:09 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]s you.
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Love, on the other hand, expands you, liberates you.
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0:04:15 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]e is loving those who disagree with us, in fact,
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loving our enemies.
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Big challenge.
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0:04:24 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] talk fests.
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0:04:27 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions and initiatives have been generated from linkages made by
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in these meetings.
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0:04:34 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] or links or resources that will help people put the
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details into the chat, Robert, if you can make sure you put your, we've published your
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website, but Robert, put your website into the chat and all the resources because you've
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got a lot of resources on your website.
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0:04:50 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]oaded on the Rumble channel.
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0:04:55 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] presenter, Dr. Robert O. Young, formerly.
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And we thank you, Robert, for again being with us and sharing your genius with us.
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0:05:06 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ing, I want to read a short bio of Robert, whose mission
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0:05:13 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] lives with an alkaline diet and lifestyle.
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And Neil Solomon, former head of research for Johns Hopkins University, said, Dr. Young
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may be on the threshold of a new biology whose principle, if proven, could revolutionize
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the biology and medicine worlds.
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0:05:37 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction], that's an end quote, over the past two and a half decade, over nearly 30
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years, Robert has been widely recognized as one of the top research scientists in the
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world.
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Throughout his career, his research has been focused at the cellular level, having a specialty
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in cellular nutrition.
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Robert Young has devoted his life to researching the true causes of, quote, disease, end quote,
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subsequently developing the new biology to help people balance their lives.
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In 1994, Robert discovered the biological transformation of red blood cells into bacteria
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He has since documented several such transformations.
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Robert has devoted his career to the discovery of the missing pieces necessary to complete
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His website is in the chat, drrobertyoung.com.
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For all of an amazing set of resources, I've visited his website many times.
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And thank you, Stephen Frost, again, for creating this group and for organizing Robert to speak
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to us today.
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Robert, we are all yours.
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Well, thank you, Charles.
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I hope everyone can hear my voice.
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We can.
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And it's coming through clearly.
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It is.
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I'm really always grateful for the opportunities to have a platform to share, you know, my
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It's gone really, really fast.
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I don't feel as probably as old as I look.
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But the bottom line is, is that I never thought I would be in this place talking about the
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things I talk about, because most of my life was really spent, at least the early part
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of my life was spent in amateur and professional sport.
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0:07:39 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] that that competitive edge.
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I've lost it over the years a little bit, but it sparks up once in a while and reminds
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me, you know, that it's not such a bad thing to have a little competition.
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0:07:54 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]s would say to me, I was I was a better doubles player than a
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0:08:00 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ayer in tennis.
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And so I I really enjoy working with others and supporting others and having others support
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me in whatever I was doing.
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And I've enjoyed that type of relationship, both in sport and also business.
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0:08:23 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] four decades.
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I've had some very unique relationships, one of those, of course, you mentioned Dr.
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Neil Solomon. He was at the at the university.
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0:08:45 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] trying at Johns Hopkins University at the School of Medicine.
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And I don't know if you remember him or not, but those who are old enough to remember
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President Nixon, Nixon, he nominated Neil Solomon for the.
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0:09:06 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ates, the surgeon general.
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And he he told me this personally.
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Because we work together.
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And he was the one that got me involved, which back then I innocently didn't know the
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0:09:27 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ed Nations had.
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0:09:30 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ually had a program and and and we had a foundation together.
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It's called the Interlight Biological Health and Education Foundation.
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0:09:41 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]en on health, to educate children on the needs of
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you know, eating the right kinds of foods that would help build strong bodies.
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And so he was a great influence early in my career and in in in my 30s.
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And. He.
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When he was offered this position as the the top doctor of the United States, he told
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0:10:18 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] Nixon that he would do this on one condition.
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One condition, and that condition was that choice was allowed for all American citizens,
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that they could choose not only.
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What was perceived as contemporary medical treatments.
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They call them traditional or conventional is probably better than traditional
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traditional I associate with natural.
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But they would be able to choose the type of care that they wanted, whether they were
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going to go to a naturopath or whether or not they were going to go to a physician.
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So they were able to choose.
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And Nixon said, we can't do that.
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You know, there's only one type of medical care that can be offered that we need to
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stand back and support.
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And that's, you know, Rockefeller medicine.
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He didn't say it that way.
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That's the way I said it.
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OK, I'm not quoting him, but he's he turned down the job.
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He said, well, then I don't want to be the surgeon general if we cannot offer the
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not offer.
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You know, our people a choice and to be educated about that choice.
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And so I thought that was that was quite an extraordinary thing that he he chose, but
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he he was he believed in natural approaches rather than chemical approaches.
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And I think it's important for people to understand.
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Even more so now, because of the last three and a half, four years and even before that
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0:12:26 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]icides, insecticides, herbicides.
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You know, going on and on that are now found in our foods, even microplastics.
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That are found in our foods, forever chemicals.
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You know, this debate between organic and inorganic or non-organic based upon how farming.
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How farming.
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Was being done, and that was a that was a concern that I had as well, and I I gained
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that concern from my father.
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0:13:08 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]range because we never went to the doctor.
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You know, I can't tell you other than when we went to church, I knew there were doctors
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there and I knew them by name and called them doctors.
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But I didn't know why we never visited them for any type of treatments or medicine.
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0:13:34 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction] never were exposed to regular physicals or when anything seemed to be.
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Out of balance, you know, running off to the hospital, to the emergency room, or running
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0:13:50 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]or to or to what now the box stores that are, you know, dispensing pharmaceuticals.
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0:14:01 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] never done that.
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So I've never taken pharmaceuticals and I think my mother, if I had a headache, maybe she gave me
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some aspirin, but I don't even remember that.
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I really don't.
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And so, in fact, it was it was even to the extent that we had no health insurance.
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And so, you know, the most tragic thing that happened to me was when I was using a little
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hatchet, I ended up cutting my knee, lacerating my knee.
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And my dad broke down and says, well, we may need to go to the hospital.
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And he took me to the emergency room, said, stay here.
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I'm going in.
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He walked out saying, we're not going in.
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And I said, we're going to have to figure out another way.
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I said, Dad, I'm bleeding here.
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You know, I'm losing blood.
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He says, no, we'll patch it up.
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It's no problem.
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It's interesting.
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We passed it up and where there was a scar, there is no scar because there were no stitches.
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I didn't receive those, but it was a deep laceration.
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And so I'm not apologetic towards that.
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0:15:19 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction] friends growing up, who was my scoutmaster, he was an orthopedic surgeon.
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And his language was, hey, you know, kid, you're smart enough to go to medical school.
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You should become an orthopedic surgeon because there's a lot of money in it.
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And I said, well, what do you mean?
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There's a lot of money.
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And he said, well, I make 250 to 300,000 a year.
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And this is in the 60s.
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And I thought about that and I thought, wow, okay.
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You know, so doctors go to medical school, you know, I thought to help people, but I guess
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they also go because the pay is good.
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And I really wasn't necessarily interested in that.
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I swear.
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I kind of chose a different path.
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And I don't know if what I'm telling you is helpful.
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But it kind of rounded me out to why the first doctor I ever saw and the last doctor I ever
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saw was when I was born in the LDS Salt Lake City Hospital.
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And that's been the extent of my exposure to medical treatments.
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Now, I think the first doctor I ever saw was Dr. John H.
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0:16:46 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e having their own doctor?
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Absolutely.
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0:16:52 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ors?
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Absolutely.
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0:16:54 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction], you know, their training?
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Yes and no, to a certain extent.
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I mean, I think their training is critical as it relates to anatomy.
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But I disagree with physiology, their physiology aspects.
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And so I mean, for a good argument, you know, this whole theory that we metabolize or generate,
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you know, energy through the breakdown of foods rather than the release of electrical energy
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0:17:27 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]e have had.
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0:17:32 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] important part of the energy cycle is the electron transport chain.
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That's probably the most accurate thing about it.
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But our bodies do not run on sugar.
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I know the theory of, well, you need sugar because your brain cells run on sugar.
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Absolutely not.
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0:17:54 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]rical.
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0:17:57 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]rical.
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0:17:59 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]rons and they transport those electrons and they use it.
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So early in the game in the late 80s, early 90s, I wrote a book called Sick and Tired,
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Reclaim Your Inner Terrain.
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0:18:15 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ing because I wasn't pleased with the breakdown that the FDA was
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giving as it relates to, you know, this food has this amount of mineral in it or
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this amount of sugar in it.
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But I wanted to look at the whole food.
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So I would take a food, I would liquefy that food.
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I wouldn't burn it off like they do as far as the FDA when they're testing pH or if they're
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0:18:49 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ing mineral content of the food, it's literally cremated down to, you know,
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it's mineral content.
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The water burns off, the sugar burns off, and it really doesn't give you a correct picture.
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So I came up with a whole new scale that's based upon the electron
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concentration of foods and also its pH.
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So pH and ORP, pH measuring the hydrogen or hydroxyl, the H positive or the OH minus,
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0:19:27 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ion potential,
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realizing that we eat food not for calories, we eat food for energy, life force energy.
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And that spark I call the life force energy is the electron.
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0:19:48 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ron becomes very, very important.
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And the charge of food becomes very important.
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0:19:54 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]rons or it consumes electrons,
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0:20:00 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]e would ask me, why are you against orange juice?
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I said, I'm not against orange juice.
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I grew up on orange juice.
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I like orange juice, you know, and once in a while I have it.
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But it doesn't provide me any energy.
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0:20:17 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]es good.
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0:20:18 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ron consumer and a proton donor.
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So orange juice does not provide any life force energy.
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It may provide some mineral content, but that's another discussion when you're just looking at
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food for its, whether it donates, you know, electrons or protons.
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And so that was the case with bananas.
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We grew up on bananas.
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And it was the case with the opposite of this, which would be like tomatoes.
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0:20:51 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]e would say, well, wait a minute, tomatoes are acidic.
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And somebody may say, well, they have, you know, another scientist may say, well,
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they're high in lycopenes.
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0:21:01 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] a high concentration of antioxidants, you know, and so there's this argument going on.
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0:21:09 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] looking at that time in the late 80s, early 90s, is whether or not tomatoes would be
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0:21:16 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]nger.
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0:21:21 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]s, you'd lose energy by eating a tomato.
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That's not the case.
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0:21:27 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] a lemon or if you have a lime or if you have a grapefruit
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0:21:36 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] its juice, you'll see the test out on a scale of zero to 14, it tests out on the acidic
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side.
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But the point here is when I developed the scale, I didn't necessarily develop it based upon that
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arbitrary zero to 14 pH.
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I wanted to know if that tomato or if that lemon or that lime or that grapefruit was going to
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create more toxicity, more acidity or more alkalinity.
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And the answer to that, it's the net gain for tomatoes, grapefruits, lemons, limes,
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etc., actually donate life force energy in excess of their acidic components.
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0:22:27 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] acidic components, but the net effect is alkalizing.
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And so I had to create a whole new scale.
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If you get my book, you'll see this scale and goes, what is he talking about?
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The scale that goes from positive zero to 100 to negative zero to 100.
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And I'm talking about this food when it's broken down, it's massacated,
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will donate life force energy and whether it's contributing because our cells are electrical.
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0:22:59 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]rical.
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Cells don't run on carbohydrates, proteins or fats.
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0:23:07 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ricity, electron, and that's the element.
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So that's an oversimplification a little bit, but I just wanted to explain a little bit about
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what my thought process is when I'm categorizing food.
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0:23:27 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] it in certain categories, which is uniquely different than most, if not all the pH scales,
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ORP scales that are out there.
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0:23:38 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction], whatever your position is on that, I just wanted to clarify some of the early
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research I was doing on food sciences since my PhD is in nutrition.
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0:23:50 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction], I remember my coach, Harry James, at the University of Utah, introduced me to
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encapsulated nutrition in the form of a capsule in the 60s.
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0:24:02 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]range.
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I thought it was Space Odyssey 2000, where they'd eat their breakfast or their lunch
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or dinner and it was in a tablet.
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Well, there were few people who were able to do that.
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0:24:13 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] a friend who was able to do that.
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0:24:17 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] a friend who was able to do that.
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Well, they were feeding us that in the 60s.
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0:24:22 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]art in taking nutritional supplements as something that was recommended
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by my university coach.
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Well, I don't know why I started out this way, but I wanted to just introduce you to
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0:24:41 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]e who are giants in my world.
