TOP SECRET Influence Of The Bilderberg Group (How They Control YOU?)
TOP SECRET Influence Of The Bilderberg Group (How They Control YOU?)
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Why Ripple’s Stablecoin Will REVOLUTIONIZE Digital Payments (RLUSD Crypto Deep Dive)
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China Is DRAINING Everyone’s Gold (Find Out Their Secret NOW)
China Is DRAINING Everyone’s Gold (Find Out Their Secret NOW)
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Deep Dive Into The FUTURE Of Manipulated Media: “It’s So Much Worse Than You Realize…”
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U.S. Dollar Road to Destruction [Who’s Side is Saudi Arabia On?]
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“$200 Billion Industry” - The U.S. Prison System Explained!
Patrick Bet-David explains the enormous business of the American prison system.
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In this episode, Patrick Bet-David explains why Auto Insurance prices are skyrocketing above everything else!
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Economy, Trump The WEF Predicts THIS Will Happen! Global Economic Outlook 2024!
WEF Chief Economists Outlook: https://www.weforum.org/publications/chief-economists-outlook-may-2024/
- TIMESTAMPS -
0:00 Intro
0:44 Economy, Trump
3:50 Politics, Geopolitics
8:36 Unpredictability, ESG
14:11 WEF Predictions, Policies
19:06 Are They Lying?
22:29 Outro
~~~~~
📜 Disclaimer 📜
The information contained herein is for informational purposes only. Nothing herein shall be construed to be financial legal or tax advice. The content of this video is solely the opinions of the speaker who is not a licensed financial advisor or registered investment advisor. Trading cryptocurrencies poses considerable risk of loss. The speaker does not guarantee any particular outcome.
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EXPOSING The Financial Elite! [DON’T Be Manipulated By Analysts & Facilitators
EXPOSING The Elite! [DON’T Be Manipulated By Analysts & Facilitators
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Where Crypto Criminals Launder Money [How Terrorists Use Tether]
Where Crypto Criminals Launder Money [How Terrorists Use Tether]
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INSIDE EXCLUSIVE On The World’s Most POWERFUL Hedge Funds (How THIS Will Change Your Investing)
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THIS IS How Much Laws Cost (#1 Way Corporations Get What The Want)
THIS IS How Much Laws Cost (#1 Way Corporations Get What The Want)
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Joe Rogan Experience #2170 - Max Lugavere - All we were told about Alzheimer's is wrong
Joe Rogan Experience #2170 - Max Lugavere
0:01
Joe Rogan podcast check it out The Joe Rogan Experience Train by day Joe Rogan
0:07
podcast by night all day what's up Max how are you so good I
0:14
know what's cracking oh man just uh first of all honored to be here thank
0:19
you love you and your work and yeah I mean just uh National Treasure that's very nice of you go out
0:26
on a limb and say it but um no I'm super super excited because I've been working on this documentary for the last 10
0:32
years of my life and um it's finally out today which uh I'm super pumped for it's
0:37
called a little empty boxes and we talked about it the last time I was here mhm and um it's a project that means the
0:44
world to me I think it's the most important thing I've ever done and it's the first ever dementia prevention documentary about the science of
0:52
dementia prevention but it focuses it's a very emotional and personal film for me because it follows my mom who for
0:59
many years suffered from a rare form of dementia called Louis body dementia which is akin to having both Parkinson's
1:05
disease and Alzheimer's disease at the same time that's a Robin Williams had that's what Robin Williams had yeah yeah
1:10
and it's a it's a rare condition it affects about 1 million people in the United States but it's a um it's a
1:17
dementia and dementia is now a soaring public health problem and there's a lot
1:24
of controversy in within the field um the last time I was here we talked about
1:29
you you know fraud in the um in the research space with regard to the
1:36
prevailing hypothesis as to what causes Alzheimer's disease which is the most common form of dementia and actually
1:41
finally over the past month that paper was finally retracted it took two years but um could you explain to everybody
1:47
what the fraud was Yeah so basically among the dementias Alzheimer's disease
1:53
is the most common form of it and that affects about 6 million people in the United States and since it was first
1:59
named in 1906 by physician aloise Alzheimer the prevailing hypothesis as to what causes
2:06
Alzheimer's disease dubbed the amalo hypothesis has been that this plaque formed by a precursor protein called
2:13
amalo beta accumulates in the brain and by finding a drug that can potentially
2:19
remove extract that that those plaques from the brain from the extracellular
2:25
space around neurons that we could essentially cure the disease that the that the causal factor in the condition
2:33
was this was ultimately this amalo beta protein which forms the plaque
2:40
and trial after trial has been a dismal had been a dismal failure and it wasn't
2:45
looking good until in um 2006 a paper was published in nature which for any
2:51
scientist publishing in nature it's like winning an Academy Award and that paper
2:56
essentially what that did was it it allegedly identified this variant of
3:02
amalo beta that connected the plaque to the cognitive dysfunction so the most important clinical feature of
3:08
Alzheimer's disease because for a long time it was known that cognitively healthy people accumulate plaque in
3:14
their brains and that plaque doesn't seem to correlate with cognitive impairment or anything like that and so
3:21
that was very deflating for researchers in the field until this 2006 paper came out and what it did was it renewed faith
3:28
in this in this hypothesis which was always a hypothesis and continued to
3:35
send billions and billions of dollars worth of funding down this path and what turned out to be the case just two years
3:42
ago was that that paper was essentially fraudulent and it represented about 16
3:48
years worth of wasted time wasted money which was hugely deflating for not just the research Community but also for any
3:55
patient who's ever suffered from Alzheimer's disease and you know the way that the field is now
4:02
slowly starting to turn but this is a drum that I've been beating for the past 10 years is that we really need to start
4:07
talking about these conditions in terms of prevention and that's what inspired me to set down this path of creating
4:12
this documentary little empty boxes what was the fraud like what what how did they do it so
4:19
basically the in the paper there were they identifi these proteins that they
4:25
isolated in Rat models of the condition Mouse models the of the condition called a a beta star
4:32
56 again amalo is amalo is there at the scene of the crime so to speak so when
4:39
you have Alzheimer's disease somebody who's died of Alzheimer's disease what they what they find inevitably in the brains of cadavers who've died from
4:45
Alzheimer's disease are two features they see this aggregation of these plaques amalo beta plaques and Tangled
4:52
proteins called ta and so it was a very seductive narrative that this plaque causes the
4:58
condition right for years the problem is they've succeeded at reducing the plaque
5:05
in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease but that hasn't led to any Improvement in the clinically meaningful
5:12
features of the disease that we that we aspire to improve for sufferers of Alzheimer's disease right the cognitive
5:18
the cognitive function and in tandem with that we see that amalo is produced naturally in all
5:25
brains and people who are cognitively healthy have amalo in their brains there's a degree of amalo burden that
5:31
seems to be inevitable as a as um as a just general phenomena due to
5:36
aging and so it it was very it was becoming very clear that amid is not the causitive feature here that there is
5:42
some other factor or factors at play which lead to cognitive
5:48
degeneration until 2006 and in in 2006 what happened this paper basically found
5:53
this subtype that when injected into a mouse caused profound cognitive
6:00
dysfunction and what they did was they Illustrated these proteins on what are called in what's called a western blot
6:05
analysis which is basic basically a graphical depiction of proteins and um the peer review process
6:12
for papers I mean they people go in and they crunch the numbers and stuff but they don't look at like imagery and they don't they don't look with a they don't
6:19
go through the imagery with a fine tooth comb to make sure that it hasn't been photoshopped essentially but one sleuth
6:28
who is a scientist himself um this researcher uh from Vanderbilt named Matthew shrag actually identified that a
6:36
lot of these images had artifacts that made it very clear that they were faked oh yeah so fullon fraud full-on fraud
6:45
and by the way and it was it's it's been two years it took two years for that paper finally to be retracted are there
6:51
any consequences towards people that published that paper I mean it's obviously they have a
6:57
lot of egg on their face so to speak I mean very it's it's hugely humiliating
7:03
um but no I don't think that there's they're still employed they're yeah the
7:08
lead researcher still employed I mean they're they're investigating sane lesny who's a university of uh he is a I want
7:17
to say Michigan not Michigan um it'll come to me but the the the the primary
7:22
researcher is being investigated um as far as I know so the primary researcher they're connect to
7:29
the Photoshop saying this person might have been the one that released it it was very clear it was very clear and
7:36
that you know that's it's so dirty soty it's so evil for all the people that are looking for some sort of relief yeah and
7:43
that you know you have this scientific paper you published and you knowingly release these photoshopped images in
7:51
order to validate your paper there's a ton of Fraud and God yeah it's so evil
7:57
when you think about how many people suffer from this so many people and you're giving them this false hope just
8:02
to boost up your academic career yeah it's awful the lost time and by the way
8:08
that paper has been subsequently referenced thousands of times in the medical medical literature basically you
8:16
know negating a ton of research I mean like count countless papers that have
8:21
been since published that have referenced that paper in 2006 that nature paper that was finally retracted
8:27
I mean think about the Lost Time think about the needless suffering yeah and it's my view that dementia
8:32
essentially by the time you are diagnosed with dementia we'll say Alzheimer's disease you are in late
8:38
stage Alzheimer's disease whether it's mild whether you were just diagnosed yesterday it's it's this is a disease of
8:45
midlife with symptoms that appear in late life and so that's why the field is now slowly hopefully I hope pivoting
8:51
more towards prevention and where the money I think needs to go is I in into
8:58
identifying that goal golden biomarker that's associated with the onset of the condition so that clinicians can
9:05
intervene earlier because right now when you catch it it's sort of like pancreatic cancer which incidentally my mom passed from in 2018 but it's you
9:12
know pancreatic cancer most of the time it's diagnosed and it's too late the C the tumor is already
9:18
metastasized and so this is kind of similar with Alzheimer's Disease by the time it's diagnosed it's already you're already very late in the game there's
9:26
widespread neuronal uh dysfunction gluc ose metabolism in the brain is diminished by 50% so it's again you're
9:33
you're catching it in its latest stages ultimately and that's why I think Alzheimer's drug trials have a 99% 99.6%
9:42
fail rate Because by the time you catch it I think reversing it is you know impossible I think it can be slowed with
9:47
exercise with with a with a multimodal dietar and lifestyle intervention but um but yeah it's really it's really sad and
9:53
so that's why 10 years ago when I saw this developing in my mom and I stumbled upon all this research and I began really diving in
9:59
it became very clear to me that this is something that that anybody with a brain needs to be aware of and talking about
10:05
and what what's the factors when it comes to someone eventually getting
10:11
Alzheimer's is it purely genetic is it lifestyle is it diet are there environmental factors and toxins like
10:18
what is it yeah so there are what are called risk factors so the the heritability of Alzheimer's disease is
10:25
very low it's like 2 to 3% and the variant that is hereditary is early onset familial but that affects that
10:32
that makes up a very tiny proportion of overall Alzheimer's incidents and similarly with Parkinson's disease the
10:38
heritability of Parkinson's disease is very low I mean this and I definitely want to talk about Parkinson's disease because there's a lot of really
10:44
interesting new research in that in that field but by and large with regard to
10:49
Alzheimer's disease you have what are called your non-modifiable risk factors which are your age you can't change your
10:55
age your gender you can't change your gender and your genes you can't change your genes although you can affect genes Express themselves which is known as
11:01
epigenetics but then you have your modifiable risk factors which I think is so exciting because these are the the
11:06
risk factors that you have agency over you can you can control obesity
11:11
hypertension type two diabetes I mean these are all nutritionally mediated
11:17
obviously which I love talking about nutrition and nutrition in so far as it can prevent or reverse obesity I think
11:23
that's incredibly empowering type 2 diabetes if you have type 2 diabetes your risk for developing Alzheimer's
11:28
diseasing increases between two and fourfold they're actually now um we interviewed in my documentary The
11:35
researcher who coined the term type 3 diabetes have you heard that are you familiar with that concept no I haven't
11:40
