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04.18.22 Peat [1252580716].vtt
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WEBVTT
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:07.000
From the Hill Country in Texas, this is OneRadioNetwork.com.
00:00:07.000 --> 00:00:13.000
Well, a very pleasant good morning to you. Well, that didn't work out right. Hold on a second.
00:00:13.000 --> 00:00:22.000
Something, one more thing here. Oh, I see. I can do it this way and then we'll, as I'm talking, we'll figure it out here.
00:00:22.000 --> 00:00:36.000
No problem. This is OneRadioNetwork.com. My name is Patrick Timpone and it is the third Monday of the month at around 1130 Central or a few minutes behind here.
00:00:36.000 --> 00:00:47.000
And we have the honor of talking to a fine gentleman, Dr. Ray Peat. He's a PhD. He's been around the circus for a long time in the field of health.
00:00:47.000 --> 00:01:04.000
He's got his PhD from the University of Oregon, specialization in physiology and, hold on a second. Something's not working here. I got it.
00:01:04.000 --> 00:01:12.000
In physiology, sorry, and he wrote his dissertation in 1972. He outlined all of his ideas on progesterone.
00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:22.000
He's got a website that we're going to tell you all about. He also has a newsletter and he has a little chat thing in there that people ask a lot of questions.
00:01:22.000 --> 00:01:30.000
He's just quite well respected around the world of natural healing and has been for a very long time.
00:01:30.000 --> 00:01:38.000
And it's such an honor to talk to him on the third Monday because he's kind of a smart guy. He knows his stuff, does a lot of research.
00:01:38.000 --> 00:01:44.000
Dr. Peat, thanks for coming on the show. It's just such fun to talk to you. Thank you, sir.
00:01:44.000 --> 00:01:45.000
Okay.
00:01:45.000 --> 00:01:53.000
Yeah, thanks a lot. Well, I got to ask you because, you know, everybody in the world has seen the video, which I'm sure you have.
00:01:53.000 --> 00:01:56.000
Did a lot of people send you "Watch the Water" video?
00:01:56.000 --> 00:01:57.000
Oh, yeah.
00:01:57.000 --> 00:02:01.000
Oh, yeah. What did you think about it?
00:02:01.000 --> 00:02:13.000
He has a lot of information, both on snake venom and on the effects of the COVID virus.
00:02:13.000 --> 00:02:22.000
And he runs through them in parallel and shows a lot of similar reactions to each of them.
00:02:22.000 --> 00:02:39.000
But I couldn't quite get his central point, what point he was trying to make, except maybe that the disease spreads through the water rather than through the air.
00:02:39.000 --> 00:03:01.000
But I think he was missing a very essential point, which is that stress, trauma of all sorts, poisoning, anything that damages the organism activates the phospholipases.
00:03:01.000 --> 00:03:19.000
It isn't just an oddity of COVID virus or cobra venom that activates the phospholipases that have all of those harmful effects.
00:03:19.000 --> 00:03:29.000
Anything harmful that excites the organism too much turns on those things.
00:03:29.000 --> 00:03:39.000
For example, when you activate one kind of phospholipase, you get the production of prostaglandins.
00:03:39.000 --> 00:03:49.000
The prostaglandins activate all sorts of inflammatory things.
00:03:49.000 --> 00:04:09.000
The inflammatory cascade is activated, among other things, by phospholipase. And that's what kills you from COVID. And it's one of the things that can kill you with snake bite is systemic inflammation.
00:04:09.000 --> 00:04:19.000
So the phospholipase that Dr. Artis was talking about, where did he say they found this?
00:04:19.000 --> 00:04:24.000
It exists as part of the cobra venom.
00:04:24.000 --> 00:04:29.000
Oh, as part of the cobra venom. Right. Right.
00:04:29.000 --> 00:04:49.000
The thing is a bit confusing. We're going to have Dr. Artis on tomorrow. And I think one thing that happened to this whole thing, Dr. Peat, my understanding is that the people who produced this video, they are the ones that really took this whole thing into the water. Right?
00:04:49.000 --> 00:04:55.000
Not him. He did not.
00:04:55.000 --> 00:05:12.000
But many people have been arguing since the video was out that if you had a venom protein, if I think I can get this right, that is a protein that you could not take this internally and be a problem anyway. Is that true?
00:05:12.000 --> 00:05:18.000
Most likely. Your stomach digestive enzymes.
00:05:18.000 --> 00:05:20.000
Will get it. Right? Will get it.
00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:22.000
Yeah. Pretty much.
00:05:22.000 --> 00:05:25.000
The venom would have to be injected. Correct?
00:05:25.000 --> 00:05:29.000
Yeah. For the full intensity of destruction.
00:05:29.000 --> 00:05:40.000
Right. Do you think it's possible that there could be the venom in this remdesivir?
00:05:40.000 --> 00:06:01.000
No, but like anything toxic, if you mess up your nucleic acids, that causes a series of problems, among other reactions that can activate phospholipase.
00:06:01.000 --> 00:06:11.000
So again, phospholipase, how does this fit into this whole picture? I'm just quite sorry, I'm not a sharpest tool in the shed here on the phospholipase thing.