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That I was able to work with or be part of or work in their labs.
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And I think it was mentioned.
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One of those which many of you know is is Deusburg and who wrote a very, very important
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book in the 80s.
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It's called Inventing the AIDS Virus.
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Are you all familiar with Peter Deusburg's work?
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He's a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
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So Robert, many of us in this group, I would say most are aware of Peter Deusburg and how
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he was hounded.
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0:25:25 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ually, I'm extremely interested in what you have to say about Peter Deusburg
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because they really did hound him.
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And he was, well, as I understand it, they did hound him.
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Well, they did hound him and they relegated him from the top floor to the bottom floor.
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And the same thing happened to my colleague, Luc Montaner.
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And the same thing happened to him.
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Yeah, so some of you know part of the story, you know, that story started, you know, in
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around 2010 to 2011, 2012.
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But he ended up in China.
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0:26:06 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] up his chair at the University of Paris.
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But Deusburg, I mean, had a beautiful lab.
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He was focused on cancer treatment.
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And that was something that I was focused on.
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And he got turned aside here because of Robert Gallo and Luc Montaner, who received jointly
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the Nobel Prize for accrediting them the purified isolation of the HIV virus.
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Yes.
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I think that's pretty much...
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We know that.
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2008, I think.
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That's historically the fact, yes.
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Robert, wasn't that 2008?
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He won the Nobel Prize.
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Yes, 2008.
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Montaner for the discovery of the AIDS virus, I think, as I understood it.
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Not the AIDS virus, the HIV virus.
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I mean, yes, sorry, the HIV, I meant that, yes.
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I meant to say that.
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It's an important distinction because AIDS is an acronym for acquired immune deficiency,
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which is really vague.
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Sorry, I made a big mistake there.
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0:27:14 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ers were there with Robert Gallo.
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0:27:19 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]inate was Fauci.
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0:27:25 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ually took Robert Gallo's position
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when he left.
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Well, actually, he was convicted of...
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0:27:35 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] because of scientific fraud.
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Here again, I don't know the details of all that, but you don't hear his name much.
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But he hasn't been around for several decades.
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But he was part of that whole thing that was going down with HIV.
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And Deusburg, early in the game, that book was published in 1985.
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1985, Inventing the AIDS Virus.
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But it wasn't just about viruses, about HIV.
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It was also about other viruses like Ebola, Ebola virus or the hepatitis viruses.
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And he calls them, or at least I call them, I think I'd have to go back and read the book,
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but I call them phantom viruses.
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0:28:28 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ate, there has been no purified isolation without contamination
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representing the...based upon the scientific method, whether it's Robert Koch or if it's
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Rivers procedures as far as identifying, isolating, or purifying, isolating, and then
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0:28:55 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ion or transfection that this entity that you've isolated causes
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a specific disease with specific symptoms.
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So from his work, I'm talking about Deusburg now, Peter Deusburg.
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I was inspired to publish three papers which are available.
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These three papers are titled, A Second Thought About Viruses, Vaccines, and the HIV-AIDS
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Hypothesis.
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And I published these finally in the 90s through the work and inspiration
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of Peter Deusburg and his basic theory and what he was proving that AIDS was caused
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by chemical poisoning.
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Now that's important when I'm telling you because chemical poisoning has been going
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on for a very, very long time.
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And so back then, of course, the chemical poisoning was based upon the treatment.
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And back then, the treatment was a Fauci drug, even back then, that was taken off the shelf
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called AZT.
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I may be getting in the weeds on this thing, but I'm trying to stay general because I want
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to bring this around because there's a history of chemical poisoning.
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0:30:31 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]racts and in my conclusions that there are no sicknesses
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and diseases.
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0:30:41 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction], the book Sick and Tired, which was a predecessor to a book I wrote earlier, was
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called One Sickness, One Disease, One Treatment.
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And that was pretty radical in the 80s that these multiplicities of diseases were not
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diseases at all.
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And so my foundational theory was that there are no diseases, that there's only states
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of balance and imbalance, and that what they're calling diseases is not diseases.
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What they're calling diseases are symptoms or symptomologies that are then being treated
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0:31:29 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ors that are related to context or environment,
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which includes temperature, ORP, and pH.
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0:31:41 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] any imbalance, i.e. sickness or disease, you can find that very simply by
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0:31:50 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ion before we started recording, what is the ideal pH
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of the body fluids?
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And the low range is 7.2, which is actually, if it's in the blood, it would be called
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0:32:08 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ually, if it's in the blood, it would be called decompensated acidosis,
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and it would be an alarming event because it's moved around 0.15 of one point down
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because you're in a coma at 7.1 and you're dead at 6.9.
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And we're talking about a pH of the blood.
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So the regulation of the blood is critical and everything is subject to managing and
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maintaining that alkaline design.
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But it's not taught at Harvard, it's not taught at Yale, it's not taught at Oxford,
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0:32:54 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]omach is the major contributor of alkalinity that manages the delicate pH
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balance of all of the body fluids.
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Do I need to say that again?
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There is an organ and its main purpose is to manage and maintain the alkaline design
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of the body fluids.
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And they don't teach this.
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It's actually an elective at Oxford University.
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When I spoke there in 2007, I gave a very similar lecture.
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But the ideal pH to the thousands is 7.365, never above 7 and never below 7.3.
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And then I published another paper in 2022, I wrote it earlier than that,
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called the blood-jerk reaction.
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Because there's procedures that medical doctors do when the pH of the blood goes excess,
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compensated alkalosis, where what if the pH goes up to 7.4 or 7.5?
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What does that mean?
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Well, interpreted directly, it means you're too acidic.
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So what do they do?
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0:34:20 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ip to pull the pH down, which is actually
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not helpful.
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So I wrote this paper called the Peter Tauter effect.
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It's called the blood-jerk reaction because when the pH goes up, it's trying to overcompensate
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0:34:40 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]e or acidic metabolic dietary respiratory environmental toxins that are being
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0:34:46 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] organ of the human body called the inner cystidium,
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which contains the 80% of the extracellular fluids, 20% in the blood.
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It's called the interstitial fluid.
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0:34:59 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e, how does the blood purify itself?
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Where does it get rid of its toxins?
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How does it maintain its alkaline design?
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Are those things being taught to medical doctors?
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Unfortunately, not.
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0:35:14 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]and compensated and they understand
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acidosis, alkalosis, decompensated acidosis.
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0:35:21 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] to that number rather than understanding
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0:35:28 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]s of dealing with this.
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If you're in decompensated acidosis, you're in trouble.
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0:35:37 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ed States, which has never reported
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0:35:42 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]emic sepsis.
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0:35:43 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]emic sepsis is caused by the overacidification of the interstitial
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0:35:49 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]idium that can't get it out through urination or defecation or
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respiration or perspiration.
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So guess what?
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0:35:58 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]atic pressure, it pushes it back in the blood and the blood starts becoming
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0:36:04 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]royed.
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And that's the cause of death.
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0:36:07 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]royed.
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0:36:12 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]itial fluids of the inner cystidium can be measured.
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How do you measure it?
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0:36:22 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ry of the blood?
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That's 20% of the extracellular fluids.
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Why don't they do a chemistry of the interstitial fluid, which is 80% of the extracellular
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fluids?
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They don't know how to do it.
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0:36:35 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]n't been trained to do it.
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They don't have the equipment to do it.
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Why?
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I've been doing this testing or having this testing done for two decades.
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0:36:49 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ion.
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So I discovered that if you do a urinalysis, that that urine that you're testing is a product of
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0:37:05 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]idium.
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0:37:09 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]itial fluid is a minimum of 8.4 in a healthy human being.
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Because what did I do?
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0:37:18 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]e?
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Yes.
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0:37:20 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]e.
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I want to know what healthy urine looks like.
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0:37:29 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ink it.
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I don't.
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It's a waste product.
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0:37:33 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] it.
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0:37:35 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ron-proton concentration.
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0:37:39 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] it for its pH.
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0:37:44 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] a urine pH running between 8.4 to 9,
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0:37:51 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]opping during human experiments when you eat something you shouldn't or drink something
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you shouldn't, where it drops below a pH of 7.2.
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0:38:04 --> 0:38:11
And I had the eureka experience, the eureka's experience when I realized
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0:38:13 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]arted losing alkalinity, when the body fluid, the body interstitial fluid,
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0:38:20 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]arted losing alkalinity, the stomach kicked in and started within its
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cover cells, drawing off carbon, which is, believe it or not, 90% of your carbon dioxide
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is not excelled.
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It's used by the stomach as an element, chloride, not chloride, but the CO2, CO2, carbon dioxide.
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90% of the carbon dioxide is not respirated, only around 10%.
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90% is used by the stomach in creating by the cells that are responsible for that,
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taking water and salt, i.e., why would the doctor ever tell you not to eat salt?
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That's crazy.
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Salt is a major element in producing sodium bicarbonate to manage and maintain the alkaline
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design of the blood, the interstitial fluids, and the intracellular fluids.
489
0:39:22 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]anding, you start measuring the pH, you become your own doctor,
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you manage it by supporting the alkaline design of the body the same way those who were being
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0:39:35 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ed during COVID or in the 1918 Spanish flu epidemic by taking 5 grams of sodium
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0:39:44 --> 0:39:50
bicarbonate baking soda in [privacy contact redaction]illed or purified water.
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0:39:50 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]e that survived the transfection or the injection
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of the so-called phantom virus, the influenza virus. It has never been purified or isolated.
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0:40:08 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]e that are doing better. What we did when I was growing up, I would take
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a Wilson, unfortunately, aluminum can, drop out the tennis balls, put in the water, and add salt
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0:40:25 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] the salt the body needs in order to maintain its
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alkaline design. Why? Because when you're exercising, when you're moving your body,
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you're producing an acid called lactic acid. Who's testing for lactic acid levels in the blood?
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Who's testing for lactic acid in the interstitial fluid?
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That acid is never absent in the presence of cancer. And when you reduce lactic acid,
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you eliminate the risk for cancer. Period. The other acid is citric acid. These are the
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0:41:09 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] a little background, some history.
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I'm grateful for the associations that I've had with Luc Montaner. We were keynote speakers in
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0:41:24 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ionally structured water, alkaline water, and the significance of
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that. That's crazy talk from a virologist. You can lose your license if you talk about alkalinity.
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0:41:40 --> 0:41:47
You know, as a point, functionally structured water, three to five molecule structures that
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can permeate the cell membrane, these are all very, very important. But Charles, I did provide
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a slide presentation. You can share your screen, Robert.
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So I can share that screen. I hope I'm not creating more questions than I'm answering.
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That could be. That's all right. We love this group.
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Robert, Rie Montaner, you said you were in Milan with him. That was in February of 2022,
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was it? Or 2021? No, no, no, I was with him in 2011. I've known him for many, many years.
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Did you know that he went to Milan about a week before he died?
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Yeah. Well, before he died, it's very important. And I'll cover that.
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And I'll show you a picture of this. I've got this here. I want to show you.
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So I think it's important that people like
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Duisburg and Luc Montaner be honoured. Absolutely. So, Robert, did Montaner say in Milan
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0:43:08 --> 0:43:20
one week before he died or was killed? No, no, no, this was 2011. He was not in Milan. He
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actually returned to Paris. No, he was in Milan just before his death.
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0:43:25 --> 0:43:33
Yeah, he went from Shanghai back to the university there. He went from there back to Paris.
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What I'm trying to get to is the question, did he or did he not say that the unvaccinated
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0:43:42 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] humanity one week before he died or was killed?
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0:43:46 --> 0:43:51
Well, he said a lot of things, and I think that's one of them. But even more important,
525
0:43:51 --> 0:44:00
he also said, not only just to me in 2011, but he said this publicly several months before he
526
0:44:00 --> 0:44:11
passed, that he had never purified an isolation of HIV. That was number one.
527
0:44:12 --> 0:44:20
Yeah, so how on earth did he win the Nobel Prize officially for the discovery of the HIV virus?