so it's looking a lot like Alzheimer's disease might in fact be a form of diabetes of the
11:45
brain wow which is a mindblowing way to think about this condition um and in
11:54
fact we see that peripheral insulin resistance so the the home Mark of type
11:59
two type two diabetes is insulin resistance and we see that the more insulin resistant a person is the more
12:06
difficulty their brains seem to have with regard to creating ATP which is the primary energy currency of our
12:13
cells and the researcher who coined type 3 diabetes her name is Suzanne deamon she's a Brown University researcher and
12:20
she is in no way in the public sphere she's a you know purely a bench researcher she's actually in my
12:26
documentary it was like incredible to get to interview her and speak to her but it seems that insulin
12:33
resistance causes the brain to suffer in many ways it damages the blood vessels ultimately when you have type two
12:38
diabetes it damages the blood vessels that supply the brain with oxygen nutrients energy but it also seems to
12:45
impair there also seems to be an aspect of insulin resistance that reduces the
12:51
brain's ability to generate energy okay so when you first started
12:59
becoming aware of this your mother uh develops this condition you first start being aware of it what were the first
13:05
things that you noticed that started to get you to question whether or not the
13:11
conventional applications of drugs and thing are on the right path yeah I mean
13:17
you know I grew up in New York City and when my mom first started to show these symptoms and how did you notice it like
13:23
what what what were the symptoms she would I mean we would have I was living in La at the time and so we we would we
13:29
would touch base every other day via phone and she started to complain to me about brain fog and there was some
13:36
aspect of what she was sharing with me that I thought was just a natural part of getting older but
13:43
ultimately she revealed to me and the rest of my family that she had sought the help of a
13:48
neurologist and that seemed odd you know why would my mom I I hadn't had any
13:53
prior family incidents of dementia anything like that why would why was my
13:58
mom suddenly going to see a neurologist and but you know like I was
14:04
still in La living my my life I was in my late 20s at the time but it wasn't
14:09
until a trip to Miami my family went down to Miami to hang out with my dad cuz my parents had been separated and my
14:15
mom was in the kitchen and she confessed to the family that she'd been having
14:21
memory problems at this point so it had been described as brain fog but she revealed that she had sought the help of
14:27
a neurologist and you know me and my and my brothers and my dad we were in total disbelief that
14:34
my mom was having anything outside of the could could possibly be having anything outside of the realm of ordinary and so we were kind of mocking
14:41
her in a way um and we said well if you're really having such such profound
14:47
problems what month is it or I think it was like what year is it or something like that and she couldn't recall she
14:53
couldn't recall what the month was and she started to cry and at that point for
15:00
me that's when I knew that something was really wrong and that I needed to step in cuz you know when you're sick it is a
15:07
really that's a really scary place to be it could be frustrating it could be confusing and you know when you're in
15:13
these doctor's offices and they're you know often times they don't have the best bedside Manner and they run a
15:20
battery of esoteric tests it can be incredibly overwhelming and it becomes really hard to advocate for yourself
15:26
I've learned as somebody with a chronic illness not least of which a chronic illness that's affecting your cognition and so I
15:33
decided at that point um essentially that I had to pack up my La life I moved
15:39
back to New York and I started going with my mom from doctor's visit to doctor's visit and again you know I'm
15:47
pretty privileged grew up in New York City my mom had health insurance resources we started going you know to
15:52
all of these different Cathedrals to Western medicine academic medical insight and in every instance I
15:59
experienced what I've come to call over time adios diagnose and adios a physician would you know run
16:05
these tests titrate up the dose of a medication that she was already on one physician actually thought that all of her symptoms were due to depression
16:11
right there's this like idea of the hysterical woman today one in four women over the age of 40 are on an
16:17
anti-depressant drug you know so one one and four yeah over the age of 40 Jesus Christ yeah they're I mean I'm not
16:24
saying there's no use for them those kinds of drugs but they're very over overprescribed um that's not that's not I don't think
16:30
that's controversial and so my mom was given one of these drugs without full informed
16:36
consent I don't think I mean ultimately we tried to get her off of them which we found out was incredibly difficult to do
16:42
titrating off one of these ssris is really really hard actually and it turned out obviously to
16:49
be to be the case that my mom that these symptoms were not due to depression they were due to degeneration in her brain
16:56
and we went from doctor's office to doctor's office ultimately ating in a trip to the Cleveland Clinic so just imagine like we're in New York City
17:02
right we have like multiple hospitals at our at our disposal we had to book a trip to the Cleveland Clinic and it was
17:07
there that for the first time my mom was diagnosed with a neurodegenerative condition so she was prescribed drugs
17:13
for both Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease at that time and that to me was I'd never I've always
17:20
been a pretty chill guy but that was the first time in my life I'd ever i' I've ever had a panic attack just Googling
17:26
the drugs you know like a scared like any scared kid would do when their mom receives a a lifechanging
17:33
diagnosis and um and that was the moment for me that I realized that my life had to Pivot and I I had no choice but to
17:40
dedicate myself to learning all that I could about these conditions and so you
17:46
find out about the fraud and how long into your research did you find out that
17:52
most of what people understood about the condition was based on this fraudulent
17:58
study well it's not even just the study it's the fact that these conditions begin decades before the emergence of
18:05
symptoms so you know again it's it's a disease of of midlife essentially they
18:11
Alzheimer's disease begins 20 to 30 years if not more before the the first symptom and so to me it became very
18:17
clear that we were approaching these conditions in the wrong way you know trying to acting in a in a reactionary way to
18:24
something that had taken decades to manifest to me just seemed wrong
18:30
and I stumbled upon the work of a neurologist at Wild Cornell New York
18:36
Presbyterian who was talking about Alzheimer's disease as a preventable
18:41
condition which is not something that I'd heard prior to coming across his work and I realized at that time that
18:47
this was like considered 10 years ago a fringe idea dementia prevention was like a fringe idea except for through the
18:56
lens of this neurologist who was working within the confines of you know rigorous randomized research and you know and
19:03
checking all the boxes for scientific credibility and
19:08
um and so to me it became really it became really clear that that this is a topic that I needed to help amplify
19:13
using my skill set as a non-medical doctor as a non-academic scientist and I also learned really early on that it's
19:22
not a genetic condition that we have genetic risk factors but that um that we have a say when it comes to our
19:28
cognitive destiny that this is not a natural part of aging I mean you know everything in the body as you get older
19:34
tends to falter in its functionality you know like our joints don't work as well and you know there is a degree of
19:39
forgetfulness that I think is in a in a way a natural aspect of
19:45
getting older but cognitive impairment that's not natural degeneration of our of our neurons of you know of for
19:54
example the portion of the brain that that drives movement the substantial chagra which is which occurs in
20:00
Parkinson's disease that's not normal and so it began this investigation for me trying to understand because I was
20:06
seeing the person who meant the most to me of anybody in life you know degenerating every day in front of my face getting worse and worse and worse
20:14
it it instilled this this burning desire in me to understand all that I could and to share to pre in the hopes that it
20:21
might prevent it from happening to others and um and yeah it was also very odd because
20:29
my um my maternal grandmother did not have dementia so it was really sad and and surreal in fact that my mom was
20:38
increasingly requiring aroundthe clock care while her mother who lived in the
20:44
same home and was 30 years older was cognitively totally healthy it was just
20:49
the it was just the oddest thing my my my grandmother my mom's mom was in her 90s and totally cognitively healthy able
20:56
to form cogent senses and my mom was struggling to express an idea to get out
21:02
of a bathroom and it just to me it was it was so shocking that I you know it
21:08
was like it was traumatic I mean I still have PTSD I think from from those days but it it's yeah it's motivated me to to
21:17
do what I can to help and I saw all in in every you know by the end of my mom's life she was on 14 different
21:22
Pharmaceuticals and I'm not I'm not anti- Pharma like if if there was a drug that would have actually helped my mom I would have been first in line at the
21:28
pharmacy to to fill that prescription for her but the drugs don't work at all and Physicians are very quick to you
21:36
know to write a prescription to like add a new drug to the Arsenal they're they're very um reluctant to
21:44
deprescribe I've I have never seen a prescription de prescribe to my mom and
21:49
by the end of her life she was on 14 different Pharmaceuticals and there's nobody on Earth that that understands how all of those different drugs are
21:55
interacting in an you know in a in a system going growing increasingly frail it was just really
22:02
sad and you know so I started to investigate these modifiable risk
22:08
factors you know whether it's diet dietary diet related which it you know
22:14
in my mom's case it may have had something to do with her diet over the years it might have had nothing to do with her diet over the years I'll never
22:19
know but also now we're starting to see that air pollution is a major um
22:26
contributor to neurod degeneration we're starting to see now that well as of 2020 it was acknowledged that um exposure to
22:33
air pollution is actually one of these newly identified mod modifiable risk factors for Alzheimer's disease so
22:39
exposure to fine particulate matter PM 2.5 actually might cause Alzheimer's disease for some patients and
22:47
then most interestingly and this is one of the things that I want to talk about with you which I came across the work of
22:53
a of a neurologist named Dr Ray dorsy who's over at University of Rochester who's done a lot of work publishing on
23:00
the link between environmental toxicant and Parkinson's disease and Parkinson's disease is now the fastest growing brain
23:06
disease and my mom's condition actually had more in common with Parkinson's disease than it did Alzheimer's disease
23:11
she had Louis body dementia which is has more in common with Parkinson's even though they're they're both dementia um
23:17
Louis body and and and and Alzheimer's but there's data now linking exposure to
23:25
certain herbicides and pesticides to Parkinson's disease drama Ally increased risk anywhere
23:30
between three 2 and a half to sixfold um increased risk which herbicides and
23:36
pesticides so there's a pesticide called paraquat that there's a great article
23:41
written in the guardian by um a journalist named Carrie Gillum and I got to speak uh on a panel with her recently
23:48
at a at a scientific conference in DC called brain and environment and
23:54
paraquat is this compound that it's a it's an herbicide that's produced in China but its use is banned in China we
24:01
import it here yeah it's crazy we use it here
24:09
and exposure occupational exposure to this compound is associated with between
24:15
two and a half to three times a risk for the development of Parkinson's disease
24:20
related compounds are literally used in Mouse models to create Parkinson's disease
24:26
and the that has that creates it is has
24:32
been under investigation for years and what has now come to light is that they
24:37
knew about the fact that these that these chemicals accumulate in the brain in brain tissue and they seem to
24:44
selectively Target the region of the brain associated with Parkinson's disease the substantia [ __ ] wow it's
24:51
very scary and um you know what um crops are these used on is it specific crops
24:58
is specific foods to avoid or how do you know if those pesticides or herbicides
25:03
are being used well it's it's the the residues and the the exposure that you get from eating them
25:10
is very low but we don't know what long-term exposure to those low levels
25:15
is doing to us I mean my my mother is somebody who never believed in organic produce right and organic is not perfect
25:22
and natural compounds some of them are the most dangerous compounds on Earth so I know you know some people listening
25:28
might say oh you know here we go with the appeal to Nature fallacy but it's very clear that occupational exposure is
25:34
very hazardous you have to be licensed you have to use this stuff very carefully but it some people actually
25:40
use it to to to off themselves I mean it's like a it's a really toxic compound
25:46
and we're now we we now have data suggesting that it creates this
25:52
condition that it selectively targets and and destroys dopamine producing neurons that that that immediate movement and um and it's used yeah it's
26:00
used in in cereal grains things like that um why does uh cannabis oil have a
26:09
profound effect on Parkinson's patients you know I don't I don't know about
26:14
cannabis oil but I can tell you about nicotine and nicotine is a very interesting compound from the vantage