00:06:11.000 --> 00:06:37.000
When you eat something bad or get a cold, anything that starts an inflammatory process in your intestine or your nose or even in your skin, that irritation activates the phospholipases.
00:06:37.000 --> 00:07:04.000
There are several different kinds, but the one that most people think about is the phospholipase A2 that liberates arachidonic acid from the phospholipids that are part of our structural system of lipids and proteins and water that make up the cell.
00:07:04.000 --> 00:07:16.000
So there's always a lot of phospholipids around to be acted on by the phospholipase, and anything that disrupts your cells will activate that.
00:07:16.000 --> 00:07:34.000
And that liberating arachidonic acid immediately brings up your prostaglandins, which then activate many other cytokines and inflammatory processes.
00:07:34.000 --> 00:07:44.000
I see. And the other thing that was mentioned, the monocronium, what are these? Do you know which I'm talking about?
00:07:44.000 --> 00:07:46.000
No.
00:07:46.000 --> 00:07:50.000
I'll find the piece on it exactly.
00:07:50.000 --> 00:08:03.000
So after all of these, we'll talk to Dr. Artis tomorrow. We're going to see if I can just pick this apart and see if we can get some clarity on exactly what he is saying.
00:08:03.000 --> 00:08:15.000
So I guess there's no way of knowing if there's some kind of a venom as well, Dr. Peat, in these injections, right? There could be?
00:08:15.000 --> 00:08:19.000
We don't know, do we really?
00:08:19.000 --> 00:08:34.000
An enzyme is something very easy to test for. So if there's an actual enzyme in something, it would be quickly identified.
00:08:34.000 --> 00:08:40.000
So if it's in there, there could be evidence of it into the injection, right?
00:08:40.000 --> 00:09:00.000
Yeah. And that would be one of the possible adjuvants. If you stir up the phospholipases, that starts the inflammatory process. So that would be a kind of adjuvant for the vaccine.
00:09:00.000 --> 00:09:28.000
So after all of these, before we get to some questions, after all of these years, what has it been? Two and a half years as you sit back and look at the big picture, would you mind giving us your opinion, just your opinion, of what you have seen and what you think much of this COVID or some of it or all of it was about?
00:09:28.000 --> 00:09:52.000
Yeah. For just about forever, there have been colds of various varieties and they're so fast changing that probably 30 or 40 years ago, they pretty much gave up on the idea of having vaccines against the common cold.
00:09:52.000 --> 00:10:08.000
But the virus is extremely common for causing colds and it's somewhat different from the influenza virus and other things that can cause pneumonia.
00:10:08.000 --> 00:10:29.000
But the cold virus has always killed a few people. Babies that aren't very strong or especially very old people often has been nothing but a cold that it takes to kill a very old, sickly person.
00:10:29.000 --> 00:10:56.000
So the cold is a good virus to start modifying if you want to create a weapon, for example. And that's why it was chosen by places like the Fort Detrick Germ Warfare Lab and the North Carolina Virus Lab of Ralph Baric.
00:10:56.000 --> 00:11:24.000
It formed a transmissible unit for putting all kinds of other things in to modify the effects. So it isn't just a common respiratory infection type cold, but it can carry other inflammatory systems with it.
00:11:24.000 --> 00:11:33.000
So then you think there was something that was released into the air or is it just into these injections?
00:11:33.000 --> 00:11:56.000
Oh, yeah, the virus is a real coronavirus, but it has these segments with special functions of making the spike protein especially transmissible to humans.
00:11:56.000 --> 00:12:20.000
And Ralph Baric described the way he and his lab developed the transmissibility and the insertion of the spike protein and the modification of the spike protein. That's all public information, patent descriptions and so on.
00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:23.000
And who is this Ralph Baric? What is he?
00:12:23.000 --> 00:12:34.000
A professor, a researcher at the University of North Carolina, tremendously supported by the government, Fauci in particular.
00:12:34.000 --> 00:12:51.000
Are you aware that if Coch's postulates or any autopsies were done on these COVID patients to prove Baric's assertion that there was something released in the air that people got?
00:12:51.000 --> 00:13:15.000
In developing them, at first they were transmitted from animal to animal by contact, but then they let them develop in ways that until they could put animals in different cages and blow the air from one into the other and spread the virus.
00:13:15.000 --> 00:13:24.000
So it was definitely established in the lab to be transmissible through the air.
00:13:24.000 --> 00:13:44.000
And autopsies have been done on the natural or whatever the current COVID germ consists of.
00:13:44.000 --> 00:14:01.000
And you can stain the tissues and show the presence of the virus getting into the lining of blood vessels, traveling to the intestine, the lungs, and even into the blood vessels of the brain.
00:14:01.000 --> 00:14:17.000
So then do I hear you saying that the work of Lanca, Cowan, Coffin and all these people that say that it's just the isolated things, you don't agree with them?
00:14:17.000 --> 00:14:31.000
No, it doesn't matter that you can have a test tube, a picture of a certain virus, you can demonstrate its presence by multiple ways.
00:14:31.000 --> 00:14:44.000
You form antibodies to it and then you can detect it when it's connected to the tissues of the victim.