528
0:44:21 --> 0:44:28
Well, he had to come clean on that. I mean, isn't that what people do when they're on their
529
0:44:28 --> 0:44:34
deathbeds or near death? I mean, he wanted to clear the slate on that. In fact, what he did say
530
0:44:35 --> 0:44:45
was that it was not AIDS. This is not an acquired immune deficiency. This is VADES. This is vaccine
531
0:44:45 --> 0:44:58
acquired immune deficiency or damage or dysfunction. This is caused by the vaccine itself is what is
532
0:44:58 --> 0:45:09
causing the immune deficiency. You don't take a vaccine with foreign matter. And Bayshopt knew
533
0:45:09 --> 0:45:14
this. You cannot introduce foreign matter, either animal or human, chemical or otherwise.
534
0:45:15 --> 0:45:21
It'll immediately be rejected and attacked and provides no immunity whatsoever.
535
0:45:21 --> 0:45:30
But compromises the body's ability to be able to maintain, which is most important,
536
0:45:31 --> 0:45:40
because based on my premise, my hypothesis, the body is alkaline by design, but acidic by function
537
0:45:40 --> 0:45:46
and to maintain the alkaline design of the body fluids, which is the responsibility of the stomach,
538
0:45:46 --> 0:45:58
and of course, what we eat. So it's contributing to the things the body needs in order to produce
539
0:45:58 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And that's why those who simply use a natural substance, which cannot be patented
540
0:46:07 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] that Big Harm has been profiting,
541
0:46:13 --> 0:46:26
and that is patent something like NAHCO3 or CAHCO3. These are calcium, magnesium, potassium,
542
0:46:26 --> 0:46:35
sodium, bicarbonates that are critical to maintaining that alkalinity and that design.
543
0:46:35 --> 0:46:42
But Robert, what you said about Montagnier, surely the most important point from our point of view
544
0:46:43 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]and that on the one hand, Montagnier accepted the Nobel Prize when he knew
545
0:46:50 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ed him the Nobel Prize for nefarious reasons. Probably he knew that.
546
0:46:55 --> 0:47:00
And you say that he only admitted on his deathbed, but my understanding was that he was chipping
547
0:47:00 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] before his death in 2012.
548
0:47:05 --> 0:47:14
Way before, yes. I mean, he knew. And that's why he wanted to turn the direction of his research
549
0:47:14 --> 0:47:22
away from virology and into, you know, how do we create an environment that's conducive
550
0:47:23 --> 0:47:30
to, you know, cell life? Because the cell life, just like fish in a fish bowl,
551
0:47:31 --> 0:47:37
is only as healthy as the water it swims in. Cells are no different. Cells are only as healthy
552
0:47:37 --> 0:47:43
as the water that they thrive in. And there's very specific measurements of that.
553
0:47:43 --> 0:47:48
So, Robert, there's another story, which is very important. So you've raised some issues here.
554
0:47:48 --> 0:47:54
So Montagnier was approached by Kerry Mullis, no less, the inventor of the PCR technique,
555
0:47:55 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]ed the Nobel Prize 10 years after that invention or whatever you want to call
556
0:48:02 --> 0:48:10
it. Yes, discovery. So in 1993, he got the Nobel Prize for chemistry. He wrote a statement,
557
0:48:11 --> 0:48:18
the HIV virus is the probable cause of AIDS. So this was a state and then he looked as he,
558
0:48:18 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]s, I watched the video myself, he said that he tried to find a way of proving
559
0:48:26 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]atement. He couldn't find it. To his surprise, he couldn't,
560
0:48:32 --> 0:48:39
or said it was his to his surprise, he couldn't find anything that supported that statement.
561
0:48:40 --> 0:48:48
So he also commented on that. So eventually he came to Montagnier. So Kerry received the Nobel
562
0:48:48 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] finish. So he eventually gets to Montagnier. Robert. Yes, go ahead. So he gets to
563
0:48:55 --> 0:49:02
Montagnier. In Paris, apparently, he was surrounded by his henchmen or whatever, you know, the people,
564
0:49:02 --> 0:49:11
his colleagues. And he asked him about this statement. Could he provide a proof scientifically
565
0:49:11 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]atement? And so Montagnier, according to Kerry Mullis, said, well, he said, said, what
566
0:49:19 --> 0:49:23
about this paper, you know, and Kerry Mullis knew it. He said, no, that's not good enough.
567
0:49:24 --> 0:49:28
And what about this one? Montagnier said, that wasn't good enough either. This is Kerry Mullis
568
0:49:28 --> 0:49:39
speaking. And then he said that Montagnier walked away and left the group. And so he was surprised.
569
0:49:39 --> 0:49:44
I think he said that he was surprised that he walked away with no explanation to his colleagues
570
0:49:44 --> 0:49:49
or anything. So he was unable to answer the question. And I wonder whether Montagnier knew
571
0:49:49 --> 0:49:54
then, well, of course, he probably did know then that it was a fraud. But why did he go along with
572
0:49:54 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] a bad conscience later and then start speaking out and then eventually
573
0:50:00 --> 0:50:05
say, one week before he died? It's a very important story, I think.
574
0:50:06 --> 0:50:12
Yeah, it's very important, Stephen. And all I can tell you is what he said to me
575
0:50:13 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And, you know, why are you no longer at the university?
576
0:50:20 --> 0:50:32
What happened? And he had changed his position with that, and that was what lost him his position.
577
0:50:32 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] and cover up the fact that we had the Nobel laureate who won the prize
578
0:50:43 --> 0:50:46
for discovering something that he didn't do.
579
0:50:46 --> 0:50:54
Absolutely. But also, Robert, he probably understood that he was a central lynchpin,
580
0:50:54 --> 0:51:02
if you like, in the whole narrative of virology. But he went along with it. And so I think it's
581
0:51:02 --> 0:51:03
absolutely fascinating.
582
0:51:03 --> 0:51:06
Well, Stephen, can we let Robert do his presentation?
583
0:51:06 --> 0:51:09
Stephen, let Robert do his presentation.
584
0:51:09 --> 0:51:11
Let Robert do his presentation.
585
0:51:11 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ephen is on a good point because, you know, Carey Mollis also came to his confession
586
0:51:23 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ic tool and was never invented for the detailed study of DNA
587
0:51:30 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]es. Consequently, it cannot be used to diagnose infectious disease, period.
588
0:51:38 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]
589
0:51:39 --> 0:51:40
He absolutely said that.
590
0:51:40 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]s, not my words.
591
0:51:42 --> 0:51:43
Absolutely.
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0:51:43 --> 0:51:50
I can tell you that Luke believed that too. He knew that. That's why later in his life,
593
0:51:50 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]arted pushing this COVID virus, this corona, which stands for
594
0:51:57 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]inated routing nanotechnology.
595
0:52:02 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]inated routing,
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0:52:09 --> 0:52:20
corona, C-R-O-R-O-N-A, that's nanotechnology. This was a coordinated effort to literally
597
0:52:21 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]inated. It had routing capabilities.
598
0:52:28 --> 0:52:35
Therefore, it could be, you know, out of the mouths of other people like Klaus Schwab
599
0:52:36 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] Noah Harari. They said it themselves, humans are now hackable. No, humans are now
600
0:52:46 --> 0:52:55
hackable. We are currently, with human consciousness support and their resources, we are studying
601
0:52:55 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]inated routing nanotechnology that has been injected into
602
0:53:04 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ed, whether by mosquito, tick, water, air, food, sanitation,
603
0:53:14 --> 0:53:18
painkillers, what have you, nutraceutical, pharmaceuticals, they've got it in everything.
604
0:53:19 --> 0:53:33
They don't list it. This coordinated routing nanotechnology is in 90% of everyone that we have
605
0:53:33 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] the evidence. We're going to have this peer reviewed and published.
606
0:53:43 --> 0:53:51
So, you know, Judy, Judy Mikovits has come a long way on this as well.
607
0:53:54 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] I want to introduce a new word to you, not infection, but outfection.
608
0:54:03 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] complete control over that if we manage
609
0:54:12 --> 0:54:18
and maintain the internal environment, particularly the body ocean, and it's simple and it's
610
0:54:18 --> 0:54:31
inexpensive. So, you know, she's come a long ways. Terry Mollis came a long ways. I don't think his
611
0:54:31 --> 0:54:40
death was an accident. Absolutely. You know, here again, I think it was a play. Yeah, so he had to
612
0:54:40 --> 0:54:47
be dead and he did die, was killed, in my opinion, in August 2019. Otherwise, [privacy contact redaction]
613
0:54:47 --> 0:54:59
happened if he had been alive. Yeah, yeah. So, just this year, I've written six books, and I tell you
614
0:54:59 --> 0:55:04
that because two of the books are on this coordinated routing technology.
615
0:55:04 --> 0:55:08
Hey, Robert, share the-
616
0:55:08 --> 0:55:15
Triforce is deception. Charity. I mean, we're losing our freedom, folks. So, the Truth Book 1,
617
0:55:15 --> 0:55:22
Truth Book 2, you know, 3 and 4, Let Freedom Ring, based upon, you can figure that one out,
618
0:55:23 --> 0:55:30
but two cancer books. Because cancer is a symptom of what I'm talking about. The body's inability
619
0:55:30 --> 0:55:35
to maintain the alkaline design of the body fluids. It's not a cellular problem.
620
0:55:38 --> 0:55:47
It's an environmental problem. And the two main poisons that cause cancer is lactic and citric
621
0:55:47 --> 0:55:55
acid. Well, there's other ones, but those are the two main ones. And so, I want to give you as much
622
0:55:55 --> 0:56:10
information as I can. And so, this paper I did here again helps you to have some of this
623
0:56:10 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]oring the Alkalarian Lifestyle, a Comprehensive Review of Dr. Robert
624
0:56:16 --> 0:56:24
O. Young's Health Paradigm. So, my methodology is to look at the last 20 years of my life
625
0:56:24 --> 0:56:29
and consolidate this, because I've got over 100 books, I have over 3000 papers,
626
0:56:30 --> 0:56:42
and it's overwhelming. And so, I've limited this down then to these papers. The five most
627
0:56:42 --> 0:56:48
important peer reviewed, now I have to say the six or seven or eighth most important ones
628
0:56:48 --> 0:56:58
that I want to give to all those who hear my voice. I'm not looking for money. I'm looking to educate,
629
0:57:00 --> 0:57:07
not to medicate, but to educate. And so, who had their finger on the magic of life?
630
0:57:08 --> 0:57:16
Was it Gary Mullis? Was it Peter Duisburg? Was it, you know, Luc Montenay?
631
0:57:17 --> 0:57:25
They came, they gradually got there, but not really. And that's why the discovery of the work,
632
0:57:25 --> 0:57:31
especially Lace microzymas from the University of Paris, the medical library there, I wrote this
633
0:57:32 --> 0:57:38
paper and published it, who had their finger on the magic of life. And what we have is a battle
634
0:57:38 --> 0:57:47
here between virology and germ theory mentality, which is based upon a false premise, versus the
635
0:57:47 --> 0:57:55
terrain theory, versus the environmental theory. So, if you look at one of the most important
636
0:57:55 --> 0:58:01
papers that I wrote then, I told you about it, it's called the Newy-Jerk or Blood-Jerk Reaction,
637
0:58:01 --> 0:58:07
A Rise in Alkalinity of the pH. Why does the pH go up before it drops drastically down?
638
0:58:10 --> 0:58:15
No one's answered that. This paper answers this. It's a defensive mechanism
639
0:58:15 --> 0:58:19
to preserve the integrity of the environment so you don't die.
640
0:58:19 --> 0:58:24
If you want to prevent neurological problems, those are symptoms. Heart problems, those are
641
0:58:24 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] the environment. You have to protect the fluids of the body.
642
0:58:30 --> 0:58:36
That's why I have this diagram in here. So people can understand that the largest organ of the human
643
0:58:36 --> 0:58:44
body is not the skin, it's the inner-stestidium. And that word inner-stestidium was made up of
644
0:58:44 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]e in America in 2018, 2019 to describe this organ that is not even known by most people.
645
0:59:03 --> 0:59:10
We learned it in Germany, thank God, to Dr. Enderlin and Dr. Marie Blecker. We learned about
646
0:59:10 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ive tissue of the shot. I learned about that in the 80s.
647
0:59:15 --> 0:59:24
What was it? That was the largest organ. It's a collection place where the blood can purify
648
0:59:24 --> 0:59:32
itself, the cells can purify itself and protect the body cells that make up our organs and glands
649
0:59:32 --> 0:59:43
and tissues. That's what that paper's about. But I had something happen in early 2021. I was
650
0:59:43 --> 0:59:56
proposed an offering to look at some of the vials that were being injected, the material that was
651
0:59:56 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ed. And so I was given Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vials.