26:21
point of parkinsonism and I know I mean a lot of people you
26:26
know love nicotine obvious for its its cognitive boosting effects um I'm not
26:31
going to say that it's a it's a healthy compound I mean I think that it has cardiovascular repercussions um and the
26:39
like but there seems to be a and it and of course smoking is terrible for you but
26:44
cardiovascular with the delivery method or just across the board nicotine by itself raises heart rate and it raises
26:51
blood pressure acutely not by much but um presumably uh
26:58
and it's vasoconstrictive as well so it you know there's some evidence suggesting it it impedes wound
27:05
healing um I will occasionally use nicotine as a as a cognitive enhancer
27:12
but I also have I have chronic low back issues and um I think that you know for
27:18
people with disc issues this is just a speculation but I think that it's probably not a good idea to chronically
27:25
use nicotine if you have disc issues which are already your discs and your back are already poorly vascularized and nicotine is a vasoconstrictor
27:32
vasoconstrictor um and smoking you know increases your risk for Alzheimer's
27:37
disease um I'm not I don't think that there's a a that we've identified a relationship between pure nicotine and
27:45
well pretty much anything the the the research on pure nicotine by itself is pretty sparse most of the most of the
27:50
research on on the health effects of nicotine is confounded by smoking which is obviously obviously not good for you
27:55
but interestingly there does seem to be an inverse relationship between nicotine use even via smoking and parkinsonism so
28:04
people who smoke cigarettes seem to be protected to some degree against Parkinson's disease which is very odd
28:11
and they've shown in Mouse models that nicotine actually when they use some of
28:18
these mitochondrial toxins some of these poisons like paraquat right or another one called mptp which is has been used
28:25
as a as a street party drug but it's actually profoundly neurotoxic it's been shown to create chronic parkinsonism
28:33
with just acute use nicotine actually prevents that in those models so it's
28:38
been shown to somehow protect the brain from in in some in some regards um
28:44
against Parkin Parkinson's disease so I wouldn't recommend using nicotine unless somebody and this is again a speculation
28:50
but my my hypothesis is that if you were if you were exposed occupationally to some of these compounds like paraquad or
28:57
rodino or um there are there are other compounds that are being directly connected to Parkinson's disease too
29:03
like Tri chloroethylene I would say maybe nicotine is a is a potentially disease modifying intervention in those
29:09
contexts so in these when they've studied patients the was there a small like a
29:17
noticeably smaller instance of people that develop Parkinson who are smokers or was it non-existent like they're
29:24
they're just I'm not sure the the relative risk um decrease but it's one of these odd
29:32
things that seems pretty consistent in the literature that smokers are less likely to develop Parkinson's Disease by
29:39
what factor I'm not sure I'm not sure the factor but it's significant it's significant but smoke but smokers are
29:46
more likely to develop a whole host of other oh yeah it's terrible for you yeah but that's the interesting thing is that
29:51
nicotine it's thought that nicotine protects this one region of the brain a
29:57
significant way I'm sorry have they looked at people that are in taking nicotine in different ways like cigars
30:05
uh gum patches things along those lines not a lot of the a lot of the research
30:10
on nicotine is in animal models unfortunately um but it is I mean it does seem to do
30:19
if you set the vascular effects aside which might play a role um in neurod
30:26
degeneration because you know the brain relies on its vascular Network the brain you know is is a very hungry organ and
30:34
Vascular Dimension is the second most common form of dementia actually but nicotine does seem to have some really
30:39
protective effects on the brain it seems to reduce neuroinflammation um
30:46
it might act in a way as an antioxidant in the brain I'm not recommending it because there are risks of course but
30:53
um but they've shown that it seems to be protective in these animal models against against these poisons that would
30:59
otherwise cause parkinsonism and some other cool facts about nicotine
31:05
actually cuz I did do a little bit of a deep dive recently into it because because I do notice a cognitive benefit when I when I use it nicotine how do you
31:12
use it I just use it I I I use it like before but what in what form a lozenge
31:18
like a little like you know lozenge um and uh and I don't have an addictive
31:24
personality so for me I'm not like you know it's not something that I feel compelled to do every day but I do it uh
31:29
before like I have to go on like a TV show or do a big podcast or something and um and I do see you know I do
31:36
definitely see like a a cognitive like a you know it's a stimulant that's um that's pretty well known but um but yeah
31:44
nicotine also it has a very short halflife so it's half life is only about two hours I mean you compare that to coffee coffe is like eight hours so it's
31:52
it's relatively transient in your system but then I think the more interesting
31:57
compound is uh is its primary metabolite which is called Kine which it's kin's
32:02
halflife is 20 hours long and it seems to also boost cognitive function mental
32:08
health in so far as animal models can show us that these compounds boost mental health um might even enhance
32:15
what's called fear Extinction so for people with PTSD it might play a role so it's a it's a really interesting
32:21
compound but you know again it's it's highly addictive and um what is coine
32:28
it's nicotine's primary metabolite in the body so when you ingest nicotine
32:34
nicotine lasts in the body only about the half life is 2 hours so it lasts presumably about 4 hours um but it
32:41
converts to this compound called called Coty in the body and the half life of that compound is about 20 hours so it's
32:48
in your system for a long time and and that compound doesn't have any of the negative side effects of nicotine it
32:54
just seems to do all these interesting cool so does all the positives and none of the negatives seems to it I mean it's
33:00
not a stimulant short and long-term effects of oh that's Codine bro oh it's
33:06
uh Co I was trying to spell it and ited me and I fell down the path compound who look at that yeah that will [ __ ] you
33:14
up that's in cough syrup um cotinine yeah how do you spell it co t i n i n I
33:24
believe yeah it's super interesting stuff and do people take this as a supplement
33:31
no but it your body readily will create it from I don't know if it it it doesn't
33:37
have the um cotinine produced by the body after exposure to nicotine the main metabol of nicotine 70 80% of nicotine
33:44
is converted to coine cotinine is often used as a biomarker for exposure to tobacco smoke can be detected in urine
33:50
okay coine can remain in the body a day or more nicotine disappears within a few hours yeah but you can Google like cine
33:57
f Extinction or cine um cogn probably why people say that cigarettes relax
34:03
them yeah definitely I mean it's an anxiolytic it reduces anxiety
34:08
interesting yeah see I mean it does seem to be this SEL it's like this really interesting compound where it does all
34:14
these you know it has all these effects in the body that many of which I'm sure
34:20
are negative but it does seem to do some good stuff for the brain which is
34:25
fascinating you know um so I I think again I'm not promoting it but if you're
34:32
able to forge as an adult uh responsible relationship with it you know then maybe
34:40
it's worth experimenting with if you know particularly because of its you know
34:46
it's its potential to I don't want this to come off as an endorsement for nicotine but its ability potentially to
34:53
protect against parkinsonism is very is very interesting and so when a person
34:59
you're saying so this is something that starts to happen in midlife and then it really expresses itself in dramatic ways
35:05
years later what are other than the environmental factors what dietary
35:13
factors contribute except obviously pesticides and herbicides that are unfortunately a
35:20
part of our food system now yeah I mean here's the thing like or organic is uh
35:26
as I mentioned it's not a p and there today on social media if you even if you in so much as mention
35:34
organic and that debate organic versus conventional I mean there's there's so much controversy but you know I think
35:40
the as we've seen right with paraquat and this Chinese company that has
35:46
shrouded the data and in fact they they've assembled internally a SWAT team to basic to essentially suppress data
35:53
suggesting harm due to exposure to this to this herbicide even though it's banned in country even even though it's
35:59
banned in China yeah wow just so they could keep selling it just so they could keep selling it but there was there was
36:05
another there was another article that came out recently in um the publication prua written by I believe her name was
36:12
Sharon Lerner another journalist who I connected with at this DC event that I was at recently who it was this crazy 3M has
36:20
been hiding the health harms shrouding the health suppressing the health harms
36:26
due to exposure to these Pas pasas compounds that are forever forever
36:31
chemicals known endocrine disruptors in Band-Aids yeah so there's there's like
36:36
all this corporate collusion and shrouding of the truth and I'm just like
36:42
I think in so far as you can reduce your exposures to these kinds of things and and and and selectively you know if if
36:48
money is is is scarce you know selectively buy certain things organic I think that makes sense you know do they
36:55
have organic Band-Aids that's a good question I don't know but they recently identified these compounds and yeah yeah I read the study
37:01
about the Band-Aid thing and I was like Jesus Christ is anything safe it's not [ __ ] Band-Aids we've all got
37:07
microplastics in our balls these days microplastics in our Aromas right like they found in our in our arteries that
37:14
the presence of microplastics was associated with two to three two to threefold increased risk of cardiovascular death so here it is uh
37:21
partnering with environmental health news a consumer Watchdog sent 40 bandages of different brands to us
37:26
Environmental Protection Agency certified lab the lab found that 65% of the bandages compain contain detectable
37:33
levels of synthetic forever chemicals or pfas
37:38
yeah wow yeah and the that that is so crazy because it's an open wound yes
37:45
it's like literally mainlining right into your bloodstream it's nuts and you
37:50
talk about this stuff today on social media and you're accused of fear-mongering of being alarmist you're not it's yeah what is that though is
37:57
that trolls from pharmaceutical companies I mean there there that's
38:03
something that I guarantee you corporations use if if Nations use it
38:08
and we know they do and we know we do we know that there's troll farms in Russia we know this is a real thing why
38:15
wouldn't corporations use that too especially if they could farm that off and be removed from it as far as like
38:22
being able to trace back the paperwork I mean we see it all the I mean even with in our own you know
38:28
within our own government the USDA the the dietary guidelines for Americans 95%
38:33
of people on that committee have had have or have had conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry and the
38:41
food industry yeah at least 50% that I'm aware of today you know working on the
38:47
2020 20 2025 issue um we see all the time there's been a number of uh great
38:54
um journalism done by done in the Washington Post um exposing how the food industry pays
39:00
dietitians to promote you know certain a certain ideology around food that all
39:07
foods are cool you know you just have to eat less and move more all foods fit there are no good or bad foods which
39:13
yeah it's hilarious it's hilarious it's crazy yeah I mean these companies they they pay these people that are body
39:19
positive influencers as well yeah so they're they're basically paying people
39:24
that are ill because of eating these things to tell tell other people it's okay to eat these things and then it's
39:29
somehow or another phobic whether it's fat phobic or whatever it is to not
39:35
encourage body positivity and it's stupid it's just stupid it's stupid for the people that
39:42
are getting it it's St it's stupid for the people that are promoting it it's stupid for our culture to be inundated
39:49
with this nonsense and misinformation where we have to sort through it and try to do deeper research and condu conduct
39:57
you know consult people who actually understand what's going on it's so disheartening that we live in this world
40:03
that's so compromised by money that information about key things like your
40:08
own health is so distorted that it's hard like you know you talk to people
40:15
and so many people have like a basic misunderstanding of what is good and not good for you and all of it is because of
40:22
this kind of thing that it's just so prevalent and it's so confusing and you're getting expert advice from
40:29
people which is one of the wildest ones for me when you look at oh thank you did some coffee in your system there fell
40:36
thanks cheers sir cheers good to see you same um one of the things is crazy to me
40:42
is that we get expert advice from people that are clearly sick how many times have you had nutrition or dietary advice
40:49
from someone who is obese yeah you're fat you're you have no muscle your body
40:55
looks like it's just in Decay and you're the person giving advice yeah I mean Mo
41:02
most of the social media you know personas that I've observed that purport
41:08
to be experts or that you know that that seem to have I don't know
41:13
whether it's through credentialism a degree of authority I mean I wouldn't send a loved one to yeah you know it's
41:20
just gaslighting on a on a mass scale CU you know your your average person today comes across this iology that all foods
41:28
are fine it's all good and they try to reduce their consumption of the crap that they're