00:14:44.000 --> 00:14:53.000
Have you heard of Michael Palmer, a German colleague of Sucharit Bhakti?
00:14:53.000 --> 00:14:58.000
I know Bhakti, not Palmer. What's his name, sir? Palmer?
00:14:58.000 --> 00:15:14.000
Yeah, he was taught in Canada for a long time, biochemistry, but he worked on particularly the COVID virus and vaccines.
00:15:14.000 --> 00:15:28.000
And in a recent video, he shows slides from the 15 autopsies that were done on vaccinated people.
00:15:28.000 --> 00:15:33.000
Oh yeah, I did see a little bit about that. Go ahead, sorry to interrupt.
00:15:33.000 --> 00:15:52.000
Bhakti has talked about that, but Palmer has the crucial videos that show exactly what's happening, different between the vaccine and the actual virus infection.
00:15:52.000 --> 00:16:12.000
He has a slide showing the staining of the virus with immuno stains, attaching a colored material to an antibody that's specific for part of the virus.
00:16:12.000 --> 00:16:31.000
And then another set of stains specific for the spike protein. And he shows that those can occur together, but you can distinguish them clearly.
00:16:31.000 --> 00:16:56.000
And that in these 15 autopsies, there are numerous cases in which it's clearly only the vaccine dependent spike proteins that are causing the death.
00:16:56.000 --> 00:17:15.000
The breakdown of blood vessels, for example, and the concentration of inflammatory white blood cells around the identifiable spike protein.
00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:33.000
So it's the most graphically clear incrimination of the vaccine itself, distinct from the viral disease causing the myocarditis,
00:17:33.000 --> 00:17:48.000
breakdown of blood vessels and clotting, hemorrhaging, the whole range of things that have empirically been associated with vaccine injury.
00:17:48.000 --> 00:18:01.000
Now this specifically shows the presence in the tissues of the spike protein itself without any of the rest of the virus.
00:18:01.000 --> 00:18:14.000
Anything else? So do you then think that there are people over the last two and a half years that experienced some kind of a bad flu, two, three weeks?
00:18:14.000 --> 00:18:31.000
I know people that have, right? That it was not a detox or could have been, but they could have also somehow taken something in from the outside as well.
00:18:31.000 --> 00:18:38.000
So the people that poopoo pasteurized thing, he was right in some way?
00:18:38.000 --> 00:19:00.000
Oh, sure. Yeah. But before the COVID thing started at all, the CDC had been describing how many tens of thousands of people were dying of influenza pneumonia every winter.
00:19:00.000 --> 00:19:15.000
That was used to herd people into getting the influenza vaccine. But then someone said, what is the evidence really that this is influenza killing them?
00:19:15.000 --> 00:19:33.000
The same question some people have asked about the COVID so-called virus, but when they just reported something like 60,000 deaths this season from influenza pneumonia.
00:19:33.000 --> 00:19:43.000
And so someone suggested that they actually check for evidence that there was an influenza virus.
00:19:43.000 --> 00:20:03.000
They said, oh, well, yes, there were something like 1200 deaths seasonally from influenza and the others were from COVID, were from coronaviruses was one cause, common colds probably.
00:20:03.000 --> 00:20:32.000
Bacterial pneumonia was another set to syncytial virus pneumonia accounted for a big block of the deaths that had been called influenza and unidentifiable pathogen was a major block of people dying of pneumonia and they couldn't find bacteria or viruses at all.
00:20:32.000 --> 00:20:39.000
So it could have been toxins of various sorts.
00:20:39.000 --> 00:20:53.000
A major source of pneumonia without germs is endotoxin, lipopolysaccharide leaking out of the intestine.
00:20:53.000 --> 00:21:03.000
And so when anyone is seriously stressed, endotoxin tends to become one of the factors in leading to pneumonia.
00:21:03.000 --> 00:21:17.000
So even in cases like pneumonia or common flus or colds, it could in many, many cases or some cases simply be a detoxification process and not people catching something.
00:21:17.000 --> 00:21:24.000
Well, detoxification protects you, but you can call it a retoxification.
00:21:24.000 --> 00:21:29.000
Right. The body's retoxifying trying to get rid of it.
00:21:29.000 --> 00:21:34.000
Right. Yeah. The endotoxin or whatever toxin is causing it.
00:21:34.000 --> 00:21:42.000
When you're very healthy, your liver and your brain in particular have detoxifying systems that keep you healthy.
00:21:42.000 --> 00:21:45.000
You don't notice the toxins being destroyed.
00:21:45.000 --> 00:21:49.000
You don't notice the toxins being destroyed.
00:21:49.000 --> 00:21:57.000
So that's why millions of people had no, didn't wear a mask or nothing happened and they just felt fine.
00:21:57.000 --> 00:22:03.000
And it was like any other day. Yeah. Millions. Yeah. Right.
00:22:03.000 --> 00:22:09.000
Because the body just deals with whatever it is, stress or whatever.
00:22:09.000 --> 00:22:21.000
Yeah. It can eat up germs, inactivate toxins and excrete them, get rid of them. Never knew it had them.