652
1:00:04 --> 1:00:11
And I did research and continue to do research up until about June or July of 2021
653
1:00:14 --> 1:00:20
using different methodology, high resolution, phase contrast,
654
1:00:21 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] transition or transmission electron microscopy coupled with EDS, electron
655
1:00:33 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ed energy, x-ray fluorescence. That's the long version of the name of this technology
656
1:00:39 --> 1:00:45
mirrored together because I wanted to know specifically what was in this. And we're talking
657
1:00:45 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]uff under a compound microscope.
658
1:00:53 --> 1:00:57
Anyone that's saying they're seeing graphene in the blood using dark field and phase contrast
659
1:00:57 --> 1:01:02
that's not coupled to either scanning or transmission electron microscopy
660
1:01:03 --> 1:01:08
is looking at some greater organization, which we'd only know what it was if we were doing
661
1:01:08 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ing. So that would be Raman testing or it would be EDS testing, electron
662
1:01:20 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ed energy, DES, directed energy x-ray microscopy testing. And so this abstract then
663
1:01:30 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]us elements that I found in these vaccines.
664
1:01:39 --> 1:01:45
That guess what, folks? They weren't disclosed by any of the pharmaceutical companies.
665
1:01:46 --> 1:01:55
They were non-disclosed. And in fact, when this work came out where they were talking about
666
1:01:56 --> 1:02:07
a peer-reviewed article that was censored by Lancet, 73.9% of autopsies, they wanted to know,
667
1:02:07 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] relationship between the inoculation and the COVID vaccine and doing the
668
1:02:15 --> 1:02:24
autopsy? And of course, they found that, yes, these people were poisoned. They weren't infected.
669
1:02:25 --> 1:02:30
They were poisoned. I'm not going to get into some of these other details here,
670
1:02:30 --> 1:02:35
even though they're interesting, such as the doctrine of pleomorphism, that literally,
671
1:02:36 --> 1:02:44
when you introduce me, this is what I was seeing happening to blood that would actually
672
1:02:44 --> 1:02:53
transform, biologically transform into E. coli, into anthrax, and evolve into yeast.
673
1:02:54 --> 1:02:59
You know what I'm going, wait a minute. I thought yeast and bacteria were their own little species.
674
1:02:59 --> 1:03:06
They're not. They're transformation of anatomical elements that make up our body cells that evolve,
675
1:03:06 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction] like the food in the refrigerator, but it's not maintained based on temperature.
676
1:03:13 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]arts evolving and what shows up? It's a transformation or a pleomorphism of that matter
677
1:03:19 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]eria, yeast, and mold. And so I described this in 1994 on someone who was diagnosed with
678
1:03:27 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ein-Barr virus that has never been purified or isolated. That's just a name for a treatment
679
1:03:35 --> 1:03:42
that has nothing to do with a virus and everything to do with the environment or the context. That's
680
1:03:42 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]op treating disease and start paying attention to your internal environment
681
1:03:49 --> 1:03:56
and your external environment. And that was the basis of all this. So I can show you what that
682
1:03:56 --> 1:04:05
looks like. If we looked at it, here's a slide of, I did videotape this, so it's not like I
683
1:04:06 --> 1:04:07
could be accused of.
684
1:04:10 --> 1:04:18
Here it is right here. See if we can turn up the volume here. But what you're seeing are
685
1:04:18 --> 1:04:23
codocytes. These are red blood cells. They're targeted red blood cells. And you're seeing a
686
1:04:23 --> 1:04:31
rod-like bacterium, or could be identified as a bacterium, evolve or transform into
687
1:04:32 --> 1:04:43
a red blood cell. You see, there's memory here. And it's not directed by genetics. It's directed
688
1:04:43 --> 1:04:52
by epigenetics. Genetics does not determine your future, does not determine your life expectancy.
689
1:04:52 --> 1:04:59
It is the epigenetics outside of that environment that determines the life of the cell. And that
690
1:04:59 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ed to Alexis Carell a Nobel Prize for determining after 20 years of keeping a chicken
691
1:05:07 --> 1:05:13
heart alive for 20 years by changing the environment, maintaining the environment.
692
1:05:15 --> 1:05:22
It was all environmental terrain to keep the chicken heart alive. It was he that discovered
693
1:05:22 --> 1:05:31
he that discovered that a human cell can live forever if you manage and maintain the proper
694
1:05:31 --> 1:05:38
environment. That was an important discovery for me to see because I had no comprehension
695
1:05:39 --> 1:05:45
at that time of Antoine Baillamp. I knew about Enderlin, Gunther Enderlin, the German scientist,
696
1:05:45 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ion to when everything is cremated and everything is gone or evaporated,
697
1:05:58 --> 1:06:07
what is left? Indestructible matter. This is where life is. Not in the genetics, but in the tiny
698
1:06:07 --> 1:06:13
the tiny nano anatomical elements that make up every living thing.
699
1:06:14 --> 1:06:20
This is what can organize and disorganize. So on the law of physics, nothing can be destroyed.
700
1:06:22 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]royed, only organized or disorganized. So there's no death.
701
1:06:29 --> 1:06:36
There's only transformation. There's only change. There's only change. And when you get that,
702
1:06:36 --> 1:06:42
then you realize that you are in control of the quality and quantity of your life.
703
1:06:44 --> 1:06:51
And so when I was in Paris at the university taking and taking out books that have been
704
1:06:51 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]eds of years and looking at a book that literally brought me to
705
1:07:00 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ual experiments showing biological transformation
706
1:07:08 --> 1:07:19
of which Bayes-Champ battled Pasteur on this and failed. No one understood that matter
707
1:07:19 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]royed. It could only change its form or function.
708
1:07:25 --> 1:07:31
The original theory for genetic material is right here.
709
1:07:33 --> 1:07:46
That's where they developed this cartoon of our helix. Here again, from this to this
710
1:07:47 --> 1:07:50
to cartoon. This is the original.
711
1:07:55 --> 1:08:07
So how much did Deusburg know? It's hard to say. In fact, he was moving away from the science or
712
1:08:07 --> 1:08:16
the so-called science of virology and phantom. Phantom, phantom, they do not exist, viruses.
713
1:08:16 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]itutions around the world, including the FDA, including
714
1:08:25 --> 1:08:33
the CDC, and asking for any evidence based upon the scientific method where they can show
715
1:08:35 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] purified and isolation for any virus. And we've asked them about HIV,
716
1:08:41 --> 1:08:50
we've asked them about influenza, we've asked them about the cox, the coxes, the monkey pox,
717
1:08:52 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] no evidence whatsoever. If you want to see those letters,
718
1:09:00 --> 1:09:10
if you want to see them speaking that they have nothing, no evidence that validates the efficacy
719
1:09:10 --> 1:09:18
of virology. It's pretty extreme. Now this is very important. So this came out in October.
720
1:09:20 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] 55 undeclared chemical elements found in COVID-[privacy contact redaction]ual...
721
1:09:28 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]raZeneca, CanSino, Moderna, Pfizer, Sinopharm, the Sputnik, Russia, China, all of
722
1:09:36 --> 1:09:48
these. They're all here again using the same technology, the same theory of providing immunity.
723
1:09:48 --> 1:09:54
And here again, what we have is they identified over 55 countries,
724
1:09:54 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] is they identified over 55 compounds that were not declared on the white sheets of
725
1:10:04 --> 1:10:12
the pharmaceuticals. So we had 55 undeclared chemical elements found in the COVID-19 vaccines
726
1:10:12 --> 1:10:20
and all of them contained all kinds of things from aluminum. The concerning one was the,
727
1:10:20 --> 1:10:27
here among them, undeclared elements were detected 11 of 15 cytotoxic lanthanides
728
1:10:29 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]ronic capabilities and optogenetics capability.
729
1:10:35 --> 1:10:42
So that's quite concerning. That's why I love the fact that Bobby Kennedy
730
1:10:42 --> 1:10:50
is heading up, and I hope this happens, to really look at all this
731
1:10:51 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] we deliver health. And take a hard look at the theory that
732
1:11:03 --> 1:11:10
you're not sick, you don't have a disease, you've been chemically poisoned or you've been radiated.
733
1:11:10 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] you been poisoned? Well, we identified with that. And so in 2021,
734
1:11:18 --> 1:11:27
I knew that there were over 21 different compounds, elements that were inside these inoculations
735
1:11:28 --> 1:11:34
at different percentages. And I published this. It was actually peer reviewed, took a year to
736
1:11:35 --> 1:11:41
publish it, and it was finally published. And these charts are available. How many people have
737
1:11:41 --> 1:11:49
read this article? Well, before it was published, it was around 1.[privacy contact redaction]e. It was a seminal
738
1:11:49 --> 1:12:00
work that was published in 2021, peer reviewed, and then published again in 2022. But you can see,
739
1:12:00 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction], there's aluminum there, there's copper there, there's titanium there,
740
1:12:08 --> 1:12:14
there's a lot of metals, there's a lot of compounds, polyethylene glycol, etc., etc.
741
1:12:14 --> 1:12:18
That was one of the disclosed elements, but these were the things that were found.
742
1:12:20 --> 1:12:26
I'm going to pass through this. And this technology here, if we see its ability,
743
1:12:26 --> 1:12:33
those lanthanides, if we actually see their capability at the
744
1:12:36 --> 1:12:42
micro and milli micron and milli micron levels, you can actually see some of this
745
1:12:43 --> 1:12:50
self-assembly capability. And this was not only my discovery, but Yale University posted
746
1:12:51 --> 1:12:56
what they had discovered. And I'm going to show that. It's called Tesla-Foresis. And the ability
747
1:12:56 --> 1:13:02
of these elements that were found in the inoculations to literally self-assemble themselves
748
1:13:04 --> 1:13:17
into receivers, transmitters, starting out as nanotechnology. They're called nanobots or nanodots.
749
1:13:17 --> 1:13:26
So using high-resolution scanning and transmission microscopy, we're able to look at
750
1:13:27 --> 1:13:33
some of these elements. We're able to look at aluminum, able to look at graphene, able to look
751
1:13:36 --> 1:13:43
at spike proteins. And spike protein, by the way, is a symptom of cellular breakdown.
752
1:13:44 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]art losing their surface charge and they start transforming, they become what are
753
1:13:55 --> 1:14:02
called acanthocytes, and that's corrugated like berry-like cells. But then as the process continues,
754
1:14:02 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]art spiking, and these vescules break off and become what is known as spike protein.
755
1:14:09 --> 1:14:13
This can happen very easily with chemical and radiation poisoning.
756
1:14:16 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] this in 3D. So about six to eight months ago, I was introduced to
757
1:14:24 --> 1:14:32
a company, because it's one thing to talk about the pollution or to theorize what happened and
758
1:14:33 --> 1:14:40
how did it happen or why did it happen, but I wanted to find a solution. I'm a solution-oriented
759
1:14:40 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] So I was introduced to a product through a gentleman. His name is Matt Hazen.
760
1:14:49 --> 1:14:57
He is the head of a company called Human Consciousness Support. I'm not an officer,
761
1:14:57 --> 1:15:04
I'm not a director. I'm an interested party because I'm interested in myself, my family,
762
1:15:04 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]en, and I'm interested in what they had. Using HR10 transmission electron microscopy and
763
1:15:19 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ed energy x-ray fluorescent spectroscopy, he was able to do a very interesting
764
1:15:27 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ruct of a mineral called zeolite. I looked at it,
765
1:15:40 --> 1:15:47
and I said, this looks a lot like graphene. I said, graphene is hexagonal,
766
1:15:48 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction], but the difference is the surface charge. It's positive.
767
1:15:54 --> 1:16:07
The zeta potential of zeolite is negatively charged. It was like a puzzle. I said, oh my
768
1:16:07 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ns, this is good news. This could be the antidote for chemical and radiation poisoning.