41:34
already eating and they end up failing at that because it's really hard to moderate your consumption of these foods
41:40
which have been engineered to be consumed quickly and regularly and then they feel as though
41:48
they're you know they they feel moral failure and and then it just creates
41:53
this vicious cycle of of yo-yo dieting we're not being honest about about the way that these Foods impact behavior and
42:00
today 60% of the calories that your average person consumes comes from ultr processed foods which are foods that are
42:05
highly calorie dense they are nutrient poor they are minimally satiating
42:11
they're Uber delicious I mean they push your brain to a bliss Point Beyond which self-control is is seemingly impossible
42:18
and by the way it's these ultr processed foods that are a major route of ingestion for these kinds of chemicals
42:24
that we're talking about these industrial chemicals forever chemicals you know ultr processed foods are you
42:29
know if you want more phalates in your body consume more Ultra processed foods there was a study that recently was
42:35
published that found that for every 10% increment in ultr processed food consumption pregnant women were ingesting about 14% higher levels of of
42:42
these phalates right I mean you had you did such an amazing episode with shaa Swan a couple years ago talking about
42:49
the fact that our exposure to these chemicals are reducing the anogenital distance in boys right which is a which
42:55
is a very easy I don't know about if easy is the right term but it's a very it's it's a very simple uh proxy to use
43:03
to identify how these compounds might be affecting us right but that's only what you can observe like how are these chemicals affecting us in other ways
43:11
right you know and um and so it's crazy and and these are the kinds of these are
43:16
the kinds of foods that we're just eating and mass day in and day out and 60% is the average children consume
43:22
about 70% Ultra processed foods today on average black Americans unfortunately
43:27
consume 80% Ultra processed foods and there's obviously this is not all Choice
43:32
there are systemic issues many people today still live in food deserts accessibility is an issue cost is an issue I know all that but the messaging
43:40
that we're getting from our most trusted sources is essentially that everything's fine just eat less move
43:47
more yeah and it's so difficult for the average American to access information
43:53
from people that they can trust or to figure out who to trust you know you get experts that tell you oh you don't need
44:00
to take supplements you just need a well balanced diet and you go oh vitamins are [ __ ] and you have people expressing
44:05
that like it's just how could someone say that when there's so much data on the efficacy of vitamins and the benefit
44:12
of vitamin supplementation of course and vitamins I mean we we need vitamins
44:18
supplements can be really helpful and I get asked this a lot like who do you know who to trust on social media I
44:24
think a really good heuristic is you you know somebody actually I was giving a talk recently and somebody somebody
44:31
uh um highlighted that one good indicator of somebody who is is likely
44:39
trustworthy is somebody who is willing to present the opposing Viewpoint and not strawman the opposing viewpoint but
44:45
actually Steelman the opposing Viewpoint like to actually make clear what the opposing Viewpoint is and then to refute
44:51
that Viewpoint so they're not ideologically connected to the result exactly so I I try to do that I try to
44:57
you know share where I've changed my mind in the past um or where I've evolved my viewpoint um I try to be
45:04
clear about the things that I don't know I don't know you know I'm I'm also not trying to be one of these people on social media that like purports to know
45:10
everything to have the magic routine or protocol you know for for every for
45:16
everything you know as as like some kind of um you know all knowing um Arbiter of
45:22
of health information because I feel like there are still so many unknowns and I could easily day develop what it
45:28
is that my mom developed I hope I don't I had a a health scare in
45:34
2022 that um you know just proved to me that you know there is a lot of like
45:39
luck that goes into this you know into this equation as well my back hurts I don't know how to fix that like you know
45:45
what have you been doing for your back um well I try you have a bulging
45:51
discs what do you have oh man I have um like mild or it's probably progressed
45:57
but it's like disc desiccation between L5 and S1 and then um so it's like basically a dehydrated disc and uh which
46:05
I got from just squatting improperly 10 years ago and my back's like never been the same since um have you ever used a
46:14
reverse hyper no you don't know about that no uh it was uh a piece of
46:20
Machinery that was uh designed by um uh
46:26
West W side barbell Lou Roberts what's his name Simmons Simmons Louis Simmons
46:31
sorry Louis Simmons from Westside barbell developed this machine that strengthens the back and actively
46:37
decompresses the back and uh what it is is your body weight with your chest down
46:43
sits on this bench and underneath it you hook your legs to this thing that's like a leg curl and you lift up which
46:51
strengthens your back and on the D cell when it brings it down it's actively pulling your back H and it's phenomenal
46:59
W it's really good it's really good at decompressing your back it's really good at strengthening all the muscles around your back to keep your back stable this
47:05
is the machine right here we have one yeah we have the Rogue version of it out there in the studio I could show it to you after we're done here but I love it
47:12
it's phenomenal and it's it's great for developing leg strength and hamstring strength and glute strength but really I
47:18
use it for lower back for decompression show a video Jamie if you would so you
47:24
could we could see how it worked this is Louie uh he was on the podcast back in the day he was an amazing guy and very
47:31
Innovative so he was a powerlifter and developed some back problems himself but you see how on the down swing it's it's
47:39
actually pulling your back and you can feel it pull your back so you can feel it like separate everything you feel
47:46
like little things pop in there and it it provides relief and for him they were
47:51
telling them he had to get his disc fused because he had too much compression he said well what about decompression
47:57
and they were reluctant to consider that and so he's a genius a fitness genius
48:02
and so he designed a machine that would actively decompress the spine while strengthening the muscles around it whoa
48:10
that sounds awesome yeah have you done any decompression stuff I bought this thing that you like hang upside down on
48:16
it that uh you know I mean this was like a couple years ago um I don't know if it
48:23
helped that much you know what actually has helped me a lot what it I took up uh during the Pand boxing really yeah okay
48:28
so what's going on is just strengthening your lower back which is helping you that's helped yeah yeah you need to strengthen it for sure this is better um
48:36
another thing when you're talking about the hanging you're talking about a teeter right which Teeter I like that
48:41
that unit but Teeter makes what I think is a far better unit which is the decks whoa and so we have that outside too and
48:48
what that does is instead of hanging from your ankles so your legs tense up and your legs resist the weight of your
48:54
body instead of that every everything hinges down from your hips and you will like immediately feel when you get on
49:01
there your back popping and decompressing I use that every day it's
49:07
called the Dex de2 and uh you know just buy it off Amazon it's not expensive you also could
49:13
do back extension exercises on it it's very versatile machine but man for
49:18
decompressing the back I've never found anything better Chang my life that's awesome and I also use those kinds of
49:25
things with weight so I what I'll do is I'll hold uh two 20 lb dumbbells in my
49:31
hands and I'll do back extensions so I'm developing strength around all those
49:37
lower back issues I've had a lot of back issues from dis degeneration from Jiu-Jitsu you know 20 years of wrestling
49:45
with men and getting your neck strangled and it's like does a lot of stuff to your to your back that's not good and you've never had surgery right no
49:52
everyone that I know has had problems I do not know anyone that has had back surgery that's like that's the best
49:58
thing I ever did everyone like Daniel Cormier UFC champion you know he's like
50:04
I was never the same once they cut my back open it was never the same there's ways to also deal with it with stem
50:10
cells and one of the things they're doing now because the FDA has such restrictive rules on stem cells people
50:15
are going overseas and other countries to do it and uh I have some friends that run a clinic down in Tijana the cellular
50:23
performance Institute and I know many people including a good friend of mine my friend Shane Dorian who is a world
50:30
champion Surfer who had pretty severe back problems he went there and they
50:35
they're injecting directly into the discs and there's a very strict protocol
50:40
of recovery you're not doing anything physical for like a couple of months after that you can walk essentially they
50:47
don't want any stress on the back anything that's going to imped the healing process he said within 6 months
50:55
after that all of the ISS isues that he had went away wow getting up in the morning it was always like oh just stiff
51:01
no stiff like a new back now wow wild wild and you could do that again and you
51:06
could do it again and you could do it again like it's not like a thing you could only do once right it's not like a surgery that they're going to go in and
51:12
remove part of your disc so they do that the disectomy they'll take a a chunk of your disc out that's pressing against a
51:18
nerve but now guess what now you have less disc tissue you have less cushioning in between your spinal column
51:24
which is not good and this is a a way that they're doing now that seems to work and it's certainly at least worth a
51:31
try you know for people that are considering something that can have life-changing
51:36
effects yeah I mean whenever I sneeze I have back pain tilting over a sink putting on my underwear it's it's uh you
51:43
know but I live with it like I I me I'm strong I'm you know the strongest I've ever been I'm in you know good shape but
51:48
it is my it is sort of my Achilles heel um do you ever do uh windmills like
51:54
kettle bell windmills no another phenomenal lower back exercise great for
52:00
the entire core but it's you you clean and press a kettle bell and then you
52:06
turn to the side with like you so if I'm holding the kettle bell up with my right arm my left foot would be pointed that
52:12
way uh with your knee bent and you drop down like this whoa yeah and then all
52:17
the way up like that and so it's on both sides it's strengthening all the supporting muscles around your spine and
52:24
it just gives you much better range of mo motion I could feel things sort of pop and move and twist around when I do
52:30
it it's great love it phenomenal I'm going to do that yeah Turkish getups another one do you ever do those no not
52:37
a very sexy exercise but phenomenal for your core and just your overall ability
52:43
to move things you know because it it it it strengthens all of the connecting
52:50
areas instead of strengthening different specific muscle groups it's it really is working on strengthening all the
52:56
weaknesses in your system you know you know how Turkish getup works so you're lying flat on your back you press this
53:04
up you sit up you get to one knee you post the other knee you get up you stand up straight and then you lower yourself
53:10
back the same way damn very very difficult exercise difficult to do but
53:15
phenomenal for the whole thing wow and I think one of the problems that people have when it comes to weightlifting and
53:21
developing problems and you know I've certainly had plenty is that you're overlook loing certain muscle groups and
53:29
then all the stuff that connects things together the lower back the neck all these different issues they they happen
53:35
because your whole system is not strong uniformly like you're you're developing
53:43
strong muscle groups like quads you know but you know how what how are the
53:48
hamstrings how are the things behind your calves how are you know how are your tib muscles how was how's your
53:53
lower back like what's what's going on what exercis you've done to make sure that your spine is
54:00
protected I find that unilateral movements are really helpful like um Bulgarian split split squats as painful
54:07
as those are to do um I find that those help a lot and they don't aggravate aggravate my lower back at all like I
54:13
can't I can't barbell squat I can't even really CU my range of motion is now so limited do like leg presses like on the
54:19
machine your range of motion for your back when you do leg presses it's just
54:24
limited in the sense that like my I don't know what I I don't know the terminology but it's like hip mobility
54:30
or something like my legs only get to a certain point where I get that buttwink
54:35
thing you know like my lower back starts curving up okay words on the leg press and that's like strain do you um do
54:43
slant board exercises no I don't what is that okay there's a guy called the slant
54:48
board guy that made this dope product and one of the things I love about his go to slant board guys page one of the
54:54
things I love about his is his has these little hooks on the side where you can add bands to it as well W and so what a
55:01
slant board is is a board that you do squats on where the back of it is raised so your toes are pointing down your
55:07
heels are pointing up and what this allows you to do is get a very deep Bend of the knees and you get your
55:14
knees that push out over your toes and you really lower you know as to heels
55:21
and what I do with those that's it right there that's I have that one at home he made me one of so you can do this they're doing it with
55:28