00:22:21.000 --> 00:22:39.000
But it is interesting that there are some people that I've known, two or three that I've known, that during this whole affair, what has it been, what, two and a half years now, that went through three weeks or so,
00:22:39.000 --> 00:22:45.000
taste, smell of some of the worst flu symptoms ever. I mean, they did.
00:22:45.000 --> 00:22:51.000
They thought they were going to die.
00:22:51.000 --> 00:23:09.000
Yeah. A lot of it was the same causes of the flu that killed 40 to 60,000 people every winter before COVID.
00:23:09.000 --> 00:23:29.000
The post influenza syndrome was already defined very similar to the post COVID syndrome, leaving permanent fibrosis of the lungs and a general weakening of the organism.
00:23:29.000 --> 00:23:45.000
And even in those numbers, Dr. Rapit, that we see every year, there's no real evidence of how many people had comorbidities that have passed on and they claim it was because the flu or cold, right?
00:23:45.000 --> 00:24:11.000
No.
00:24:11.000 --> 00:24:21.000
I guess what artists originally argued on this show and other shows about the remdesivir, that's pretty nasty stuff, right? It's not good.
00:24:21.000 --> 00:24:24.000
Yeah, it's a gene-destroying material.
00:24:24.000 --> 00:24:48.000
The things that have been used for influenza and herpes treatments that were originated about 30 years ago, those actually had very, very horrible side effects, but they came into use anyway.
00:24:48.000 --> 00:25:02.000
Wow. And then, so the amount of people that were actually killed by remdesivir in the ventilators, that could be a big number. We don't know.
00:25:02.000 --> 00:25:20.000
Oh, yeah. The fact that the comparison of two hospitals near each other in Germany during the first few months of the so-called pandemic,
00:25:20.000 --> 00:25:36.000
one hospital was influenced by a doctor who administered only the amount of oxygen through a cannula, just free breathing.
00:25:36.000 --> 00:25:43.000
That was clearly beneficial. They had zero mortality from the COVID cases.
00:25:43.000 --> 00:25:46.000
Oh, just enough oxygen, not the ventilator.
00:25:46.000 --> 00:26:00.000
Yeah. And a nearby hospital that followed the instructions of the World Health Organization and CDC, that hospital had a 60 percent mortality.
00:26:00.000 --> 00:26:18.000
The difference was only that they stuck a tube into their chest and forced oxygen into their lungs. Extremely high mortality once you stick the tube into them.
00:26:18.000 --> 00:26:32.000
And so that in itself was known to be almost always deadly, but prescribed, ordered by the CDC. So it was mass murder for a couple of months.
00:26:32.000 --> 00:26:35.000
Are they still doing that? Do you know?
00:26:35.000 --> 00:26:38.000
I'm afraid some places still do.
00:26:38.000 --> 00:26:49.000
Are they still doing the remdesivir and the ventilator with all because they just don't get it or they're ordered by the CDC, the standard of care, right?
00:26:49.000 --> 00:27:01.000
Yeah, there were many approaches better than remdesivir. Any approach practically was better than intubation.
00:27:01.000 --> 00:27:13.000
What did these alternative things have for this so-called virus, as you say, like hydrochloroquine and what's the other one?
00:27:13.000 --> 00:27:14.000
Ivermectin.
00:27:14.000 --> 00:27:20.000
Ivermectin and all that. Do they have similar properties? Something could be going on where people felt better?
00:27:20.000 --> 00:27:32.000
Oh yeah, they're both somewhat anti-inflammatory. Especially Ivermectin has several anti-inflammatory effects.
00:27:32.000 --> 00:27:45.000
So does aspirin and antihistamines. From the very beginning, people were seeing very good effects from aspirin and antihistamines.
00:27:45.000 --> 00:27:57.000
So aspirin and antihistamines are just anti-inflammatory. Is that why aspirin has been around for the last hundred years or whatever?
00:27:57.000 --> 00:28:16.000
Yeah, but that's very closely connected to an antibiotic and antiviral effect of aspirin. A general, not very specific, but definitely existing antiviral effect.
00:28:16.000 --> 00:28:25.000
But it doesn't go in and kill some so-called virus, right? What does it do with the body? It just helps the body to deal with whatever's going on?
00:28:25.000 --> 00:28:34.000
Yeah, when it's acting as an anti-inflammatory, it's preventing disruption of the immune system.
00:28:34.000 --> 00:28:36.000
Preventing disruption.
00:28:36.000 --> 00:28:44.000
Letting your immune system continue in a highly energized way.
00:28:44.000 --> 00:28:56.000
Once you go over the edge into the prostaglandin and cytokine storm degree of inflammation, you've knocked out the energy system.
00:28:56.000 --> 00:29:15.000
Instead of producing lots of heat and carbon dioxide and usable energy, you just produce lactic acid and shift away from oxidative processes.
00:29:15.000 --> 00:29:21.000
Oxidative processes are necessary for destroying viruses.
00:29:21.000 --> 00:29:28.000
Wow, so that's why you feel better when you take aspirin?
00:29:28.000 --> 00:29:31.000
Yeah, many, many reasons.