769
1:16:13 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]erpiece it's called. And just recently, after readjusting
770
1:16:30 --> 1:16:39
the pH and the ORP in a patent that is patent pending right now, I noticed that from the
771
1:16:39 --> 1:16:47
original formulation here to the changes in pH, it increased the zeta potential,
772
1:16:47 --> 1:16:54
increased the surface area, which thus increased the surface charge. And so I started testing
773
1:16:54 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]s out there that were testing positive instead of negative with a low pH
774
1:17:03 --> 1:17:16
around 2.7 to 3.1. And that was altered when I introduced the technology to be able to alter
775
1:17:16 --> 1:17:24
the pH, alter the ORP, alter the structure, increase surface area. And that's what you see
776
1:17:25 --> 1:17:35
here at high resolution. This is high resolution at 0.1 to 0.2 nanometers. This is subatomic,
777
1:17:36 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ron microscopy, phase contrast,
778
1:17:43 --> 1:17:51
micrograph at a scale of 2.54 centimeters, so one inch equals [privacy contact redaction]uff is really,
779
1:17:51 --> 1:17:58
really small, making it transdermal, meaning that you take it under the tongue, it goes right into
780
1:17:58 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]itial fluid is this big ocean that carries it through
781
1:18:02 --> 1:18:08
everything else. It can go into the blood, yes, it can go into the interstitial fluid.
782
1:18:09 --> 1:18:16
Then I took the experiment a little bit further. What if I took some aluminum beads or graphene
783
1:18:16 --> 1:18:24
beads and I introduced that to this material? What would happen? Well, it'd act like any
784
1:18:24 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]romagnetic with a surface charge of negative, with a surface charge of positive.
785
1:18:30 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ed it in its multi-dimensional, you can see it here, its multi-dimensional
786
1:18:39 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] It's not just theory. That's an illustration, by the way. This is not an
787
1:18:48 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ration. You can see here, two-dimensional, you can see the surface area, and you can see
788
1:18:59 --> 1:19:03
what happens when you introduce a chemical poison.
789
1:19:03 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]s that. Now, zeolite is indigestible. So if it locks onto it, it's like a net. It
790
1:19:12 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ed it, it locks it, and the body's going to get rid of it. And guess what? That was the
791
1:19:18 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ed. And so we not only tested it, we then published our results,
792
1:19:26 --> 1:19:29
which were also peer-reviewed. A little higher magnification, a little lower
793
1:19:29 --> 1:19:44
magnification. It's another micrograph. This is an illustration of what I saw in the collection.
794
1:19:46 --> 1:19:51
These are graphene or aluminum, titanium. They all look very similar. The only way you can
795
1:19:51 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]roscopy, using directed energy, x-ray, fluorescent
796
1:19:57 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]roscopy, to be able to identify the difference. So I could have put a lot of
797
1:20:02 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]s in there. These are dots. They're nanosides. You can see how small they are
798
1:20:11 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ing onto this. So this is very exciting, because now you have a solution to the pollutions.
799
1:20:21 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ion came up, if it will chelate graphene, will it chelate aluminum? Will it
800
1:20:30 --> 1:20:38
chelate titanium oxide? Will it chelate? And the list went on. And we added up, okay, there's 80,000
801
1:20:39 --> 1:20:44
poisons. Let's take the ones that most people know are the ones that we're most interested in.
802
1:20:45 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ing for that. And every single case,
803
1:20:51 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]erpiece with this patented zeolite Z, Z standing for zeta potential,
804
1:20:58 --> 1:21:03
adsorbed and then absorbed the material and took it into his body. And guess what happened to
805
1:21:04 --> 1:21:10
the levels? What happened to the levels? I'll come down here.
806
1:21:10 --> 1:21:12
Come back to some of this here in a minute.
807
1:21:15 --> 1:21:23
So fairly what happened in this published paper here? Here we started seeing these levels go down.
808
1:21:25 --> 1:21:33
So the baseline, these were graphene oxide. We also tested for aluminum. You'll see it was added.
809
1:21:33 --> 1:21:40
You'll see it was added. Aluminum here, glyphosate, iron, lindane,
810
1:21:42 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ene, which is burnt, which is a wartime restricted chemical, was used in World War I.
811
1:21:53 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ane sulfates and acids. These we saw that in our charts that all the levels
812
1:22:05 --> 1:22:16
started coming down, started coming down after 35 days and after [privacy contact redaction]ed.
813
1:22:17 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]amatic. And so I took that information and I said, well, how much
814
1:22:23 --> 1:22:31
is these things coming down? So polypropylene, hydrogel, polyethylene glycol,
815
1:22:33 --> 1:22:41
forever chemicals, microplastics, nanotechnology, titanium, aluminum, etc., etc. How much are they
816
1:22:41 --> 1:22:48
coming down? And in that case, we were seeing here five substances, aluminum,
817
1:22:50 --> 1:22:59
over 50% of the aluminum within 45 to 90 days. I mean, who gets aluminum out of the brain?
818
1:23:00 --> 1:23:05
We're seeing this in hair testing because we're offering hair testing.
819
1:23:05 --> 1:23:14
Because where does aluminum go? Where does titanium oxide go? It goes out through the pores
820
1:23:14 --> 1:23:21
and into the hair. So we can take hair, we can test for it, and we're seeing remarkable results
821
1:23:22 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]ing, in the elimination of the body just throwing away the aluminum.
822
1:23:29 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]ing in the elimination of the body just throwing this stuff out. It's being released
823
1:23:39 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]erpiece Zeolite Z under the tongue twice a day based on a
824
1:23:47 --> 1:23:56
man or a woman who weighs [privacy contact redaction] a child, it's less. If you have a cat, it's
825
1:23:56 --> 1:24:07
less. But they're being transfected. So it's not my offer because it's not my company.
826
1:24:08 --> 1:24:16
I'm just excited to share this solution because I take it. My family takes it. My children,
827
1:24:16 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]en take this. And it's getting phenomenal results across the board. And so
828
1:24:25 --> 1:24:30
when we're concerned about turbo cancers, which are based on chemical poisoning,
829
1:24:31 --> 1:24:37
and I've listed some of those, aluminum, deriterium, phosting, polyethylene glycol,
830
1:24:38 --> 1:24:45
these numbers are going up because of chemical poisoning. For those who have not been inoculated,
831
1:24:45 --> 1:24:52
it's being transfected through being around someone who has been vaccinated back to Luc
832
1:24:52 --> 1:25:01
Montaner, the vaccinated people can pick up nanotechnology from someone who sneezes, yes? And
833
1:25:01 --> 1:25:07
it could be adsorb and absorbed into the body. But it's now in our water. It's now in our food.
834
1:25:07 --> 1:25:17
It's now in our air and it's being chemtrailed. So back to this, this is, see,
835
1:25:18 --> 1:25:28
look, if you want to do, and there's only three or four places in the state of California where I am,
836
1:25:29 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ing, not hair testing, we're talking about
837
1:25:35 --> 1:25:43
HR, TAM, and directed energy combined together, spectroscopy. Just for one thin sample,
838
1:25:44 --> 1:25:52
you're going to spend between $1,500 to $5,[privacy contact redaction], for one metal.
839
1:25:55 --> 1:26:05
And Los Angeles has a lab, Irvine has a lab, Berkeley has a lab. These labs are there and
840
1:26:05 --> 1:26:09
they will take your business if you want to know if you've been graphinated, if you've been
841
1:26:09 --> 1:26:18
illuminated. And I can give you their names and I can give you their websites so you can go.
842
1:26:19 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s in England, there are places in Germany. We used a German lab to do a lot of our
843
1:26:26 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ing. And I'm sad to say that they're no longer doing it because they were
844
1:26:34 --> 1:26:40
shut down for doing what they did. There's not a clear licensed lab in the United States
845
1:26:40 --> 1:26:48
that I know of that will do this kind of testing, intracellular testing. But there may be hope.
846
1:26:48 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s a university, the work that was done in Spain was done by the
847
1:26:59 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] the money to do this because the equipment is very
848
1:27:05 --> 1:27:11
expensive. The combination of that, you're going to spend between $1,000,000 and $1,000,000 and $5,000,000
849
1:27:11 --> 1:27:17
for the kind of equipment that you need to do this kind of testing. So that's why I like this hair
850
1:27:17 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ing, folks. And this guy's been doing this for 15 years and he's in England.
851
1:27:24 --> 1:27:32
Okay. And he can take, you just take, you get a packet, you put a little piece of hair, your hair
852
1:27:32 --> 1:27:38
in there from the back, and you send it and you get this super duper report that's going to show
853
1:27:38 --> 1:27:44
all of these chemical poisons, not all of them, but the majority of them. And then you can then
854
1:27:44 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] and see the results of that. Now that would be valuable for someone to have that done. That's
855
1:27:53 --> 1:27:58
called prevention. And maybe someone's already sick and they said, look, I don't have time,
856
1:27:58 --> 1:28:03
I don't have the money, I'm just going to start taking the antidote to the poison.
857
1:28:04 --> 1:28:14
And that's okay too. That's a good way to go. But I just wanted to make you aware of that.
858
1:28:14 --> 1:28:22
Of course, when we're dealing with 5G, we have some good news. Peru is taking down all their 5G
859
1:28:22 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]e in power that says, okay, we're not bowing down to the
860
1:28:30 --> 1:28:41
corporation. 5G is coming totally down, completely. That's important. It's important that you social
861
1:28:41 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]ance yourself from a lot of this. If you want to be healthy, and of course, that's something
862
1:28:49 --> 1:28:57
that you'll need to consider. Because when we look at the technology and the connection,
863
1:28:57 --> 1:29:02
the cell tower to your brain, why would it be the brain? Because of the nanotechnology,
864
1:29:02 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]inated routing nanotechnology that's in your brain, that's in your heart,
865
1:29:07 --> 1:29:15
that's in your reproductive organs. It's all been directed. Somebody asked me, why is there so little
866
1:29:16 --> 1:29:26
genetic material in these inoculations? Because it's not about mRNA. MRI is the information to drive
867
1:29:27 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ogel, the lipid capsid, to specific bodies, to specific body parts. And that's what it does.
868
1:29:39 --> 1:29:45
So you can take the inoculation, you can tag it with MRI from cell lines from specific organs
869
1:29:45 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] it to the heart, drive it to the reproductive organs, or drive it to the brain.
870
1:29:52 --> 1:30:00
And that's what's going on there. I do want to show you some Tesla paresis if I can here.
871
1:30:00 --> 1:30:06
Oh, by the way, the weight loss products that people are injecting, it's all loaded with
872
1:30:06 --> 1:30:13
nanotechnology, all loaded with coordinated routing technology. What a way to lose weight.
873
1:30:16 --> 1:30:19
This is what it looks like under fluorescence when it starts organizing.
874
1:30:24 --> 1:30:26
So what else did I want to share with you?
875
1:30:29 --> 1:30:36
Nothing on monkeypox. I mean, that's just another more of the same thing. You may want to look very
876
1:30:36 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ions that I hear. Does the stomach digest food? The answer is no.
877
1:30:43 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]omach? I think I've defined that. Does the stomach produce sodium
878
1:30:47 --> 1:30:55
bicarbonate, potassium bicarbonate, magnesium, calcium in bicarbonate forms? What is the true
879
1:30:55 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]omach? What is the true purpose of the intestines? Does digestion and the
880
1:31:00 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] in the small intestine? The answer to these questions
881
1:31:06 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]em in the human body? Yes, it's called your teeth.
882
1:31:13 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]omach? True pH should be no less than 7.2, other than when they're
883
1:31:20 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ing, they're testing the after effect because the byproduct of the cover cells producing sodium
884
1:31:25 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ochloric acid, which falls away into the gastric pits and
885
1:31:32 --> 1:31:39
never even touches the food you eat. So the stomach does not digest food.
886
1:31:41 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]omach? 7.[privacy contact redaction]omach?
887
1:31:47 --> 1:31:53
Well, right now for most people in the way they're living and eating, it's down around 1.5 to 3.
888
1:31:53 --> 1:32:01
That's why the number one symptomology of acidic toxemia is caused by what you eat,
889
1:32:01 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ink, and what you breathe. So here again, the stomach doesn't digest that piece of
890
1:32:09 --> 1:32:15
meat you eat. And how do we know that? You can do a simple experiment. Eat a piece of corn,
891
1:32:16 --> 1:32:23
don't chew it, swallow it, and watch what comes out the other end. You can do that with spinach.
892
1:32:23 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]s, eat them, and watch what comes out. They will not liquefy. Nothing liquefies in
893
1:32:30 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]omach doesn't digest it. The pancreas and the gallbladder all secrete
894
1:32:40 --> 1:32:49
a pH of 8.4. Sodium bicarbonate and bile is at a pH of 8.4, which is the ideal pH of the small intestine.