different exercises here these are just calf strengthening exercises I do them with body weight squats and one of the
55:34
things I do them with is goblet squats um I have very strong legs but I never
55:40
do deadlifts and I never do like regular squats the heaviest thing I squat with
55:46
is a 100 lb kettle bell so I hold a 100lb kettle bell in in front of me and
55:52
then I do goblet squats on that and what that does is it strengthens you when you
55:58
have a a heavyweight like a 100 PB Kettle BT and you're holding it in this position just to hold it there your
56:04
whole body wants to go forward right because it's like it's all this weight out in front of you so you're
56:10
stabilizing it with your lower back you're stabilizing with your abs and then you're dropping down very deep into
56:17
this body weight Squat and then up for this goblet squat H and I do it on that
56:23
on the slant board phenomenal and it doesn't put a lot train on your back that's awesome I've noticed that front
56:29
squats or yeah maybe I guess I've used um dumbbells to do goblet s those are
56:35
great too yeah a lot less load on the spine so that's that's helped me a lot too and really hard to do yeah so this
56:42
is it right this gentleman's doing it right here perfectly so he's doing a bunch of different variations of it so
56:48
he's doing you know oh like yeah okay he's going s side lunges so the Goblet
56:54
Squad is there so he's got this is a who's this guy right here on oh it's on
57:00
the slant board guys channel so slant board guy like I said he sent me that
57:05
and he he's he's been doing this he made this quite a long time ago and I I think it's
57:11
just a phenomenal piece of exercise equipment that I I don't I have in every gym I have here I have my house that's
57:17
freaking awesome yeah yeah I mean f Fitness is a huge part of my life but it's uh I've been limited for the past
57:24
decade because of the back because of the back yeah I'm after this podcast I'm going to take you next door and show you
57:29
that reverse hyper and and you get to experience that Dex yeah just those two things alone I think will provide you
57:35
tremendous relief so excited and the decks you can just have in your house it's like simple easy to set up I'm so
57:41
down yeah yeah I mean you know there's a lot that I you know obviously don't know
57:47
but uh but I know what I know and I know that from a from a nutritional standpoint from an environmental exposure standpoint your average
57:54
American today is inflicting self harm unwittingly on a daily basis yeah via the foods via the exposures yeah we're
58:01
just constantly taking in things that give us inflamation yeah and you know where our
58:08
circadian rhythms are all disregulated we're more sedentary than we've ever been we're exposed to I mean the I
58:14
believe it was the environmental working group identified 217 industrial chemicals in Cord Blood you know of
58:21
pregnant women we just we being exposed you know from from Every Which Way and it's not necessarily that it's like one
58:28
compound that's causing all of our problems you know but it's it's cumulative injury it's like we our
58:35
bodies are resilient but they can only contend with so much so you you throw all these exposures against the backdrop
58:41
of widespread nutrient deficiencies you know unprecedented
58:46
sedentary Behavior chronic stress poor sleep and it's a it's a recipe for
58:52
chronic disease I mean it's not to me it's it's very clear as to why so many of us seem to be suffering yeah and it's
58:59
very difficult for someone who's swimming in a sea of that to figure out how to course correct yeah and I you
59:05
know to to to to quote unquote detoxify which has become one of these contentious words now on social media
59:12
granted maybe possibly for good reason because it's used to sell detox supplements and things like that but I
59:17
mean our bodies can detox we just have to make sure that we're giving our bodies the right the right raw materials to to do that and that's actually one
59:24
reason why I think you know I'm not a carnivore Dieter I'm I'm I'm a big advocate of consuming grass-fed
59:30
grass-finished meat I'm a you know huge protein guy but I do think dietary fiber plays an important role in terms of
59:36
helping us you know detoxify release some of these compounds when we go to theath how does dietary fiber play a
59:42
role in detoxifying so the three primary means in which a body detoxifies is via peeing
59:49
pooping and sweating and when you release bile acids into the Lumin of the
59:56
gut with those bile acids come compounds that the liver has has essentially
1:00:01
deemed has has marked for removal from the body and fiber dietary fiber soluble
1:00:07
fiber um specifically sequesters these bile acids and they because they're
1:00:14
absorbed by the soluble fiber they disallow reabsorption and so you poop them out that's one of the reasons
1:00:20
that's that's actually the mechanism by which soluble fiber reduces can reduce
1:00:25
LL cholesterol apob because it sequesters bio acids which your liver creates using cholesterol and um so you
1:00:34
you essentially like poop out lipids toxins I mean if you're not pooping on a regular basis you're harboring you know
1:00:40
toxins that's why I think that that's probably one of the mechanisms by which fiber seems to be so consistently
1:00:46
associated with health span lifespan um you know and those
1:00:52
observations are not necessarily causal like there's healthy user bias there I think you know obviously people who eat
1:00:58
more fruits and vegetables today they likely have other healthy dietary and lifestyle Habits Like that's
1:01:05
that's clear right but I do think there's a mechanism for fiber to help um remove some of these toxins and and the
1:01:12
like and is the idea behind that mechanism that fiber encourages defecation fiber the soluble fiber like
1:01:20
traps it basically bile acids get released into the Lumin of the gut which help break down down fats right you need
1:01:27
these you need these compounds to break down and and assimilate fats from your diet right but there's a very small I
1:01:32
believe it's at the end of the small intestine where these acids essentially would otherwise get reabsorbed but because they're trapped by the soluble
1:01:39
gel forming fiber they get passed and so how is that different than what would
1:01:45
happen if you just ate meat and you have these compounds that's a big question mark but
1:01:51
I think that that's uh something that is not often discussed and should be discussed one of the potential benefits
1:01:58
of fiber is the fact that it helps trap toxins in the gut and meat does not no
1:02:03
meat is meat is a low residue food food meat is largely absorbed in the small intestine I mean when people you know
1:02:09
the bulk of stool i
42
views
Banks 🤝 Cartels (HIDDEN Hands Behind Drug Trade)
Banks 🤝 Cartels (HIDDEN Hands Behind Drug Trade)
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#crypto #cryptocurrency #cryptocommunity #cryptonews #bitcoin #ethereum #ada #solana #news #brics #unitedstates #brics2024 #currency #bitcoin #crypto #news #btc #ethereum #eth #ondo #cryptocurrency #litecoin #altcoin #altcoins #pulsechain #hex #xrp #ada #ripple #cardano #bitboy #lynettezang #forex #money #best #trading #bitcoinmining #invest #trader #cryptocurrencies #top #investing #entrepreneur #business #success #investment #finance #motivation #coinbase #stocks #wallstreet #investor #wealth #bullish #bearish #cryptolive #future #altcoindaily #coinbureau #priceprediction #cartel #drugs #thetruth
Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, crypto, altcoin, altcoin daily, news, bitboy, best investment, top altcoins, ripple, best crypto investment, ethereum, xrp, crash, bottom, crash, price, prediction, podcast, interview, finance, stock, investment, too late, bitcoin, cryptocurrency news, bitcoin news, cryptocurrency news media online, best crypto investments, 2024 prediction, should I buy solana?, coin bureau, binance, coinbase, trading crypto, trade, make money, cryptosrus, bitcoin today, bitcoin cnbc, altcoin news, millionaire, finance, hard work, earn, potential, future, tech
37
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The Dark Side of Corporations (GLOBAL Exploitation Exposed!)
Pull up for precise seeking
6:21
1:04 / 10:18
The Dark Side of Corporations (GLOBAL Exploitation Exposed!)
Do corporations control the world? Many people think that corporations are just businesses, but that’s not really how it works...
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23
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Fighting The System With Old World Tech - You Vill "CONTROL' Nusink And You Vill Be Happy
Fighting The System With Old World Tech - You Vill "CONTROL' Nusink And You Vill Be Happy
They say that in the future, you'll own nothing and be happy about it, but in actuality, that ship has already sailed. It's the ability to be autonomous and control your own movements that is really at stake here, and the battle is being lost every day in countless different ways.
By promoting archaic technologies and systems on this channel the way we do, it appears that we are just being senseless luddites, but there's a much bigger picture and we'll thought out methods to the apparent madness.
@J_Bravo @EconomicNinja @IAllegedly
#automobile #diy #technology
47
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BREAKING NEWS WikiLeaks [Critical Moment for Free Speech]
BREAKING NEWS WikiLeaks [Critical Moment for Free Speech]
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26
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Hang On, Is THIS Why Assange Was Freed?
Hang On, Is THIS Why Assange Was Freed?
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Julian Assange is free. But what led to the plea deal, and why now?
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Julian nange has been released in a way
0:03
this seems epocal and extraordinary and
0:05
many people will see it as a victory
0:07
indeed on a human level on a personal
0:09
level it is a victory he's United with
0:11
Stella his wife and his children once
0:14
more that's extraordinary to see the
0:16
images of Julian Assange getting on a
0:18
jet and like looking at his face and
0:20
wondering what he must be feeling is
0:24
kind of exciting and inspiring It's
0:27
Curious that he has had to plead guilty
0:30
in a bargain with the United States to
0:32
the crime of Espionage making him the
0:35
first journalist to be successfully
0:37
prosecuted with that I think that's a
0:39
fact of the matter there will be more
0:40
details after he reaches a Pacific
0:43
island where there will be a trial and
0:45
presumably it seems a sentencing
0:48
equivalent to the time he spent in
0:50
belmarsh without one you might be
0:53
wondering why Julian Assange is guilty
0:56
of Espionage you might be wondering why
0:58
Julian Assange is guilty of anything
1:01
this is what Julian Assange is guilty of
1:04
people will say stuff like Julian
1:06
Assange is guilty of putting American
1:08
troops and service Personnel in danger
1:11
that's the kind of thing people will say
1:13
but this is what Julian Assange is
1:16
actually guilty of pay attention to this
1:18
and think for a moment I wonder when it
1:20
was that Julian Assange was saying this
1:22
I'm not sure but it's probably like 10
1:25
years ago cuz he weren't in the
1:26
Ecuadorian Embassy when he was saying it
1:28
and he weren't in Belmont harsh when he
1:30
was saying it and it's about 7 years
1:32
accumulatively that he's been in one of
1:34
those places maybe even a little longer
1:37
now we live in a space now where perhaps
1:39
all of us that occupy these spaces are
1:41
in a sense the progeny of the likes of
1:44
those early outliers in those spaces and
1:47
you might say you choose a hero maybe
1:49
you were really into the David Ike
1:51
perspective maybe you love gome Chomsky
1:53
or Naomi Klein maybe you were really
1:56
into Alex Jones 30 years deep or maybe
1:59
you are a fan of Julian Assange and what
2:02
he has done and what he's subsequently
2:04
been accused of to have a look at this
2:06
clip of Julian Assange this is the
2:08
Julian Assange that they jailed because
2:11
the goal is not to completely subjugate
2:15
Afghanistan the goal is to use
2:17
Afghanistan to wash money out of the tax
2:20
bases of the United States out of the
2:23
tax bases of European countries through
2:26
Afghanistan and back into the hands of a
2:29
transational security that is the goal
2:32
I.E the goal is to have an endless war
2:36
not a successful War now what Julian
2:38
Assange describes In that clip is
2:40
something that we all well now
2:42
understand oh there are provocations and
2:44
causes for international Wars that drain
2:46
the coffers of independent Sovereign
2:48
Nations taxpayers fund these wars it
2:50
seems that the money loops around
2:52
somehow ends up in the hands of the
2:53
military industrial complex do you
2:54
imagine that there are similarities
2:56
between the Afghanistan conflict and the
2:58
Ukraine Russia conflict and what's
2:59
happening across the Middle East right
3:01
now let me know in the comments and the
3:03
chat as well as declaring publicly as
3:06
well as providing evidence thanks to The
3:08
Bravery of Chelsea Manning that the
3:11
American Military in particular were
3:13
behaving corruptly and let's call it
3:14
what it was a legally he also said stuff
3:17
like this this is another defining
3:20
Julian Assange statement what's the
3:23
difference between Mark Zuckerberg and
3:24
me says Assange I give private
3:26
information on corporations to you for
3:28
free and I'm a villain zukerberg gives
3:30
your private information to corporations
3:32
for money and he's Man of the Year
3:35
Julian Assange is free for now and
3:38
across the internet you can see numerous
3:40
people posting how excited they are how
3:42
pleased they are and yet what an
3:44
injustice it remains although there is a
3:47
curious post from Mike Pence now have a
3:50
look at this Julian Assange endangered
3:53
the lives of our troops in a time of war
3:55
and should have been prosecuted to the
3:56
fullest extent of the law the Biden
3:59
administration's plead deal with Assange
4:00
is a miscarriage of justice and
4:02
dishonors the service and sacrifice of
4:04
the men and women of our armed forces
4:06
and their families there should be no
4:08
plea deals to avoid prison for anyone
4:09
that endangers the security of our