00:29:31.000 --> 00:29:32.000
That's right.
00:29:32.000 --> 00:29:38.000
It, for example, activates your mitochondrial respiration the way thyroid does.
00:29:38.000 --> 00:29:51.000
When we were kids back in the 50s, Dr. Peat, that's really all we had was aspirin and castor oil. That was pretty much it, right?
00:29:51.000 --> 00:30:09.000
Yeah, and laxatives use is historical and turns out to be very well based because of the endotoxin thing.
00:30:09.000 --> 00:30:28.000
When you've eaten something that you can't digest or you get constipated, an inflammation begins inside your intestine producing, among other things, lactic acid, histamine, serotonin,
00:30:28.000 --> 00:30:39.000
and those make your blood vessels that should be a barrier against toxins in your intestine, lets them absorb the endotoxin,
00:30:39.000 --> 00:30:49.000
and that lowers your whole systemic body energy and that can lead to death from pneumonia in a week.
00:30:49.000 --> 00:31:00.000
Wow, so that's the whole theory behind, or not theory, but the meme behind this whole idea of the immune system and that being in the gut that we've talked about,
00:31:00.000 --> 00:31:03.000
people have talked about for the last 25 years, right?
00:31:03.000 --> 00:31:10.000
That's what's going on and why lots of bowel movements is a good thing.
00:31:10.000 --> 00:31:13.000
Moving things out.
00:31:13.000 --> 00:31:29.000
About 150 years ago, pathologists and the coroners recognized bowel inflammation as a major cause of death.
00:31:29.000 --> 00:31:47.000
Wow, and the bowel gets inflamed because these endotoxins, when we don't have a sufficient bowel movement in getting things out, it just creates a problem down there, an inflammation, and then it causes all kinds of issues.
00:31:47.000 --> 00:31:52.000
Yeah, leading to inflammation of the lungs and brain and so on.
00:31:52.000 --> 00:31:59.000
Wow, which is why then you take a big hit of castor oil and wake up in the morning and have a big bowel movement and you feel better.
00:31:59.000 --> 00:32:04.000
Well, it's pretty simple.
00:32:04.000 --> 00:32:33.000
There was a big campaign when medicine started becoming organized and modern. There were actual organized campaigns for public relations, getting press conferences and such to convince the public that there is no such thing as a bowel toxin sickness.
00:32:33.000 --> 00:32:37.000
Really? And when was this? In the early days, 1900s?
00:32:37.000 --> 00:32:40.000
1920s, early 20s.
00:32:40.000 --> 00:32:46.000
And they tried to convince people that it didn't matter how much you pooped.
00:32:46.000 --> 00:33:05.000
Yeah, for example, one professor of medicine said that there's no such thing as bowel toxins causing sickness and headaches. He said it's all basically in your mind.
00:33:05.000 --> 00:33:22.000
And to demonstrate that headaches weren't caused by toxins, supposedly, he had his medical students stuff their rectums with wads of cotton.
00:33:22.000 --> 00:33:40.000
And the next day, people who often had headaches reported that they had a headache. So he released the publicity that, "See, we've demonstrated that it isn't poison. It's pressure."
00:33:40.000 --> 00:34:03.000
And that was just part of it. It didn't say anything at all about toxins in the intestine, but just that whatever the level of toxins exists in the intestine, if you have pressure as well, you're going to get a headache or other sickness.
00:34:03.000 --> 00:34:04.000
Sure.
00:34:04.000 --> 00:34:21.000
Animal studies showed that just putting a balloon into the intestine, if the animal is in a good physiological state, you can blow up the balloon and no symptoms occur.
00:34:21.000 --> 00:34:50.000
But if you give them some insulin to lower their blood glucose and then blow up the balloon, the combination of the stress from low blood sugar combined with stretching the intestine will produce all kinds of things, not just headaches, but epileptic seizures, asthma spasms, all kinds of psychosomatic diseases.
00:34:50.000 --> 00:34:56.000
All kinds of psychosomatic changes of circulation and excitation.
00:34:56.000 --> 00:34:58.000
Isn't that fascinating?
00:34:58.000 --> 00:35:11.000
An uncle who's long gone from this planet used to say, "Well, I just have a couple cups of coffee and I have my morning constitution to use, and I feel good."
00:35:11.000 --> 00:35:17.000
You think it's detrimental that people use caffeine to go to the bathroom?
00:35:17.000 --> 00:35:19.000
Oh, no, not at all.
00:35:19.000 --> 00:35:21.000
It's normal, it's kind of natural, right?
00:35:21.000 --> 00:35:25.000
Yeah, it has lots of other beneficial effects.
00:35:25.000 --> 00:35:34.000
I've had some effects, even a little bit of green tea will even move things around a little bit more than interesting.
00:35:34.000 --> 00:35:38.000
I guess there must be some caffeine in green tea, too, right?
00:35:38.000 --> 00:35:42.000
Yeah, a small amount, just weaker than coffee.
00:35:42.000 --> 00:35:47.000
You've never been adverse to coffee at all, right?
00:35:47.000 --> 00:35:53.000
As long as I've talked to you, you thought it was okay, coffee, caffeine?