895
1:32:51 --> 1:32:57
That's when you start making healthy stem cells, which are made in the crypts of the small intestine.
896
1:32:58 --> 1:33:06
So that book is called A New Theory, The Physiology of the Stomach. I'm not going to go into it today,
897
1:33:07 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] want you to make you aware of this. This is what healthy blood should look like
898
1:33:14 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] using a compound microscope. We're looking at electron microscopy,
899
1:33:21 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] went through this. I wanted to show you Tesla-Faresis.
900
1:33:27 --> 1:33:33
All this is in a report that's been peer reviewed, that has been published, and
901
1:33:34 --> 1:33:42
you can find out more of this information on your analysis or in hair testing to help you monitor
902
1:33:43 --> 1:33:49
the internal environment of your body, which is here again a body of water.
903
1:33:50 --> 1:33:53
A body of water. Let's see if I can find this.
904
1:33:55 --> 1:34:01
So here are some of the papers that we talked about today that I'm going to provide with you.
905
1:34:04 --> 1:34:10
For healthy cats, healthy dogs, any animal can use this solution to the pollution.
906
1:34:10 --> 1:34:22
There's the pH hydrant paper, 4.5 to 9. Purposely set that low point and high point
907
1:34:22 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]amatic because of the human diet, the human lifestyle.
908
1:34:29 --> 1:34:37
So for $20, you can get [privacy contact redaction] this out.
909
1:34:40 --> 1:34:46
Charles, can I go back up here and just see if I can find, since I've mentioned it three times,
910
1:34:46 --> 1:34:57
Tesla-Faresis and the organization of nanotechnology into larger constructs.
911
1:34:58 --> 1:35:04
I think it's important for people to see this. This is coming from a major university.
912
1:35:05 --> 1:35:07
I'll see if I can find it here.
913
1:35:08 --> 1:35:11
If it's a major university, it must be a woke university.
914
1:35:14 --> 1:35:26
Yeah. Yeah. So here we go. Here's the Tesla-Faresis video. I think it's important to watch this.
915
1:35:35 --> 1:35:40
Tesla-Faresis, which is a discovery we made several years ago and we've been developing it.
916
1:35:50 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]n't got the sound, Romit.
917
1:35:53 --> 1:35:59
What you're seeing here is activation by frequency, light frequency.
918
1:35:59 --> 1:36:07
There's a lot of nanotubes around, so we decided to use nanotubes. What we discovered
919
1:36:08 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ring together and form wires by themselves on this
920
1:36:13 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ric field. This fundamental idea of force acting at a distance that you can have instead of
921
1:36:26 --> 1:36:31
when you've normally built circuits and things like that, you have to have physical contact.
922
1:36:31 --> 1:36:35
Now we're talking about the circuits without actually touching.
923
1:36:42 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ually do this if you designed it in a way to create
924
1:36:48 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]rong force field in front of it. That was the engineering aspect.
925
1:36:53 --> 1:36:57
And then once I designed the machine, then all sorts of discoveries started falling out.
926
1:36:59 --> 1:37:04
Tesla-Faresis is one of those things. It's a project that there are just so many avenues,
927
1:37:04 --> 1:37:10
so many things that I think you can do with it. Not just making conductive wires, but taking it
928
1:37:10 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] biomedical engineering, but taking it into
929
1:37:16 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ries like silicon ships or exploring different conductive materials.
930
1:37:22 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] generally in nanotechnologies that self-assembly is very big.
931
1:37:30 --> 1:37:36
That is, if you can get things to build themselves, just as in biology, we build ourselves.
932
1:37:36 --> 1:37:41
When my son saw it, he called them webs. He thought it was like Spider-Man shooting webs out.
933
1:37:41 --> 1:37:44
And it really is. It's very much like a web stringing out together.
934
1:37:45 --> 1:37:47
And that was a surprising finding.
935
1:37:49 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ers of this nanotechnology that's actually spiking out like antenna,
936
1:38:00 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] like in the video, the Tesla-Faresis. It can self-organize itself, which brings me to this
937
1:38:08 --> 1:38:13
quote, humans are now hackable animals. The whole idea that humans have this solar spirit,
938
1:38:13 --> 1:38:20
free will, that's over. Today we have the technology to hack human beings on a massive scale.
939
1:38:20 --> 1:38:23
Everything is being digitized. Everything is being monitored.
940
1:38:24 --> 1:38:29
That was reconfirmed by the World Economic Forum. These technologies will operate within our own
941
1:38:29 --> 1:38:37
biology, our own bodies, within our bodies, and change how we interface with the world.
942
1:38:37 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] based on aluminum, titanium, copper, a lot of different elements, arrays of full
943
1:38:45 --> 1:38:52
computers with antennas, each much smaller than a grain of sand, can now organize themselves inside
944
1:38:52 --> 1:39:02
the body. Here it is inside the body. Here it is inside the body, organizing itself inside the body.
945
1:39:02 --> 1:39:13
Disease X. Here it is inside the body. And so I'm grateful for those other scientists who just
946
1:39:13 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ober, validated my work that I had published in 2021 and then 2022.
947
1:39:23 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]y because when we're looking at hydrogel,
948
1:39:33 --> 1:39:40
when we're looking at try Panisoma cruce parasites, which we found in the Moderna and also in
949
1:39:40 --> 1:39:49
the Pfizer, and when we looked at this using directed energy X-ray fluorescent,
950
1:39:51 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ually see this try Panisoma cruce parasite and testing it using
951
1:40:02 --> 1:40:09
EDS, using directed energy X-ray microscopy, what did we see?
952
1:40:10 --> 1:40:17
We found graphene, we found iron, we found copper, we found aluminum encrusted on that,
953
1:40:17 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] like barnacles on a boat. This is swimming inside the body. So these are the concerns
954
1:40:26 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]e need to wake up to and realize that very simply that sickness and disease
955
1:40:36 --> 1:40:45
are symptoms of an imbalance that is reflected by the internal environment that is out of balance,
956
1:40:45 --> 1:40:54
that can be measured and controlled without taking medications, without taking more chemicals
957
1:40:54 --> 1:41:00
to deal with a particular symptomology, which cannot resolve the chemical poisoning.
958
1:41:00 --> 1:41:07
So I'm going to say it very simply so everybody hears it. You are not sick, you've been poisoned.
959
1:41:12 --> 1:41:20
Very good. Robert, beautifully put, you are not sick, you have been poisoned, and you reinforced
960
1:41:20 --> 1:41:28
what I learned in [privacy contact redaction] naturopath in Melbourne, a long time ago.
961
1:41:29 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]rong, total genius in his understanding of the body, and I consider you
962
1:41:36 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]anding of the body, he said the number one cause of, he said disease,
963
1:41:43 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]and what you're saying, the number one cause of disease is constipation.
964
1:41:51 --> 1:41:57
And so he's often said you are what you eat, but you have reinforced again what I learned
965
1:41:57 --> 1:42:06
in 1965, you are what you don't eliminate. And the fact is that most people are full of crap.
966
1:42:08 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]e don't realize that if you don't get it out from the
967
1:42:13 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]itial fluid, the blood's going to push it there, the cells push out their metabolic waste.
968
1:42:19 --> 1:42:23
Anything that's in the blood gets pushed out to that organ. It is an organ.
969
1:42:23 --> 1:42:25
Very good.
970
1:42:25 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ive tissue of the shot, the Americans now call it a new organ
971
1:42:31 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] discovered, really, the interstitium. And here again, we've known about it for 40 plus
972
1:42:39 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]itium? Is it the interstitium or the interstitium?
973
1:42:47 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]itium or the colloidal connective tissue of the shot,
974
1:42:54 --> 1:43:02
and the fluid that's being compartmentalized and collecting plasma, collecting intracellular
975
1:43:02 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ored in this matrix, these compartments that are either pushed out
976
1:43:10 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ive tissue. And that's why when you build up a lot of lactic acid, you feel it in
977
1:43:16 --> 1:43:22
the muscle. The body can't get rid of it, it has to get rid of it through here again, from the
978
1:43:22 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]em out through the pores of the skin or to the kidneys
979
1:43:27 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ation becomes a very, very important thing. And alkalizing becomes very,
980
1:43:34 --> 1:43:39
very important. Yes, you can drink water with your meals. It's the right kind of water. It has to be
981
1:43:39 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ured alkaline water that's donating electrons to neutralize the acids of
982
1:43:45 --> 1:43:50
the food that you're eating. That's what's happening in your mouth. Your pH does not go down
983
1:43:51 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]omach, it goes up. The mouth pH does not go down, it goes up because the salivary glands
984
1:43:59 --> 1:44:07
are trans, they're literally secreting alkalizing compounds that are made by the stomach. And that
985
1:44:07 --> 1:44:13
development brought me to the conclusion that this is a whole organ system. So therefore,
986
1:44:13 --> 1:44:21
I came up with a name. It's called the alko-phile system, alkalizing system. The alko-phile,
987
1:44:22 --> 1:44:30
it includes your salivary glands, it includes your stomach, of course, is the main one that supplies
988
1:44:30 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction], the glands in the pancreas, the lubricant glands in the intestines,
989
1:44:37 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]omach. And this is why upset stomach is the number one
990
1:44:44 --> 1:44:54
symptomology that is experiencing worldwide. And the last thing you want today is a
991
1:44:54 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ops the cover cells from operating because that will lead to a cancerous
992
1:45:05 --> 1:45:13
condition, a degenerative condition. You want to stop eating acidic food, stop drinking acidic water,
993
1:45:13 --> 1:45:23
start hyper-perfusing alkalinity. The ideal pH of water should be minimum 9.5, ideally between 10 and 11.
994
1:45:24 --> 1:45:32
An ORP at negative [privacy contact redaction] to be conscious of this. In this idea,
995
1:45:32 --> 1:45:40
you shouldn't drink with your meals, you'll dilute the hydrochloric acid. Boy, you're right on. That's
996
1:45:40 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ly what you want to do, is dilute the hydrochloric acid in the stomach. That's what
997
1:45:44 --> 1:45:49
the body's trying to do, is get rid of that waste product. But for every molecule of hydrochloric
998
1:45:49 --> 1:45:55
acid that's produced, an equal amount of sodium bicarbonate is produced to maintain alkalinity.
999
1:45:55 --> 1:46:01
And the only reason there's hydrochloric acid in the stomach is because the stomach is working
1000
1:46:01 --> 1:46:06
every second, every minute, every day, every week, every month, every year of your life to maintain
1001
1:46:06 --> 1:46:16
that delicate pH balance of the blood at 7.[privacy contact redaction]itium fluids
1002
1:46:17 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]itium at 8.4 or higher, or the intercellular fluids, which are at around 7.4,
1003
1:46:27 --> 1:46:33
much like some very similar to the blood. The most alkaline places in the body are in the intestines
1004
1:46:35 --> 1:46:42
and in the fluids that surround all of your [privacy contact redaction]roys
1005
1:46:42 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]roys that environment.
1006
1:46:49 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]omach should be in a liquid alkaline state,
1007
1:46:53 --> 1:46:59
and that's why you have a gallbladder and that's why you have a pancreas. And the reason why there's
1008
1:46:59 --> 1:47:05
problems with liver and gallbladder and with stones in the pancreas and in the gallbladder
1009
1:47:05 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]and what they're doing to themselves when they don't liquefy their
1010
1:47:12 --> 1:47:19
food. And so on the pH miracle program that's outlined, the alkaline lifestyle that's outlined
1011
1:47:19 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]er five, chapter 11, that I taught, you know, a lot of the doctors I worked with, including
1012
1:47:26 --> 1:47:35
the famous Tony Robbins, I had him liquefying his food. He still eats broccoli for breakfast.
1013
1:47:36 --> 1:47:44
So liquefy your foods. You know, start moving more to green. Start building healthy blood,
1014
1:47:44 --> 1:47:49
which is done in the crypts of the small intestine, and start raising the pH level.