4:11
military or even the National Security
4:13
of the United States ever what's
4:15
extraordinary about this primarily is
4:17
that is the perspective that prevails
4:20
that is the idea that's led to Julian
4:22
Assange being prosecuted successfully
4:24
under the SPN AR act and having been
4:25
incarcerated without trial for the last
4:28
seven years Mike Pence is tone death Out
4:31
Of Tune Madness which you could unpack
4:33
in Myriad ways you could say for example
4:36
well isn't it pretty extraordinary that
4:37
22 American Service Personnel take their
4:40
own lives every single day is that an
4:43
indication that perhaps there are other
4:44
ways we could honor and support the
4:45
troops there are military families and
4:48
military veterans watching this right
4:49
now you know how you feel about your
4:51
government you know how you feel about
4:53
the United States and its relationship
4:55
with large corporations and its plainly
4:57
globalist agenda and you know who side
5:00
Julian Assange was on and it's your side
5:02
and that's the reason Julian Assange was
5:05
incarcerated in the way that he was
5:07
what's astonishing about Mike Pence's
5:08
remarks is even though to you and to me
5:11
and surely to any right thinking person
5:14
they would seem like the rantings of a
5:15
lunatic they are in effect the imperat
5:19
and imprint of the Mind Of The
5:21
Establishment and they are not
5:23
theoretical that's how Assange was
5:25
treated and is using that mentality that
5:28
people can perpetu those ideas you can't
5:31
speak out against the nation why the
5:33
average service Personnel member would
5:35
be put into all sorts of Jeopardy how
5:38
long will we allow them to divide us on
5:41
that basis I would say not for a lot
5:43
longer and that's thanks primarily to
5:46
Heroes like Julian Assange there are
5:49
others but Julian Assange today in
5:51
particular we should celebrate and I
5:53
would rather hear the opinion of no one
5:56
more than that of Coast guy that's how
5:58
you can follow him on x Neil Oliver Neil
6:01
welcome in Earnest to the show thank you
6:03
very much Russell great to hear you uh
6:05
great to hear your thoughts on Julian
6:07
Assange what do you feel we can learn
6:09
not only from the imprisonment of isange
6:12
which I'm sure you and I are guessing
6:14
alignment on but why is he being
6:16
released now do you think it's connected
6:18
to the November elections in the United
6:20
States and do you think that it's
6:21
connected even to the forthcoming
6:24
debates well I think it's it's hard to
6:26
imagine that it wasn't done with out of
6:28
some kind of political expediency I'm
6:30
I'm sure it is to do with the fact that
6:32
they're in we're in the rundown to
6:34
elections in November and uh everyone
6:37
involved is trying to appeal to their to
6:39
their base and and to and to you know
6:41
develop an idea in in the public mind of
6:44
the kind of people that that they are
6:46
Joe Biden and his his team I'm sure that
6:50
they had to get they have to get this uh
6:53
prosecution uh because otherwise I can
6:56
imagine uh there might be the
6:57
possibility of uh appeals and demands
7:00
for compensation for all that wrongful
7:03
imprisonment without trial but I suppose
7:05
if if they get uh Julian Assange to
7:08
plead guilty to something that lets
7:11
them jail him as it were reverse
7:15
engineer jail sentence so that they can
7:16
justify that we can't continue to bring
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but I mean more than anything else Trudy
8:32
my wife and I were talking about it this
8:33
morning you know that there it's 15
8:35
years that this has been going on for
8:38
him this this Detention of one form or
8:41
another and you know my youngest child
8:44
is is 16 now uh I I must have been I
8:47
would have been about
8:49
42 uh when when Julian Assan began this
8:52
uh this unbelievable Odyssey of
8:55
detention and to lose that much of your
8:58
life you know when I think that I I've
9:01
watched I've watched my little boy my
9:03
youngest grow up from he first appeared
9:06
to you know today he's in fifth year in
9:08
high school and that Julian Assange has
9:11
spent all of that time either you know
9:14
in the embassy or in B Marsh is just
9:17
Unthinkable as a fellow human being
9:20
almost regardless of what he was accused
9:22
of I I just find that an unthinkable
9:24
Prospect you know because you can't get
9:26
that back you don't get those those
9:28
years back back um it has all of the
9:32
implications that that everyone has
9:34
talked about for the longest time about
9:36
what it means for freedom of speech that
9:37
the idea that a publisher because what
9:39
he didn't he didn't hack that
9:41
information he was provided with
9:43
information and he then published it
9:45
which is what Publishers do and the fact
9:47
that he was singled out when a lot of
9:49
the same content was published by other
9:51
organs and other outlets and nothing
9:53
happened to then the whole the whole
9:55
weight of the uh the attack against the
9:59
publication of that material fell on the
10:01
shoulders of one man everything about it
10:04
just absolutely reeks of of Injustice it
10:07
WS of threat to freedom of speech it it
10:10
raises all sorts of questions about
10:13
democracy all of these things but again
10:15
basically I just think about if I had if
10:18
I had missed the last 15 years of of my
10:21
life being stuck in one box or another I
10:24
don't know how you retain your sanity
10:28
and how you get Beyond it some people
10:30
would argue Neil that we do spend our
10:31
lives moving from box to box vehicle to
10:35
room incarcerated in many tangental and
10:39
perhaps abstract ways which are
10:40
certainly preferable to the very real
10:43
ways that Julian Assange was
10:45
incarcerated in belmarsh one of the
10:47
aspects of this matter that intrigues me
10:50
is the way that Julian Assange went from
10:53
kind of darling of the Legacy Media
10:56
backed by the guardian New York's times
10:59
the spegel all those things like he was
11:02
a kind of princeling a radical I
11:06
remember prior in particular to the
11:08
accusations of sexual assault that
11:10
mysteriously emerged that he was seen as
11:14
a kind of you an icon broadly speaking
11:17
of if not the left but I would say the
11:19
left the an anti-establishment figure
11:22
politics is changed so much in that time
11:26
he's again one of those figures that you
11:27
can use to track the way that the
11:30
culture more broadly has changed Assange
11:32
was abandoned by the left he was
11:34
abandoned by the Legacy Media I'm not
11:35
saying everyone on the left I know for
11:37
example someone like Jeremy Corbin has
11:39
always been very uh outspoken and
11:41
supportive of Assange so that's too much
11:43
for a generalization but what do you
11:45
think it tells us that all of those
11:48
Legacy Media Outlets turned their back
11:50
on Assange was that a pivotal moment was
11:53
that one of the moments when the Legacy
11:55
Media was once more resolutely co-opted
11:58
by The Establishment uh chided and cowed
12:02
by the power of the establishment I
12:03
think some of us will recall like that I
12:05
think like MI5 went into the guardian
12:07
offices with like um like uh sort of
12:10
jigsaws and axe Grinders and just you
12:13
know like terrified the Legacy Media so
12:16
is Julian Assange a pivotal figure in
12:18
the sort of the breakdown of the kind of
12:20
Journalism that him and Greenwell at
12:22
that time and who was similarly a
12:24
darling of the left like was it a
12:26
pivotal moment not just for him not just
12:28
for justice not not just for war
12:29
reporting but somehow for our whole
12:32
culture Neil I think it revealed a
12:35
reality that was there for a long time
12:38
uh but that had been it had been
12:40
convenient or it had been possible or it
12:43
had been expedient uh to keep it out of
12:45
sight uh and then and then the the time
12:49
came I think when uh those days were
12:52
over I'd also mention George Galloway
12:54
was a was a trenching uh supporter of uh
12:58
Julian right from the very beginning you
13:00
know as you see there were there were
13:01
various voices not not enough and I I
13:04
can't claim it I you know I I was I was
13:07
inexcusably oblivious to a lot of it for
13:09
the longest time uh but there were there
13:11
were voices out there who were doing the
13:13
right thing but I think what was exposed
13:16
I genuinely think what was exposed uh
13:18
was uh we are and for and for an unknown
13:22
unspecified period we've been in the
13:24
grip of a crime syndicate or or
13:26
competing crime syndicates and when it
13:30
when it finally uh suited when those
13:33
when those entities when those
13:34
syndicates were confident enough that
13:36
they could just ride rough Shard than
13:38
they did and that the way in which uh
13:42
Julian Assange was uh was made a
13:45
scapegoat and that he was targeted and
13:47
the way that he was bullied and vilified
13:50
I think it it was it was H it
13:52
demonstrated a way in which those those
13:55
crime syndicates had decided that you
13:57
know we don't really need to pretend to
13:59
be uh subject to democracy here we don't
14:02
really need to pretend anymore that we
14:05
will defend freedom and we will defend
14:07
freedom of speech I think to some extent
14:09
it it was a it was an indication that
14:11
those entities had decided you know I
14:14
think we can I think we can go in hard I
14:16
think that the time might be coming when
14:18
we we'll when we'll show the people that
14:20
if we need to get something done we'll
14:21
just do it and we will we will ride
14:24
rough shot over Notions of justice and
14:27
fair trial and and all of the rest of it
14:30
and I think Julian Assange was just
14:32
incredibly unlucky in that respect and
14:36
that he happened to be the right person
14:38
in the right place and he suited he
14:41
suited an objective which was to uh
14:44
which was for those criminal syndicates
14:47
to just start throwing their weight
14:48
around and say it's uh there's a new
14:51
sheriff in town and it's it's ourway or
14:53
the highway I think you're right in a
14:55
number of ways also significantly in the
14:58
way that various figures symbols and
15:01
ideas appear to line up appropriately as
15:04
tectonic plates shift as the technology
15:07
became available for publishing to reach
15:10
the level it did firstly the there was a
15:13
it favored journalism and the type of
15:16
Journalism that may as far as I know
15:18
have once emerged from institutions like
15:20
the New York Times atal but now that
15:23
kind of Integrity is migrated elsewhere
15:25
and Julian Assange was the sort of
15:27
pivotal cartilage figure that connected
15:30
those two worlds I think were there were
15:33
also all he crystallized a moment for
15:36
Everyone by by what he was doing because
15:39
the I I've wondered for a long time uh
15:42
if the if the long-term consequences of
15:45
the internet were foreseen you know back
15:48
in the you know back in the 60s and ' 7s
15:50
when between you know MIT and DARPA the
15:53
whole thing was set in motion I do
15:55
Wonder at the extent to which the
15:56
unintended consequences were foreseen
15:59
and I think by the time of Julian
16:00
Assange and Wikileaks it had become
16:02
apparent to those those crime syndicates
16:06
that actually uh we thought that the
16:08
internet was just going to be something
16:09
that would serve us that would that
16:11
would enable us to harvest all the data
16:13
Harvest all the information about people
16:16
uh you know work towards 24hour a day
16:19
surveillance of people know more about
16:20
them than than you about themselves be
16:22
able to get more information than than
16:24
previous iterations of the CIA and the
16:26
FBI and and anybody else might have ever
16:28
dreamt of gathering about the general
16:30
population but then I think I think it
16:32
was unforeseen that there was another
16:34
that there was a flip side to the
16:36
internet which favored the likes of us
16:39
and Julian Assange was one of the and
16:41
Wikileaks that they were one of the
16:42
first people to make plain the way in
16:45
which the internet could be
16:47
used against them yes that it could be
16:50
that it could be turned back on them and
16:52
very quickly I think it was realized do
16:54
you know what we have got to get a grip
16:56
on this and and we will make a point
16:58
with this guy hey thanks for watching if
17:00
you want to see more uncensored content
17:03
where Free Speech can flourish join our
17:05
live stream click the link right here to
17:07
watch the next video if you want to or
17:09
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17:12
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17:14
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90
views
Big Bank Predators [Keep Your Bitcoin and Hard Assets Safe]
Big Bank Predators [Keep Your Bitcoin and Hard Assets Safe]
Join the Trademaster Telegram to learn more.
https://t.me/Trademaster_Ninja
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19
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"They'll Erase You" - Super Elites, Invention Secrecy Act, Tesla, UFOs | Dr. Steven
"They'll Erase You" - Super Elites, Invention Secrecy Act, Tesla, UFOs | Dr. Steven
Dr. Steven Greer returns for a second sit-down with Patrick Bet-David, and you won't want to miss it! This episode of the PBD podcast features one of the wildest conversations yet, covering government conspiracies, whistleblowers, aliens, secret patents, teleportation, Nikola Tesla, and more. Tune in for an unforgettable discussion!
-----
Find All The Information Referenced - https://drstevengreer.com/
Watch Dr.Greer's Documentary "The Lost Century" - https://amzn.to/3VxSRbV
Watch PBD's first interview with Dr. Greer - https://youtu.be/CiKT2z5HiDU
----
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157
views
"Cartels LOVE Her"- Ed Calderon Reveals How Mexico's New President Will Strengthen Drug Cartels
"Cartels LOVE Her"- Ed Calderon Reveals How Mexico's New President Will Strengthen Drug Cartels
Ed Calderon, a retired federal police officer from Mexico, explains how Mexico's new president affects their criminal organizations and could possibly make China stronger. He also explains his fears that the current administration could lead to a military conflict with the United States.