00:35:53.000 --> 00:35:55.000
Oh, sure, yeah.
00:35:55.000 --> 00:36:00.000
It happened when I was four years old.
00:36:00.000 --> 00:36:03.000
I just loved the smell and taste of coffee.
00:36:03.000 --> 00:36:04.000
Did you?
00:36:04.000 --> 00:36:05.000
Yeah.
00:36:05.000 --> 00:36:14.000
I believe you've said that coffee is actually something that will get your thyroid going a little bit, too, right?
00:36:14.000 --> 00:36:17.000
Yeah, it helps to balance everything.
00:36:17.000 --> 00:36:20.000
Helps to balance everything.
00:36:20.000 --> 00:36:26.000
You can't count on it making up for food.
00:36:26.000 --> 00:36:27.000
No.
00:36:27.000 --> 00:36:38.000
If you drink coffee on an empty stomach, it can give you the shakes and accentuate hypoglycemia.
00:36:38.000 --> 00:36:43.000
So that's why it would be good with food, with breakfast or something like that, right?
00:36:43.000 --> 00:36:44.000
With breakfast, yeah.
00:36:44.000 --> 00:36:52.000
So, before we do a break and get to all the questions, if you have a question for Dr. Peat Patrick on RadioNetwork.com.
00:36:52.000 --> 00:37:04.000
So, on to the bowel thing, do you think there's any cautionary tales with doing different things to keep the bowel movements going two, three, four times,
00:37:04.000 --> 00:37:12.000
however you feel more comfortable, like what is psyllium husk or other things, castor oil?
00:37:12.000 --> 00:37:19.000
Is there any problems with getting the body addicted to this stuff?
00:37:19.000 --> 00:37:21.000
Not really.
00:37:21.000 --> 00:37:35.000
Some people who have a really inflamed problem find that psyllium husk is dehydrated and can increase the plugged quality.
00:37:35.000 --> 00:37:36.000
Yeah.
00:37:36.000 --> 00:37:39.000
But if it works, that's very fine.
00:37:39.000 --> 00:37:41.000
If it works, it works, right?
00:37:41.000 --> 00:37:49.000
Yeah, a good bulk-forming, softening material with just a moderate degree of constipation.
00:37:49.000 --> 00:37:54.000
Other than that, then lots of, I guess, vegetables are the best?
00:37:54.000 --> 00:37:57.000
I mean, it also does the same thing, vegetables?
00:37:57.000 --> 00:38:02.000
Yeah, as long as they're working, they're improving things.
00:38:02.000 --> 00:38:07.000
But if a certain kind of vegetable makes the constipation worse.
00:38:07.000 --> 00:38:09.000
You just got to outdo it, huh?
00:38:09.000 --> 00:38:10.000
Yeah.
00:38:10.000 --> 00:38:14.000
Cooked or raw, what's the difference?
00:38:14.000 --> 00:38:33.000
In animal experiments, many years ago, compared canned vegetables with exactly the same vegetables in a raw state and fed them to different groups of rats.
00:38:33.000 --> 00:38:40.000
The rats getting a mixture of canned vegetables thrived all the way through the experiment.
00:38:40.000 --> 00:38:47.000
The ones given exactly the same raw vegetables wasted away.
00:38:47.000 --> 00:38:48.000
No kidding.
00:38:48.000 --> 00:38:51.000
Eventually died of malnutrition.
00:38:51.000 --> 00:38:52.000
What was that about?
00:38:52.000 --> 00:38:58.000
Just because so many raw vegetables are extremely indigestible.
00:38:58.000 --> 00:39:13.000
The heat breaks down the structure of the fibrous cellulose mixed with other, like the lignin materials, that we just can't digest.
00:39:13.000 --> 00:39:21.000
And so the nutrients are trapped inside this web of indigestible material.
00:39:21.000 --> 00:39:29.000
Wow. So somewhere along the line, us humans figured out, what did we do before we figured out how to cook vegetables?
00:39:29.000 --> 00:39:31.000
We must have done okay?
00:39:31.000 --> 00:39:40.000
Yeah, if you choose the right vegetables to eat raw, you can probably do it just by chewing them thoroughly.
00:39:40.000 --> 00:39:43.000
What are some of the easy ones? Raw?
00:39:43.000 --> 00:39:52.000
I would imagine baby squash are a source of nutrition.
00:39:52.000 --> 00:39:53.000
Tomatoes?
00:39:53.000 --> 00:39:56.000
Oh, sure. They're a fruit.
00:39:56.000 --> 00:39:59.000
Oh, that's right. They're a fruit. Tomatoes are fruit.
00:39:59.000 --> 00:40:02.000
So that's different fruits.
00:40:02.000 --> 00:40:09.000
Do you think we could just live on fruits like tomatoes and squash and botanical fruits and do okay?
00:40:09.000 --> 00:40:17.000
Yeah, especially older people who have a very low protein requirement.
00:40:17.000 --> 00:40:19.000
They often thrive.