1015
1:47:49 --> 1:47:55
You're going to feel so much better. And it's one of the reasons I formulated a product called
1016
1:47:55 --> 1:48:00
four salts, because a lot of people need extra help, but you don't want the caking agents and
1017
1:48:00 --> 1:48:06
the aluminum and the chemicals, the anti-caking agents they put in those to keep them, you know,
1018
1:48:06 --> 1:48:13
so they're in a powder form. You need sodium bicarbonate. It's the simple antidote, baking
1019
1:48:13 --> 1:48:20
sodas, the simple antidote to any symptomology. And that supports the stomach. So I put sodium,
1020
1:48:20 --> 1:48:28
potassium, magnesium, and calcium in bicarbonate and bicarbonate form so people could take three
1021
1:48:28 --> 1:48:34
to five grams in the morning before going to bed or any time their pH of the urine drops below
1022
1:48:36 --> 1:48:43
7.2. You can do this. It's so simple. In a small glass of purified alkaline water.
1023
1:48:43 --> 1:48:54
It's something that anybody can do. And it's safe and it's effective. You don't need to be trapped
1024
1:48:54 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]y theory and this antibody theory and this genetic theory. And I'd like to
1025
1:49:01 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] that our cells are only as healthy as the water they swim
1026
1:49:09 --> 1:49:15
in and the ideal environment for body cells, for liver cells, brain cells, heart cells,
1027
1:49:15 --> 1:49:23
any cell of the body, except for the blood, and the white cells, if they're in the plasma, is at 8.4.
1028
1:49:24 --> 1:49:29
That's the ideal pH. And it can be measured by simply testing the urine.
1029
1:49:29 --> 1:49:37
Robert, that's a great point. So what we've got now, we've got 37 minutes. And I know you can speak
1030
1:49:37 --> 1:49:43
another four hours. Your website is amazing. You've provoked, I think, all of us and everyone
1031
1:49:43 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, what if it's, Stephen, if we go the next 10 minutes for your
1032
1:49:48 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ions, a few other questions, we'll finish. But gosh, we're going to have Robert back to ask
1033
1:49:52 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ions because this is, you know, Robert, your life work has been all about
1034
1:49:59 --> 1:50:07
health. And you are laying out what many of us on this call, Danny, you know, other people, experts on
1035
1:50:07 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]anding this. And so we'll never get to the end of the questions. But we've only got 37
1036
1:50:13 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, you go first. And then, yeah, so let's see how many we can get through by the
1037
1:50:19 --> 1:50:25
two and a half hour mark. And then and then please, everyone save the chat. There's a lot of gold in
1038
1:50:25 --> 1:50:34
the chat. And go to Robert's website and start learning and there's no expense. It's just drrobertyoung.com.
1039
1:50:34 --> 1:50:40
I've got just in the last four years, I've published over 600 articles. Yeah, I you know, I just
1040
1:50:40 --> 1:50:46
finished up an article for peer review today. And I'm trying to get this information out,
1041
1:50:46 --> 1:50:51
you know, before they throw me in jail again, you know, so I, you know, it's just it's just
1042
1:50:51 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ice of these Luciferians and bad actors, they, they think that they can shut me
1043
1:50:57 --> 1:51:02
up on this. But I've published too much, I've written too much, you know, I have thousands
1044
1:51:03 --> 1:51:08
upon thousands of video presentations, I've lectured all over all over the world, from
1045
1:51:09 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction], those videos are available. I want people to have this information
1046
1:51:18 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]rings attached, attached. This knowledge should be available
1047
1:51:26 --> 1:51:34
for everyone to empower each human, each of my brothers and sisters, and all of their children,
1048
1:51:34 --> 1:51:40
how to personally take responsibility back for their own health, and the quality of their health
1049
1:51:40 --> 1:51:45
and the quantity of their health, rather than wholesaling that out to people that have been
1050
1:51:45 --> 1:51:52
educated beyond their intelligence. Beautifully said. And last comment before Stephen starts,
1051
1:51:52 --> 1:51:59
Robert, just as you said, we have 72 trillion cells, we had [privacy contact redaction]
1052
1:51:59 --> 1:52:04
dropped to 71. So there you are talking about synchronistic. Stephen over to you.
1053
1:52:06 --> 1:52:13
So Robert, I think, well, I'm very interested in Peter Duisburg, in particular, why was he attacked?
1054
1:52:14 --> 1:52:19
Because the other person who's been attacked, as you know, is Andrew Wakefield, and of course,
1055
1:52:19 --> 1:52:25
he's being proved right now. And Peter Duisburg, in my opinion, was right. And that's why they were
1056
1:52:25 --> 1:52:31
attacking him. Well, let me ask you a question. So hang on, I'm asking you the questions.
1057
1:52:31 --> 1:52:34
Okay, but let me ask everyone the question to think about.
1058
1:52:36 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] today, is that practicing medicine without a license?
1059
1:52:43 --> 1:52:52
What, you you mean? Yeah. Well, I haven't said that. No, no, no, no, but in the state of
1060
1:52:52 --> 1:52:58
California, we know the whole thing's a fraud, Robert. But yeah, what's the license? Who's
1061
1:52:58 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ing the license? You know, that's the problem. It doesn't matter whether you have a license or
1062
1:53:05 --> 1:53:10
you don't have a license. Yeah, but there's no use complaining about it. The law allows you to
1063
1:53:10 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ice medicine without a license as long as you do not prescribe legend drugs. I'm trying to get to
1064
1:53:16 --> 1:53:22
the bottom of what Peter Duisburg was saying. So he was saying that AIDS was caused by chemicals.
1065
1:53:23 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ly virus. So that's absolutely essential to understand. You don't let me speak.
1066
1:53:32 --> 1:53:36
Oh, go ahead. I'm sorry. I thought you were finished. My apologies. I'm not finished.
1067
1:53:37 --> 1:53:44
So Peter Duisburg clearly was saying things that they didn't like. The question is, you have the
1068
1:53:44 --> 1:53:49
knowledge to know why, or maybe you have the knowledge to know why they didn't like what he
1069
1:53:49 --> 1:53:57
was saying. Well, you told us tonight that he was saying that AIDS was caused by chemicals. Well,
1070
1:53:58 --> 1:54:09
they were saying, and they gave a Nobel Prize to Luke Montagnier for discovering the virus, HIV,
1071
1:54:09 --> 1:54:17
which caused AIDS. That's what they wanted to put about. They were developing virology, shall we
1072
1:54:17 --> 1:54:25
say, at the expense of immunology, let's say that within medicine. But I learned at medical school
1073
1:54:25 --> 1:54:33
that a deadly virus, if one believes in viruses, which I'm not sure I do, kills its host, i.e.
1074
1:54:33 --> 1:54:41
that you can't have a pandemic. So the whole false narrative has been constructed over decades,
1075
1:54:41 --> 1:54:47
it seems, with evidence-based medicine and virology and hiding the immunologists and
1076
1:54:48 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]e like Gallo and Fauci. So I don't, so Kerry Mullis was protecting Peter Duisburg.
1077
1:54:57 --> 1:55:04
Peter Duisburg was saying that chemicals are causing AIDS, whatever AIDS is.
1078
1:55:05 --> 1:55:13
So it seems to me that AIDS is like COVID-19, the disease doesn't exist. So, and Kerry Mullis
1079
1:55:13 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] never be used as a diagnostic test for a viral illness.
1080
1:55:25 --> 1:55:31
Luke Montagnier, meanwhile, was not able to answer Kerry Mullis's question.
1081
1:55:31 --> 1:55:37
Could he prove, could he give him a citation for the statement, the HIV virus is the probable
1082
1:55:37 --> 1:55:42
cause of AIDS? These people are all intimately connected, as I understand it. So Gallo
1083
1:55:42 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ed the Nobel Prize together with Montagnier. And I remember seeing
1084
1:55:49 --> 1:55:54
seeing an interview of the secretary to Montagnier, I think it was,
1085
1:55:54 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] on holiday and Gallo, and I'm pretty sure I'm
1086
1:56:03 --> 1:56:11
right in this, Gallo rang up the office and spoke to her and tried to get her to send stuff to him.
1087
1:56:11 --> 1:56:18
I'm not sure whether he was, she did send it, but I think that was Gallo and Montagnier and they
1088
1:56:18 --> 1:56:23
end up receiving the Nobel Prize together and Montagnier knows that it was a fraud.
1089
1:56:24 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]uff and we need to put it together.
1090
1:56:30 --> 1:56:36
Well, you know, the reason they can't answer it is because they have no answers.
1091
1:56:36 --> 1:56:40
And that's exactly what we get from the FDA and the CDC when we ask them,
1092
1:56:40 --> 1:56:46
you know, under FOIA request, we say under FOIA request, can you provide us any evidence,
1093
1:56:46 --> 1:56:53
any citations, any published papers, which using the scientific method, they cannot.
1094
1:56:53 --> 1:56:59
The reason they cannot is because it does not exist. But also tonight, Robert, we hear that
1095
1:56:59 --> 1:57:05
you say that Fauci- For managing and controlling the surplus population, as Kissinger said,
1096
1:57:05 --> 1:57:12
of useless eaters, close quote. So we all got Fauci replacing Gallo.
1097
1:57:12 --> 1:57:19
Well, this is a racket, isn't it? It's a racket. It's the anatomy of a racket.
1098
1:57:20 --> 1:57:26
Hey, I didn't have all the pieces of the puzzle. I mean, each piece kind of laid out over a period
1099
1:57:26 --> 1:57:35
of [privacy contact redaction]ry. And, you know, how do you get arrested for
1100
1:57:35 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]icing medicine without a license when you're not practicing medicine?
1101
1:57:39 --> 1:57:47
It doesn't matter. Absolutely. Make it up. You know, the main objective here
1102
1:57:48 --> 1:57:53
is censorship. It's censorship. Of course, we know that.
1103
1:57:53 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] the right and control over the human body. That is the
1104
1:57:59 --> 1:58:05
medical model. Yeah, but we know that, Robert, what we don't know and what the public don't know is
1105
1:58:05 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ion between these five men here and someone needs to look at them and dig deep.
1106
1:58:12 --> 1:58:17
I told you what I know. I told you what Luc Montaner said. I told you what
1107
1:58:17 --> 1:58:22
Deusper did. I've been in his lab. I've been at Berkeley. I've been, you know,
1108
1:58:24 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ions and being part of that. You know, I understand what he was
1109
1:58:29 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]and that he didn't want any part about it. And he spoke truthfully.
1110
1:58:35 --> 1:58:40
And when you speak the truth and it's not in line with the current protocol,
1111
1:58:42 --> 1:58:49
what happened during COVID? You lose your job or you may even lose your life.
1112
1:58:51 --> 1:58:56
But Robert, what I'm trying to do is draw attention to the connection between these five men,
1113
1:58:56 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] for some reason. I don't understand.
1114
1:58:59 --> 1:59:04
I'm not taking away. You know, they're all connected. Deusper got out of that connection
1115
1:59:04 --> 1:59:13
in 1983-85. He didn't want any part of it. He spoke out. So his connection was he was actually
1116
1:59:13 --> 1:59:22
an advocate for viral theory and HIV. He was against it. And Luc Montaner, he could not speak
1117
1:59:22 --> 1:59:28
out and didn't speak out and spoke to me in private. I never said anything about this,
1118
1:59:29 --> 1:59:36
this experience of 2011. I mean, I wanted to know why he was at this conference talking about
1119
1:59:36 --> 1:59:44
water technology and alkalization. And he was one of the keynote speakers. I still have the
1120
1:59:44 --> 1:59:50
programs and the evidence that that event actually happened. He was there. 2011, I sat right next to
1121
1:59:50 --> 1:59:57
him. I asked him, I wanted to know how are things going in Paris? I'm not there any longer. You're
1122
1:59:57 --> 2:00:07
not there? The chair of virology at the University of Paris School of Medicine? Where are you? I'm
1123
2:00:07 --> 2:00:15
in China. What are you doing in China? Studying water technology, functionally structured water
1124
2:00:15 --> 2:00:25
technology. As a cure for what? Here again, back to virology again, rather than using chemicals,
1125
2:00:25 --> 2:00:35
using water. But he came off that about two years before he died. And he came out and vocalized
1126
2:00:35 --> 2:00:42
his position on virology and what he had done and what he had not done. And so he confessed
1127
2:00:43 --> 2:00:49
that he had never purified in isolation of HIV period.
1128
2:00:53 --> 2:01:01
So Robert Gallo's gone. So Robert, I'm a medical doctor. So in my opinion,
1129
2:01:04 --> 2:01:10
they had to create virology to do what they did in 2020. It was a construct.
1130
2:01:11 --> 2:01:15
They had to do that for all these so-called
1131
2:01:16 --> 2:01:22
pandemics. Even polio. Polio was another pandemic. There's no polio virus.