Mexico just went through an election they elected the first female Jewish uh
0:07
leftist Party candidate uh not getting a lot of attention actually in the
0:12
international press which is surprising but uh especially downplaying the fact
0:18
that out of 20,000 candidates running for federal state local office we have
0:25
on record at least 137 assassinations um is this is coming
0:31
where there's graduation parties of American kids taking keg stands and puking on donkeys in Cabo and and then
0:40
in the interior you have you have third world type uh Behavior so uh which again
0:49
is what makes Mexico just the wildest country on Earth but uh so obviously you
0:56
know take it from there do you think sure where is this coming from and why I
1:02
mean again uh we are we just lived through one of the most violent presidencies in history um we've had
1:09
several the Filipe Calderon Administration which I was which where I got most of my
1:15
experience uh started off a war with the cartels that uh D de evolved into this
1:21
just cluster of a thing um this current president underest mon Lopez oor is part
1:27
of a leftist movement uh very populist guy I think uh Donald Trump uh merged
1:33
with uh Maduro that's that's Lopez orador um uh a guy who is a very a
1:41
populist um Claudia chain bomb is a political candidate that has they
1:47
basically grew up around him um so very much a member of that cult this past uh political cycle we had
1:56
I I mean I've heard 30 official over 30 official political candidates were
2:02
assassinated during these election the election cycle right as well as some actual politicians already in office uh
2:08
after some of the events uh uh that took place during the elections um it's it's
2:15
a free-for-all um cartels have politicized deeply and some of them are
2:21
betting their livelihoods and their organizations influence within the political uh organizations that they are
2:27
now funding um we see a Moren party that is probably on
2:34
the side of the ca cartel or some factions of the Senora CA law Confederation uh we saw a president that
2:41
visited vand wat the the birthplace of oapa Guzman like six times during his
2:46
presidency like he's the president has visited that forgotten place the most so
2:52
there's obviously some sort of relationship there um what what I see is
2:57
Mexico going through very much uh uh very much the same heading it's been on
3:04
for the past few years uh with the current president uh hands-off approach as far as cartel's go UMAS no valasos is
3:11
the policy and saying that nothing is wrong is probably kind of like the main directive that the current government
3:17
has and she looks like somebody's going to basically continue on this policy um
3:22
okay so it's good times ahead for the cartels you think it's going to be business as usual more or less for for a
3:28
few organizations it's probably going to be business as usual some of the classic standouts uh of the senore Confederation
3:34
are probably going to be business as usual um you also see a growing um one
3:42
of the first people to congratulate Shan mom on her victory was uh xiin pin so
3:48
China's very much betting on this uh this Victory as a way into Mexico as far
3:53
as manufacturing um so it's it's it's a celebrated victory in a lot of ways uh
4:00
mostly because of the influence that is being now kind of showcased publicly as far as outside influence and internal
4:06
cartel influence in some of these political uh events in Mexico Mexico is important and people are coming to
4:12
realize the potential of Mexico as the next China so if if the what I don't
4:18
understand is if the current Administration and the incubate um uh
4:24
shine bomb are favorable to the Legacy cartel specifically caoa let's say say
4:30
uh why are all of these political assassinations happening then because
4:37
there's other there's a larger cartel growing in influence and a few a few of them but the main one is the the
4:44
cartel the new generation cartel is a growing uh influence and Power in Mexico
4:51
uh it's it's overtaking the the law cartel as far as territory in the past
4:56
and now it's probably going to overtake them in political influence I think they they they they already got that page out
5:02
of that Playbook and they got that page probably you know pretty recently maybe five six years ago this this phenomenon
5:08
started kind of like really uh taking an uptick and you can directly see a relationship between the Cen cartel and
5:15
the new generation cartel's conflict on the outside as far as like basically them going after each other's territory
5:22
and also the political violence and assassinations are basically at the same time started happening once these two
5:28
large organizations started competing for control over territories um you could see that each
5:33
of them had their own candidates so they were politicized um so when political
5:39
assassinations happen they're essentially uh a proxy hit against a
5:45
rival cartel in a way yeah I mean you have I
5:50
mean you have you have the current the current uh the current feeling in Mexico is that the Mora party isn't stle I mean
5:57
they won by a large majority and most of the places that they uh they competed and a lot of the assassinations were
6:03
targeted at their candidates so we can assume that there's a cartel out there
6:09
that doesn't want their people in MH uh same phenomenon that happens with corrupt uh corrupt cops and corrupt uh
6:15
institutions with corrupt leadership in them you know you corrupt one member of that institution and now you can control
6:22
things that happen on the streets through him my my cartel Rivals will assassinate my guy that's what happens
6:28
within police force and some uh and some government institutions now it's happening at a high level as far as
6:35
politics in Mexico and now is the goal of that to get the candidates or or the
6:42
politicians to then come work for you in other words if I kill a mayor in a city
6:47
in meak Khan where it looked like looks like a lot of the violence uh was happening is that in to to say hey you
6:54
don't work for Ceno anymore you work for halisco yeah I mean it's it's it's like
6:59
okay oh this guy looks like he's going to win let's kill this guy and see if let's see if we can afford the other guy
7:05
that's going to that's going to be the one tol him because everybody that runs in Mexico has aente is what it's called
7:10
basically your running mate you know if something happens to you you get you know the other guy gets replaced yeah
7:16
and some of the high level agreements with some of these criminal organizations happens with happens with the main candidate the suent is like a
7:22
guy it's a forgotten guy in the back room so if you know you're on a budget and you want to have some cartel influence in a certain region of Mexico
7:29
you you know and you can't afford the main candidate you kill him and you pay off the other dude now the other dude OB
7:34
has a visual live lesson of what happens if you don't play right and there's a good chance that the suplente will say
7:41
hey you know what I I'm not married to the caloa I'll go with you guys I mean
7:47
in some cases that's what's happened in other cases it's uh just basically oh that's the uh CA law cartel
7:54
candidate right just just be because he's he's an exposed uh element of an
8:00
organization you know public exposed element of an organization you might not be able to get to them because they're
8:06
hiding or they're in their territories but you see their money behind a candidate so viable
8:13
Target um where were the majority of these assassinations taking place in
8:18
your estimation I mean interestingly enough in a lot of the contested territories of some of these cartel
8:24
organizations uh some of them happen in Mexico uh proper Mexico City uh in the area of Mexico City MH mukan as you
8:30
mentioned which is a contested area right now I mean it's it's been going through basically trench warfare for the
8:37
past five six years um and it's where the uprisings of these armed movements
8:42
of civilians happened in the past that were uh showed on Netflix and various documentaries it's a Hot Zone of
8:49
activity and and it's a very important place for a lot of reasons um one of the
8:54
reasons is uh you know Americans in their avocado toast not and all of the
9:00
uh and all of the avocados that grow in that region and the money that goes in and out of that place if anybody's ever
9:07
bought ask for extra grock at Chipotle you've been putting money in one of one
9:12
of a few cartel organizations out there maybe maybe the maybe the new generation
9:18
cartel that runs that is now kind of gaining influence in that area but most of these places where these political
9:23
organ uh political assassinations have taken place you can directly link to places that are contested as well
9:29
control over the territory MH and you're referring to of course the extortion of the avocado industry uh in
9:37
meakan yeah and that's I mean it's one that's a giant industry and there's a lot of money there a lot of American
9:43
money I think it was a boycott for a bit but uh that it's it's gold it's green
9:49
gold and again it's one of those examples of uh of these cartels diversifying going into regular
9:54
industry and and or extorting I mean again extortion is one way
10:00
ownership is another you know we don't hear lot we don't hear a lot about these groups coming in and basically making
10:05
you sell them your land and or just signing it over that's not extortion that's a very quiet way of basically
10:12
buying into regular business and so focusing on on the avocado industry for a second what does uh killing a
10:20
political candidate in one of these zones in mean what does uh that do to
10:27
further uh a cartel s's interest in say the avocado industry I mean if you have
10:33
control over a town mayor you have eyes and ears now uh and you now you have a whole arm institution where the
10:38
Municipal Police is now on your you know now they're your guys um they have you
10:44
have eyes and ears all over the area now uh now you have um ways of extorting and
10:50
not extorting of robbing the government blind of its funds by you know having
10:55
competitions for different contracts as far as Government contracts and now you have your cartel uh ghost companies
11:02
shell companies uh competing for some of these uh things so it's it's not just the influence and the power behind it
11:08
and having control over a region because you know you have the political candidates there it's also access it's
11:14
access to information intelligence um and legitimate inroads
11:19
into industry in Mexico so some of these organizations have U are hard to it's
11:24
hard to tell where the uh where the legitimate parts and and the legitimate
11:29
Parts begin so if this is what they're after if a new highway is get needs
11:35
getting paved or built in you know a city in Guerrero right uh that's the
11:43
cartel is probably going to get that bid if they own that mayor or that Governor
11:48
or whoever's earmarking those funds or whoever the cartel wants to get that bid
11:54
it could be one of their companies it could be a company that they're extorting you know it could be you know
11:59
it's complex um the the means and ways that these organizations make money is
12:05
not just hey we cross drugs into the United States and we get the cash back and we wear pointy boots and big hats and chains that is an image of the
12:12
cartels that is vintage that's like a that's like a 30 30 40 year old image
12:20
now I guess uh these guys are Diversified um these guys are trying to figure out ways and inroads into
12:25
telecommunications I mean they took apart a whole Telecom ation system that they had already set up a few times
12:32
across Mexico um they're they're interested in Sea Lanes they're interested in start in building
12:38
ports they what would be better paying off a Port Authority or building your
12:43
own port right so they want to build a port uh to
12:50
import chemicals from China to make fent andol but they're going also going to
12:55
build their company is going to build the port their company their Electrical Company is going to power the port their
13:02
cement company is going to sell the cement to the construction company and so now you've just Diversified and your
13:09
your streams of income are now 10x and only one of them is illegal right yep
13:15
yeah I mean cartel got I mean elements of the C law cartel historically have have done all this work
13:21
already other organizations that are getting to the same size as it are now doing the same and that's why you're
13:28
seeing this a of violence now people are aware of this now and it's kind of in the open in
13:34
a lot of ways I mean you know uh the the the Pres pres and Lopez ofor goes to
13:40
lagonia lag goes to Chapo's hometown of
13:45
Luna uh and his uh his b wat I mean um
13:51
and uh for the funeral of O Chapo Guzman he closed off the federal airspace over
13:58
that area so he could have a wow they could have a nice funeral for him for for for his mom now Ed how does that how
14:07
does that contradict how does this um this new look this this new uh modus
14:15
operandi if you will of Mexican criminal organizations right the way that they have
14:20
completely uh embedded themselves into legitimate uh Society right into into uh
14:29
the legitimate economy right to where it's like imperceptible almost yeah how does that
14:35
contradict with Mexico's growth like the GDP grew
14:41
18% last year uh so so how do these two things how are these two things related
14:47
going forward sure I so it's it's it's it's say to think that in a country like Mexico with all the violence and all the
14:53
people the numbers are skewed by the way all official numbers as far as people dying and disappearing in Mexico are completely a lot of those are skewed ask
15:01
me how I know I used to work for the government are they downplayed yeah they're yeah they're
15:07
downplayed you know somebody going missing they're missing there's a reason why some of these Federal organizations
15:12
uh go after some of the mothers that are looking for their missing uh sons and and daughters and
15:19
stuff like that go out looking for cabers they're they're actively being blocked by federal officials now they
15:24
don't they don't want them to find anybody because the numbers going to change right um
15:29
you have a country with that going on and all the violence yeah there's some good parts of the country but Mexico
15:35
really is like four five countries in one we have Central Mexico which is our New York California type people woke
15:44
leftist all the trans uh pronouns and stuff like that uh legislation started
15:49
in Mexico City proper so that's our that's our New York and California I guess um you have northern Mexico which
15:55
is a lot of the industry uh Baja monter a lot of the plugs that go
16:02
directly into United States and all all that you know uh and then you have rural
16:08
parts of Mexico um um that are kind of Forgotten and uh that kind of do their
16:14
own thing on the coast and then you have the jungle parts of Mexico which are people are really forgotten like Waka
16:20
and chapas right so these are the three these five parts of Mexico the industrial side of it the
16:27
northern part of Mexico is basically Bally with open arms waiting for all of the exiting manufacturing capabilities
16:35
of China because people don't want to invest in China anymore and want to make anything in China because of everything that entails and also because the
16:41
economy China's going to the toilet um and and all of the manufacturing is
16:46
moving to where where else Mexico this is the next China that's why you're seeing such a stable currency MH and
16:54
that's why you're seeing a lot of people investing in in in Mexico and that's why you saw us cheeking
16:59
uh being one of the first people to congratulate Claudia on her Victory it's
17:04
probably related to the fact that he wants to make his electric vehicles in Mexico to get around the tariffs that's
17:10
probably his that's probably their objective with that I guess um uh
17:17
because uh I mean I think that's where that's where we're moving they they tried to make a Tesla plant uh a Tesla
17:24
building plant uh in in Monterey that kind of went through and it was a whole big deal just for one plant uh now
17:31
there's Rumblings of four from China and they're not going to have the same issues with like we have to have these
17:38
ambiental standards built into this like they're not going to on any of that so so with with the the coming Prosperity
17:46
that's that's coming to certain parts of Mexico right the manufacturing Hub the financial center in Mexico City because
17:52
those are linked right um yeah you know with this coming up it's it's safe to
17:58
say that that well is it safe to say that uh cartels are actually going to be
18:04
a thing of the past in terms of these uh iconic Kingpin figures Chapo meno like
18:13
don't you because Mexico's got a vested interest in trying to not eliminate crime not eliminate cartels but to to
18:20
bury them from uh you know the rest of the world right I mean the Mexican
18:27
people have that wish but probably the federal and and