00:40:19.000 --> 00:40:30.000
Someone yesterday emailed me about their father, who 10 years ago was very sick with prostate cancer,
00:40:30.000 --> 00:40:40.000
but he stopped eating ordinary proteins, went vegan, and is now in good health 10 years later.
00:40:40.000 --> 00:40:43.000
No kidding? Really? That's funny.
00:40:43.000 --> 00:40:53.000
It's just that once your metabolism has slowed down, the proteins, you don't need very much at all.
00:40:53.000 --> 00:40:55.000
You just don't need as much.
00:40:55.000 --> 00:41:02.000
The plant materials can provide them, and if you eat more than you need,
00:41:02.000 --> 00:41:10.000
the excess amino acids become antithyroid agents and make your metabolism even slower.
00:41:10.000 --> 00:41:17.000
Oh, when you have more protein than you need, it actually slows your metabolism.
00:41:17.000 --> 00:41:21.000
Wow, that's interesting, which is a thyroid thing, right?
00:41:21.000 --> 00:41:31.000
Yeah, about 40 years ago, Broda Barnes decided to do a high-protein diet just for an experiment.
00:41:31.000 --> 00:41:39.000
For years, I think his daily dose of armor thyroid was two grains,
00:41:39.000 --> 00:41:49.000
and when he went on a high-meat and protein diet, he found that he needed four grains of armor thyroid every day.
00:41:49.000 --> 00:41:53.000
Just to keep his temperature stable in the morning.
00:41:53.000 --> 00:41:58.000
Yeah, even in moderate middle age, he felt that effect.
00:41:58.000 --> 00:42:04.000
But the older you are, the more toxic too much protein can be.
00:42:04.000 --> 00:42:10.000
It's probably more difficult after you have about 70, 80 years under your belt to catch a buffalo or something.
00:42:10.000 --> 00:42:21.000
It's probably an evolutionary thing.
00:42:21.000 --> 00:42:25.000
Yeah, sitting around eating fruit is an appropriate thing.
00:42:25.000 --> 00:42:27.000
It's a lot easier, right?
00:42:27.000 --> 00:42:29.000
Yeah, it's a lot easier.
00:42:29.000 --> 00:42:33.000
Stay right there. Dr. Ray Peat, Patrick Timpone, thanks for being on the show, sir.
00:42:33.000 --> 00:42:34.000
It's always a pleasure.
00:42:34.000 --> 00:42:38.000
If you have a question, patrick@oneradionetwork.com.
00:42:38.000 --> 00:42:41.000
And if you want to do a little thyroid, testosterone.
00:42:41.000 --> 00:42:47.000
The first supplement I like to take in the morning, right after I wake up, is Pine Pollen Pure Potency, or P4.
00:42:47.000 --> 00:42:51.000
This is Cirque Rival's flagship testosterone and androgen support formula.
00:42:51.000 --> 00:42:59.000
It's made with the pollen of pine trees, which is rich in testosterone, androstenedione, DHEA, and a bunch of plant sterols.
00:42:59.000 --> 00:43:06.000
These are all substances, phytochemicals, that support the body's natural androgens, or male hormones.
00:43:06.000 --> 00:43:11.000
Of course, men and women are using this product, but usually it's men in andropause.
00:43:11.000 --> 00:43:15.000
Men after age 40, whose testosterone production has started to decline.
00:43:15.000 --> 00:43:23.000
Many of Cirque Rival's supplements can be taken any time of day, but Pine Pollen Pure Potency, it's important that you take at very specific times of the day.
00:43:23.000 --> 00:43:31.000
Now, it can be taken once, twice, or three times, depending on how much you want to supplement yourself with the phytoandrogens found in it.
00:43:31.000 --> 00:43:38.000
But the key is taking it at morning, right upon waking, midday or noon, and then again right before bed.
00:43:38.000 --> 00:43:42.000
So once, twice, or three times a day, but always at those times.
00:43:42.000 --> 00:43:46.000
And that's because that's when your body's naturally producing its own testosterone.
00:43:46.000 --> 00:43:49.000
And all we want to do is amplify that sine wave.
00:43:49.000 --> 00:43:54.000
We don't want to start to take testosterone at a time where our body's purged it from the bloodstream.
00:43:54.000 --> 00:44:01.000
Instead, we want to take it at a time where those levels are already spiking and we're just subtly helping to increase them.
00:44:01.000 --> 00:44:04.000
This product tastes fantastic. I think of it like an orange creamsicle.
00:44:04.000 --> 00:44:16.000
And that's because in addition to that subtle pine flavor, there's a little bit of orange peel, Tahitian vanilla bean, cloves, and then a little bit of maple syrup just to give it this nice kind of sweet orange flavor.
00:44:16.000 --> 00:44:19.000
So it's really delicious and easy to take.
00:44:19.000 --> 00:44:30.000
So if you're looking to increase your testosterone or androgen levels and you want an alternative to pharmaceutical testosterone replacement therapies, there's nothing that does it better than Pine Pollen Pure Pote.
00:44:30.000 --> 00:44:32.000
And we love this product. I've been taking it.
00:44:32.000 --> 00:44:36.000
Well, what I do and what you should do are two different things.
00:44:36.000 --> 00:44:40.000
But I can tell you, I've been using it for years.