1132
2:01:26 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]or, I hypothesized that actually pandemics are not possible
1133
2:01:34 --> 2:01:40
and that the whole thing about pandemics and gain-of-function research is a fraud. Every
1134
2:01:40 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction], that's all I wanted to say. You are right. Congratulations. I'm proud of
1135
2:01:49 --> 2:01:57
you. Thank you. I'm proud to know you. Thank you, Stephen, for speaking up. So very importantly,
1136
2:01:57 --> 2:02:04
Robert, not only was there no pandemic in the COVID years, but it's not possible for there to
1137
2:02:04 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] that they say. And maybe even more so because viruses don't exist. But we
1138
2:02:15 --> 2:02:19
won't get into that now because we'll have to explain to people. We had enough problems
1139
2:02:20 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]e who were saying, oh, I had COVID. I'll take it with me.
1140
2:02:24 --> 2:02:30
So I would say, well, how did you know you had COVID? Oh, I had this and I had that. And I said,
1141
2:02:30 --> 2:02:36
well, the test was, it should never have been using a test. But the test was fraudulent.
1142
2:02:36 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ions. I apologize. I'm going to have to leave. I don't know if,
1143
2:02:43 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] another appointment, but I want to continue this conversation, Stephen. It's an
1144
2:02:49 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] All right. So the most important thing to understand, Robert,
1145
2:02:59 --> 2:03:05
is that pandemics are not possible. So the WHO is pushing pandemics. We agree. We agree.
1146
2:03:05 --> 2:03:10
Come on. We agree. He's got to go. We have to hands up. Let's go. Mark.
1147
2:03:10 --> 2:03:20
Hi, Robert. Thank you very much. I'm not a doctor. I'll be brief. First of all, in the UK, where can
1148
2:03:20 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ed? Okay. I can provide that through you. And I don't know if Matt Hazen's
1149
2:03:29 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ually give you a link. If he's here, I would want him to
1150
2:03:35 --> 2:03:41
speak up and give you the link of how you can do that. But if you go to DR Robert Young and send
1151
2:03:41 --> 2:03:49
me your email, I will send you the information plus other information concerning plus all of the
1152
2:03:49 --> 2:03:55
references that I spoke about. So you'll get a PDF file for the scanning and transmission electron
1153
2:03:55 --> 2:04:02
microscopy. Okay, fine. Yeah, that will take care of the other question as well. I'll send you that.
1154
2:04:02 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]ion is you mentioned CO2. Yeah, thank you. You mentioned that CO2
1155
2:04:11 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]ually not being exhaled. Can you just explain that to me? Because my understanding is that the
1156
2:04:18 --> 2:04:23
CO2... I'm saying that it's being exhaled but only at a rate of 10 to 15 percent. The majority of
1157
2:04:23 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]omach as one of the elements for producing sodium bicarbonate. So the question
1158
2:04:30 --> 2:04:35
is, what are the elements for producing sodium bicarbonate which maintains the alkaline design
1159
2:04:35 --> 2:04:42
of the body fluids? This is a very, very important point. CO2 is necessary. Robert, just one second.
1160
2:04:42 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]anding is we're breathing in 0.04 percent carbon dioxide and
1161
2:04:51 --> 2:05:01
we breathe out 4 percent. So I'm a bit confused. Where is that carbon dioxide going? Because we're
1162
2:05:01 --> 2:05:11
breathing out 17 percent oxygen having consumed or brought in 21 percent. So where is this carbon
1163
2:05:11 --> 2:05:19
dioxide? Are you talking about the body produces carbon dioxide through metabolism? It's a waste
1164
2:05:19 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] So it's a waste product metabolism, CO2. So when you're going through the oxygen
1165
2:05:27 --> 2:05:35
process, CO2 is produced. It's a process of metabolism. The majority of that CO2 is being
1166
2:05:35 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]omach to produce a compound of NaHCO3. The formula is NaCl plus H2O plus CO2
1167
2:05:45 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ochloric acid. You can read the chemistry. The chemistry
1168
2:05:54 --> 2:06:01
has to be balanced. I agree with you. But any excess that's coming out that the body's producing
1169
2:06:01 --> 2:06:07
is coming from metabolism. Thank you. Beautiful. Thank you very much. Albert.
1170
2:06:07 --> 2:06:15
Robert, how are you doing? Where are you? I'm in the upper.
1171
2:06:17 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ic on this? A chart? You're the chart guy. I mean, this guy's done,
1172
2:06:23 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction], he's done some great work. Albert's a star in statistics.
1173
2:06:30 --> 2:06:36
I'm just a medical biller, Robert. But man, I am so happy that you brought up the two stories that
1174
2:06:37 --> 2:06:44
never cease to amaze me. The chicken heart story, how the guy... Yeah, Alex Carell.
1175
2:06:45 --> 2:06:50
That one. But the even better one is the Beauchamp story. I know you didn't go in
1176
2:06:51 --> 2:06:55
deep here, but one of these days you have to come back and tell us the story of
1177
2:06:57 --> 2:07:03
you being there and how the big French security guy... It's a long story, but I can give you the
1178
2:07:03 --> 2:07:09
abbreviated form, not right now, but if I come back, I'll do that. The reason I'm here today,
1179
2:07:09 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ews. I see his face here. So thank you, Andrews. I mean, I'm honored
1180
2:07:15 --> 2:07:23
to be able to speak, share this. Hopefully, you've learned something new today that you didn't know
1181
2:07:23 --> 2:07:32
before. There's a whole bunch more that can be shared. And I need to thank you and carry on.
1182
2:07:32 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ews knows my work very well. Albert knows my work. Matt Hazen knows my work. I see Tom up here.
1183
2:07:41 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]rong knows my work. I've got to run, but God bless you all. Thank you so much for allowing
1184
2:07:48 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, keep up your research going here. And if I can be of any
1185
2:07:57 --> 2:08:02
help with what you're doing to come to some of the conclusions, looks like you're doing it all
1186
2:08:02 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] So you're heading in the right direction. That's all I can say. God bless all of
1187
2:08:07 --> 2:08:13
you. You know, and go out and vote. Okay. Thank you, Robert. There's one thing. I think one of
1188
2:08:13 --> 2:08:21
your supporters, Robert, Matt Seema, I think, Seena, seems to think that... He can give you
1189
2:08:21 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ing. Yeah, I'm just trying to make a point. So,
1190
2:08:27 --> 2:08:33
Matt, I think he's helping you. He seems to think that we were pushing the no virus. I was
1191
2:08:33 --> 2:08:38
saying the opposite of that, but I was interrupted by Charles because I was saying... No, no, you're
1192
2:08:38 --> 2:08:45
not pushing that. No, you were perfectly clear. I got it. But I do think there's a strong possibility
1193
2:08:45 --> 2:08:51
there are no viruses, but now is not the time to be arguing about that because all the
1194
2:08:52 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]e who are chicken pox and lungs... Read my work on it. The second thought is, which I wrote
1195
2:08:57 --> 2:09:03
in the 90s, talks about that whole issue. It's in three parts. I'll provide it to you for free.
1196
2:09:03 --> 2:09:09
It'll give you some more in-depth. God bless you all. I've got to go. Take care. Thank you, Charles.
1197
2:09:09 --> 2:09:14
Thank you, Stephen. Thank you all for being here today. I hope to see you and talk to you soon.
1198
2:09:14 --> 2:09:18
Okay. Thanks, Robert. Thank you. Bye-bye. Oh, okay.
1199
2:09:20 --> 2:09:27
All right. So we've got 10 more minutes. 12. 12 more minutes if anyone wants to
1200
2:09:27 --> 2:09:34
put their hand up and raise anything. Albert has. Go, Albert. Yeah. Hey, I know he's not here,
1201
2:09:34 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to tell him and I'll tell you guys that it doesn't pass me that a special
1202
2:09:42 --> 2:09:50
Dr. Robert O. Young is because of what he knows, but his story, he talks in first person,
1203
2:09:50 --> 2:09:58
like Luke Montagnier told me. I mean, that is amazing when he talks in first person like that.
1204
2:09:58 --> 2:10:04
And it's going to be like, how much longer, how many more years are going to pass where we're
1205
2:10:04 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]hand account? And in the same token, how much longer,
1206
2:10:11 --> 2:10:17
you know, will we able, will I'll be able to say like, well, Robert O. Young told me,
1207
2:10:18 --> 2:10:24
you know, another 30, 40 years and, you know, we're going to lose that and just have to read
1208
2:10:24 --> 2:10:30
it in a book. So these are. Albert, I think that's called legacy memory and we're going to lose it,
1209
2:10:30 --> 2:10:37
as you say. So before we lose Peter Duisburg, I'm going to try and get him to come and talk to us.
1210
2:10:38 --> 2:10:42
He's shy about doing interviews, but I don't think it's impossible to persuade him.
1211
2:10:42 --> 2:10:47
Yep. So yeah, I'll just wrap it up. I was just going to say that. And that is the bittersweet,
1212
2:10:47 --> 2:10:54
one of the bittersweet things of this whole pandemic is to get to meet these giants,
1213
2:10:54 --> 2:10:59
Robert O. Young and you guys and a lot of people here. So thank you. Thank you guys so much.
1214
2:11:00 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]on.
1215
2:11:07 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]on, you muted. Sorry about that. I just wanted to comment. It seems to me that this
1216
2:11:13 --> 2:11:22
issue of Gallo was talked about by Judy Mikovits sometime ago and following which she,
1217
2:11:23 --> 2:11:29
she got into some trouble with Fauci and then lost her job. So perhaps she could put us straight on
1218
2:11:29 --> 2:11:34
what's happened here, but it seems very interesting.
1219
2:11:34 --> 2:11:41
Well, it's very interesting Winston, that Gallo subsequently did lose his position because of
1220
2:11:41 --> 2:11:48
criminal fraud, as I understand it, or some kind of scientific fraud. So, but why would they do
1221
2:11:48 --> 2:11:55
that to someone who's won a Nobel Prize? Or was it to show him who was boss?
1222
2:11:55 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ing because it does seem as though some one of the people
1223
2:12:01 --> 2:12:08
it does seem as though some one or two people got a Nobel Prize when it wasn't you. So,
1224
2:12:08 --> 2:12:14
but I think Judy Mikovits articulated that if I'm fairly certain about it, she went on at length
1225
2:12:15 --> 2:12:22
on what had happened to her and so on. Yeah, but was she speaking about Gallo and Fauci
1226
2:12:22 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] of them? Yes, yes, yes, yes. It's all related to that. We should get her back then.
1227
2:12:28 --> 2:12:32
Yes, all right. Yeah, yeah.
1228
2:12:34 --> 2:12:41
All right. Well, Charles, yeah. Okay, everybody, we'll take this opportunity. Well done,
1229
2:12:41 --> 2:12:48
Anders, for organizing Robert to be here. We've had him before and it's wonderful the work he does.
1230
2:12:48 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]udy, me included, his website, vast amounts of
1231
2:12:54 --> 2:13:01
information and I think it reinforces how little we understand of the body when Ian Brighthope was
1232
2:13:01 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] the debates that go on about the functioning of the body stop being so certain
1233
2:13:07 --> 2:13:14
about what you think is going on in the body because, as I often say, to be uncertain can be
1234
2:13:14 --> 2:13:19
uncomfortable. To be certain is ridiculous. I learned that from an old Chinese saying.
1235
2:13:20 --> 2:13:26
Well, maybe Charles, understanding what's going on in the body is like saying we don't know,
1236
2:13:26 --> 2:13:32
we're mere human beings, but it seems to me that knowing what's going on in the body definitively
1237
2:13:32 --> 2:13:38
is like saying we're going to find out how the universe was created and how it, you know,
1238
2:13:39 --> 2:13:43
like Elon Musk says he's going to another planet. I don't know which planet.
1239
2:13:43 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]t? Yep, agree. All right, everybody. Thank you for your contributions. Thank you for
1240
2:13:50 --> 2:13:56
the chat. Thank you for being here and we will be back with you on Sunday. Thanks, Stephen.
1241
2:13:57 --> 2:14:05
Thanks, Charles. Oh, early finish tonight, Charles. Yeah, miracle. A miracle. Okay.
1242
2:14:05 --> 2:14:08
It's fine. Thank you so much.