18:33
politics doesn't I guess um there's a giant swath of industry in Mexico and
18:38
people that live off the money that the United States sends down to Mexico to pay for the War on Drugs for example uh
18:45
you want to talk about cartels that nobody talks about Ford mortar company n
18:50
511 tactical gear which make millions off the drug war in Mexico um the United
18:57
States through a thing called Med that's plan Med that which is a bilateral uh agreement with Mexico as far as
19:04
basically sending money down to Mexico so they can do the fighting for us is kind of the idea that money has been
19:11
going down there for years and the problem's getting bigger I mean it's not getting any better um you can see I mean
19:20
in a lot of ways and and this is not me just theorizing on this there there's been many uh document leaks from the
19:26
current uh Administration ations uh sedena which is our our army the
19:31
military the military industrial complex in Mexico uh where you can clearly see
19:36
that they know that certain politicians in certain regions of Mexico are working for one cartel or the other their
19:43
intelligence organ their intelligence apparatus tells them that so like hey if you're going to go and do patrolling in
19:49
this region yeah don't tell the local authorities because they're they're not going to they're not going to help you
19:54
because they work for the cartels right so so they themselves are
19:59
clearly uh stating that everybody has a side everybody's trying to figure out
20:05
who's going to come up on top and everybody's basically vying for power or aligning themselves as far as who
20:11
they're going to be working for in the future to see who's going to win this war so you so you do think that if
20:19
Mexico reaches the industrial capacity of China in like the 1990s or the mid
20:24
2000s right when it was the fastest growing economy in the world it was
20:30
their Heyday right you think that that the corruption and the violence and the criminal the criminally Run state that
20:37
is Mexico can exist alongside five Tesla factories in monter this this modern
20:44
industrial you think both of those things can exist in parallel I don't see I don't see how I
20:50
mean I don't I I mean I remember talking to some people that were involved in some of the negotiation for Tesla like I
20:56
do I do security Consulting lot so every now and then I get called with questions about that type of stuff and uh one of
21:04
the things that they were kind of worried about and these people have worked in a lot of parts of the world including China uh they were worried
21:10
about paid paid protection and extortion which is a field that they had no idea how to deal with uh realistically um so
21:19
I I don't I don't see this working longterm um a lot of these plants moving
21:25
down there are going to basically create an opportunity for people and um people that are already working
21:31
down in Mexico won't will know this already there's no way of working in
21:36
Mexico without realizing that there's two authorities here the government and the other government laa
21:45
L Mano Puda whatever you want to call them they have different names you know there different nicknames to kind of refer to them um but in a lot of ways
21:53
now you have institutions and this has happened to some of the clients that I've had where they're like hey yeah a
22:00
guy came here tried to extort money from us and he G gave us a phone and we talked to this guy he said arrange
22:06
payments and stuff like that so we gave all that to the cops and then we had another call from the same people it's
22:11
like hey I know you call it so and so at the cops yeah he works for us so like what the are you doing so this is this is the nature of
22:19
it um so could that happen like could Tesla H have to pay the piper could they
22:25
end up having to pay extortion to whoever many American companies that
22:30
work openly in Mexico through industry have paid extortion money and PID
22:36
protection money and are currently that's a whole industry and that's a whole other money-making aspect of the cartels that really doesn't get exposed
22:43
or talked about about a lot wow so so an American company are they paying the cops are the cops the intermediaries or
22:50
are they paying the cartel guys where you are it depends on where you are I mean you might show up someplace and
22:56
again I can't talk about some of these things the specific uh about some of these jobs that I've been on but
23:03
uh American Plant uh old company moves to Mexico sets up shop uh
23:10
they bought the company in Parts people were already there working and they had
23:16
an issue with uh things um valuable parts that they were making
23:21
were walking off right so um they hir they changed security and still still
23:28
it's still happening uh they put cameras up still happening
23:35
they called me and I went in there and like looked around and talked to
23:40
everybody and um I told the guy like you bought this company who's the managerial aspect
23:47
of oh these guys up here they're like they're known in the community they they're the fixers they know everybody these are the guys okay yeah that those
23:54
are intermediaries for the cart house those guys are connected with somebody from the outside and they're basically
23:59
taxing you mhm what do you mean I mean they that you're being robbed from
24:04
within okay so fire those guys get another they they get a call hire them
24:11
back wow or else you know so you think so you actually think that this strategy
24:17
of near Shoring right instead of sending your manufacturing to China send it to
24:24
Mexico you actually you don't think it's going to uh you don't think it's going to last long term I think two there's
24:30
two things going to go on one if Trump wins he's aware of this loophole that the Chinese are trying to exploit and
24:37
he's gonna just ter off the out of everything so it's not gonna it's not going to do anything the long term that
24:43
that's what I think I I don't know um but uh you are seeing now a growing uh
24:51
incursion as far as like Chinese money business and coming into Mexico and they
24:56
realize quickly that they can't be too open and upfront about it so what what are what they are doing is they're
25:01
investing in Mexican companies gaining ownership stock and all that stuff uh
25:06
and all that as far as control controlling decision power in some of these Mexican companies and setting up
25:11
in Mexico uh or other International companies I mean they bought up Canadian companies in the past to kind of hide
25:17
some of their dealings as far as Mining and like that in Mexico uh when the uh giant lithium deposits were found in
25:24
Sonora uh the Chinese were using a Canadian Mining Company to kind of buy and into some of those rights and the
25:30
Americans kind of figured some of that out blocked it I guess but uh do you know what's going on in chapas I've
25:35
heard that Chinese companies are working to try to buy buy out indigenous land
25:42
that's full of minerals underneath it and in doing so they are employing local
25:49
uh or even the super cartels right depends on who they're connected with to then Massacre the the land owners to get
25:57
them to sell so the chin the companies can take over is there there any veracity to those claims yes and if
26:04
people don't think there is any veracity over those claims I would say rewind back the time the clock a little bit uh
26:11
we saw these uh documentaries on Netflix about all these Mexican talents people raising up in arms and wearing white
26:18
t-shirts uh people thought that was like they were that that was like some sort of operis uh what I heard and what I
26:26
realized later on it it was an illegal iron ore uh mining
26:32
operation by the Chinese in the area a few of them and they were actually paying some of these armed groups to be
26:38
protection to keep people away uh it's been done in the past in
26:44
Mexico and recent past and it's probably
26:49
being done again specifically with a friendly open government towards uh the Chinese uh right now and it's going to
26:56
get even a bit bit it's going to be even bit a bit stronger as we move forward so
27:02
the cartels don't mind the Chinese incursion into Mexico one of them doesn't one of them specifically I think
27:09
has like all of the interest for all of the support on that side I mean the the
27:14
new generation cartel seems to have some sort of relationship and or favoritism I guess I don't know uh it seems to grow
27:23
more uh on the Pacific side where it has access to those ports than the other side of the country which makes me think
27:30
that you know something's going on also during the co epidemic it's one of the it's one of the only cartels that
27:35
maintains their capacity to infuse fenel into their product while the calora
27:40
cartel Federation was um exporting fenel from the US into
27:47
Mexico to load their drugs and then put them up a back up there was a there was a case in sanedo I think they caught a
27:54
giant load of fenel was coming from San Diego down to Mexico wow so so you can
28:00
see there that they have logistical support at least of some sort or some sort of favoritism or some sort of
28:06
support of some kind so if not stupid so sounds like halisco then has the noo
28:12
halisco has the the bigger plug with China then if they're able to keep the fentanyl rolling even during the
28:19
pandemic um yeah and you're and you're seeing the influence of the scen L cartel
28:24
just like we we saw a violent Uprising in the chapas the chapas Waka border
28:30
area um where you saw members of elayo sad historical leader of the scen law
28:37
cartel a lot of his armed gunmen basically drive down to the border which
28:44
is kind of think about this um Mexico is a country that has armed gunships and a
28:49
whole military that you've seen their you've seen their operations you've seen what they can do I mean the last
28:56
gaso you saw what they could do uh somehow a molte vehicle Convoy with
29:04
artillery on top of it technicals drove across the country from SE long controled territory all the way down to
29:10
the B the southern border to fight uh these members of the new generation cartel basically trying to take control
29:15
of some of these towns and they were received with Applause right so something's clearly happening
29:22
as far as influence and control of of the region you see with the scen law
29:27
cartel weren't stopped by the by the military so they probably have some sort of open line of communication is what what you could see and you see a new
29:35
generation cartel that is the one that's constantly getting harassed by the government constantly getting highlevel
29:41
uh events as far as captures and pressure so you can see something going
29:47
on as far as uh as far as sides and um and an influence as far as who's doing
29:53
what but you also see you know the as you said you see the caloa cartel
30:00
weakened and and their heads are shrinking they're their figure heads
30:06
keep getting knocked off so again you again it's all a game right like they have to feed the Americans you know some
30:15
targets um every now and then just to keep the Beast fed and just to keep the appearance up um but it does make me
30:22
wonder like can this Duality as I said four can ASU graduates
30:32
take pictures with bottles of tequila sitting on donkeys in Cabo while in
30:38
Guerrero uh and chapas scores of people are massacred and nobody gets arrested
30:44
nobody goes to jail and new factories from so-called legitimate Chinese and
30:50
American companies are set up to make Goods for the US I mean it it it's been going this long and the game seems to be
30:58
working at least for the powers be I think I think we're coming to a head
31:03
pretty soon uh one of the only bilateral uh efforts uh that we've seen as far as
31:09
politics currently and this has been a very divisive time for the United States has been border
31:15
issues and another one has been legislation and talks about naming some of these criminal organizations South of
31:21
the Border as terrorist organizations to unleash the military on them uh 3 years
31:27
uh three years years ago I predicted that we were going to see some sort of uh military intervention in Mexico by
31:34
the United States and this is we poor the talk of trump speaking of this
31:39
naming them terrorist organizations stuff like that was was a went on um so
31:45
you could that's where I think where we're headed there's because I mean you have an open antagonist as far as the
31:52
current uh Federal Administration in Mexico um uh
31:58
amlo the current president has been very vocal and very open in his disdain for the United States as a as a as a country
32:05
right um and he's basically being a mouthpiece for anti-American sentiment across uh
32:12
the Americas uh so you you have you have
32:17
that going on on one end and on the other end you have this current uh lady that just W the elections
32:23
uh culturally Jewish I mean she she she she says she's an a
32:28
um she shows up to political rallies with a crucifix and you know she she keeps up appearances because Mexico is a
32:34
very Catholic country you know and she's a politician so that's you know whatever but she's also a Rockefeller Foundation
32:41
lady and she went to Berkeley she's a scientist um the sorus foundation funded
32:48
a bunch of uh media companies in Mexico and that you could see the favoritism as far as the coverage through some of
32:54
these campaigns so it's it's odd man and it's this is this is I've been trying to
33:00
kind of piece it out and piece it all through uh as a candidate she makes
33:05
sense I mean she's very much a True Believer as far as the current president she was she was with him since the start
33:11
I guess um but she's a different animal as far as the the way she the her
33:17
background and how she's kind of uh kind of approaching things and in none of her
33:22
political uh speeches and none of the stuff that she's planning to do do you hear anything about uh fighting the
33:30
cartels or fentin or organized crime or all of this stuff it's like a non
33:35
subject she's talking about uh women's rights and pronouns and Progressive
33:41
stuff and all this like it's like some weird out ofid on a mind policy I guess
33:47
fascinating so it was like America eight years ago yeah so what if Trump gets in
33:53
here what if what what does that do is what kind of conflict does that create because there's this if he gets in
33:59
there's this huge demand for Border Crackdown a of the migrants that's the most important thing B of fentanyl so
34:07
how does the leftist government in Mexico that doesn't seem to want to even
34:15
talk about stopping that stuff how does that come into conflict and will the new
34:20
Mexican government be forced uh to take some action if they want to continue
34:26
receiving security f funding from the US I think uh I think in the end the one
34:31
that the the the I mean it's a perfect storm I mean me the United States isn't
34:37
going through a an easy time right now as well and you know when uh when the economy gets low you know the US
34:44
usually you know likes to go around kicking be beehives it's it's it's not
34:50
it's not a judgmental thing that's that's the way the US has been in the past and uh you look around at the
34:56
conflicts in the world that could probably spark up and the US involvement in them and
35:02
you look at Israel and I don't think that's going to be it um the Russians are kind of going back and forth over
35:09
there and I don't I don't Envision the US sending people to the Ukraine but Mexico that's pretty close
35:17
that's pretty close do you actually are you just saying that or you actually think that the US could send Special
35:26
Forces into Mexico to to combat this situation I I not only say that I mean i' I've
35:33
spoken to Congress about these issues so I know that this is very much on the on
35:40
both sides of the aisle that's very much on their mind do you advise them that that's a good
35:45
idea no I advise them that's a horrible idea um the the
35:52
humanitarian uh the wave of humanity that is going to create is going to be
35:58
completely Unstoppable I mean there's no you can line up every single Marine you
36:04
have in Balon On the Border they're going to still that wave
36:09
is going to be like nothing in History either you make that border fence
36:14
irrelevant with with an with an armed incursion into Mexico or you now have a new Puerto Rico
36:22
that's the those are the only two outcomes
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#crypto #cryptocurrency #cryptocommunity #cryptonews #bitcoin #ethereum #ada #solana #news #brics #unitedstates #brics2024 #currency #bitcoin #crypto #news #btc #ethereum #eth #ondo #cryptocurrency #litecoin #altcoin #altcoins #pulsechain #hex #xrp #ada #ripple #cardano #bitboy #lynettezang #forex #money #best #trading #bitcoinmining #invest #trader #cryptocurrencies #top #investing #entrepreneur #business #success #investment #finance #motivation #coinbase #stocks #wallstreet #investor #wealth #bullish #bearish #cryptolive #future #altcoindaily #coinbureau #priceprediction
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