00:44:40.000 --> 00:44:45.000
It's a food, it's a pollen, and little pine trees do their thing in the spring.
00:44:45.000 --> 00:44:49.000
And pine pollen and all the animals and everybody eats it and who knows.
00:44:49.000 --> 00:44:51.000
It's just a pretty magical substance.
00:44:51.000 --> 00:45:01.000
But this is just one of the many products that Daniel Vitalis has in his store from One Radio Network.
00:45:01.000 --> 00:45:04.000
If you can click on there, and Colostrum is one.
00:45:04.000 --> 00:45:08.000
We love that product. They now have four different colostrums.
00:45:08.000 --> 00:45:15.000
Chocolate, vanilla, strawberry, and the original, the original, pine pollen, shiaga, and reishi.
00:45:15.000 --> 00:45:23.000
And these are fruited bodies. They're not just, you know, they just really go to some great extent to make these more potent.
00:45:23.000 --> 00:45:26.000
They have a vitamin D, K2, 3 thing.
00:45:26.000 --> 00:45:31.000
Also, a digestive bitters products that we love.
00:45:31.000 --> 00:45:40.000
Some CBD oil and also a CBD that for your skin, which I just got and I've been playing around with it. I like.
00:45:40.000 --> 00:45:45.000
So, just a great selection of products that I think you'll enjoy.
00:45:45.000 --> 00:45:49.000
And that's at any thrival link on oneradionetwork.com.
00:45:49.000 --> 00:45:54.000
Click through our website because we get a little commish when you buy through our website.
00:45:54.000 --> 00:45:58.000
And that helps us to support ourselves.
00:45:58.000 --> 00:46:03.000
As you know, you know, one of the big buzzwords out there right now is inflation.
00:46:03.000 --> 00:46:05.000
And there's a lot of it going around.
00:46:05.000 --> 00:46:10.000
We think the real inflation rate is probably 15, 18 percent.
00:46:10.000 --> 00:46:17.000
Yeah, I know. It's a little about 8 percent more than what the gov is telling you.
00:46:17.000 --> 00:46:23.000
That's for the most part what we believe with the research that we do.
00:46:23.000 --> 00:46:26.000
One of the places we like to go is Shadow Stats.
00:46:26.000 --> 00:46:29.000
This fellow, he does incredible research.
00:46:29.000 --> 00:46:33.000
He's been doing it for a long time and name is escaping me.
00:46:33.000 --> 00:46:36.000
But, you know, it's just much more.
00:46:36.000 --> 00:46:40.000
But you don't need a government or anybody to tell you what the inflation rate is.
00:46:40.000 --> 00:46:49.000
Just go to the store and, you know, we, my girl here, Doodle, is lying next to me, a golden doodle.
00:46:49.000 --> 00:46:55.000
She eats raw, grass-fed, organic beef many nights.
00:46:55.000 --> 00:47:00.000
Other than that, it's organic raw chicken, either wings or legs.
00:47:00.000 --> 00:47:03.000
And some cornucopia pet foods.
00:47:03.000 --> 00:47:06.000
It's in a can that you can go there.
00:47:06.000 --> 00:47:09.000
We don't have a financial interest in them.
00:47:09.000 --> 00:47:15.000
But cornucopiapetfoods.com, 100 percent absolutely, totally organic.
00:47:15.000 --> 00:47:20.000
And if you want to feed them in the can and it's, you know, it's been cooked.
00:47:20.000 --> 00:47:26.000
But, hey, you can't get 100 percent organic food in a bag in a kibble.
00:47:26.000 --> 00:47:27.000
And we don't recommend kibble.
00:47:27.000 --> 00:47:28.000
It's got a lot of issues.
00:47:28.000 --> 00:47:30.000
I don't care how good it is.
00:47:30.000 --> 00:47:32.000
But anyway, that's here near the here and near there.
00:47:32.000 --> 00:47:38.000
But I was just going to mention before I got so rudely interrupted by my mind,
00:47:38.000 --> 00:47:48.000
is that the meat that we're feeding Doodle has gone up about $1.25 a pound just in the last month.
00:47:48.000 --> 00:47:49.000
A pound.
00:47:49.000 --> 00:47:51.000
So things are moving up.
00:47:51.000 --> 00:48:00.000
The way to protect from inflation, the only way that we know to hedge against inflation is gold and silver.
00:48:00.000 --> 00:48:02.000
Well, platinum and stuff like that.
00:48:02.000 --> 00:48:05.000
But the way, easy way to do it is gold and silver.
00:48:05.000 --> 00:48:08.000
That is the only real money on this earth.
00:48:08.000 --> 00:48:10.000
The rest of it is all just made up.
00:48:10.000 --> 00:48:12.000
Just made up.
00:48:12.000 --> 00:48:14.000
So give Fred a call.
00:48:14.000 --> 00:48:17.000
800-878-2646.
00:48:17.000 --> 00:48:20.000
800-878-2646.
00:48:20.000 --> 00:48:23.000
Fred at U.S. Coin Capital.
00:48:23.000 --> 00:48:28.000
He'll hook you up with whatever you need.