Episode Transcript
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0:01
Welcome to Pushing the Limits with
0:03
your host, Lisa Tarmaty, where it's
0:05
all about health optimization, anti -aging,
0:07
longevity, and being the very
0:09
best you can be. Pought
0:11
to you by LisaTarmaty .com. Welcome
0:14
to Pushing the Limits,
0:16
Lisa Tarmaty here, your host, and
0:19
today I have Dr. Suzanne Humphries.
0:21
Now, I actually recorded this a
0:23
couple of years ago, but I
0:25
had major problems with the episode
0:27
because it was in the middle
0:29
of the pandemic and everyone was
0:32
all upset and no one was
0:34
allowed to talk freely about anything
0:36
and so it had to be
0:38
taken down but now I think
0:40
the time has come that we
0:42
can share and talk openly about
0:45
topics hopefully and recently Suzanne Humphreys
0:47
who is the author
0:49
of dissolving illusions. And
0:51
she's a nephrologist, a specialist,
0:53
researcher, scientist. She
0:55
was on the Joe Rogan podcast. You
0:57
might have seen that a couple of weeks ago.
0:59
And I think the times come that we can
1:01
actually have an adult conversation around some of these
1:03
topics. So I hope you enjoy this episode
1:06
with Suzanne. She's an incredibly
1:08
courageous woman who stands up
1:10
for what's right. So it's
1:12
a really, really important podcast, this one.
1:15
Before we head over to the show, just
1:17
want to remind you to come and check
1:19
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1:57
to work with me. You can find all
1:59
that out at lessatarmaty .com. Now,
2:01
I'm really, really pleased to bring
2:03
you this episode, Dr. Suzanne Humphries. And
2:05
I hope you do enjoy it
2:07
and learn a lot. She has a
2:10
lot to say. And this woman
2:12
has researched everything for the last. couple
2:14
of decades she really knows her
2:16
stuff so it's really really informative. Enjoy.
2:20
Hey everyone and welcome back
2:22
to Pushing the Limits. Today I
2:25
have Dr Suzanne Humphries. She
2:27
is an author of Rising
2:29
from the Dead and Dissolving Illusions.
2:32
She is an internist and
2:34
a nephrologist. someone who specialises
2:36
in kidney health, if you
2:38
don't know. She's also
2:40
someone who has fought against vaccines
2:42
and the dangers that they
2:44
can do. So we have a
2:46
very open conversation today about
2:48
vaccines in general, not specifically about
2:51
COVID vaccines, but just in general.
2:54
And I do hope that you
2:56
enjoy this interview with her
2:58
and her take on the world.
3:00
It's a very interesting journey that
3:03
she's been on, giving up a
3:05
hugely successful practice in order to do medical
3:07
research into the subject. And she spent over
3:09
10 years doing that. So I hope
3:11
you enjoy this episode. Before we
3:13
head over to the podcast, just to
3:15
remind you to check out our
3:17
epigenetics program. This is our flagship program
3:20
where we look at your specific
3:22
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3:24
You know, genes aren't about determining, you
3:27
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3:29
have this gene. Therefore, I have
3:31
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And it's all very special. to you,
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4:37
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4:40
we really do appreciate that. OK,
4:42
over to the show now with Dr.
4:45
Suzanne Humphries. Well,
4:48
hi, everyone, and welcome back to
4:50
Pushing the Limits. Today, I have
4:52
an amazing doctor and scientist and
4:54
specialist, Dr. Suzanne Humphries,
4:56
with me. Welcome to the show,
4:58
Dr. Suzanne. Hi, Lisa. Thank you. I'm
5:01
so stoked to have a bit of your time. It's
5:03
really, really amazing. I apologize to
5:05
your audience for my
5:07
lateness. You've
5:09
been in the garden and we had our times
5:12
mixed up. So it's excellent
5:14
that I've been able
5:16
to talk to you because
5:18
you're a bit of a superstar
5:20
in the world of in science
5:22
and medicine and you've had a
5:24
very interesting career. So you have
5:26
a background. Let's go into a
5:29
little bit into your background. You
5:31
are a nephrologist, an MD,
5:34
a physicist. You've
5:36
got credentials up the wazoo. Maybe
5:38
we start there and then move forward
5:40
from there. Yeah.
5:42
Um, yeah. So let's see.
5:45
We can, we can start even earlier
5:47
than that is that I started out
5:49
as a nursing student and, um, because
5:53
my high school teacher, physics teacher told
5:55
me that I shouldn't take anything that
5:57
has physics in it because I wouldn't
5:59
be smart enough to pass. Brilliant.
6:01
Um, and I passed his class. So I didn't, I think
6:03
he just didn't like me because I was a bit of a
6:05
rabble rouser even back then. But
6:07
anyway, so I went in and I took
6:09
nursing because it didn't require physics. And I really
6:11
liked it. You know, we dissected a cat
6:13
and, you know, we all got our own cat
6:15
to bring home. And after a while, I
6:17
was like, nah, I don't think this
6:19
is what I want to do. I don't
6:21
think I want to dispense drugs to no offense
6:24
to nurses, because I love nurses. But that wasn't,
6:26
it just wasn't my calling being a nurse. And
6:28
if I did, I probably would have
6:30
gone into administration or something like that, because
6:33
I'm a rather a restless person than
6:35
even as a doctor, I've never stayed in
6:37
one place or one job very long
6:39
because I like to just keep learning new
6:41
things and doing new things. So I
6:43
talked to the nursing, I
6:45
don't know what she would have been, like
6:47
the director of the nursing program at Rutgers
6:49
and she was like, yeah, you know, it
6:51
doesn't really, maybe she was happy to get
6:53
rid of me too. Not very suitable. so
6:55
I went and I went to the basement
6:57
of the physics lab for some reason I
7:00
don't know why there was a kind of
7:02
an older student and he was a phd
7:04
student and he was telling me about microprocessors
7:06
and it's the future of medicine and microchips
7:08
I mean how ironic right like this is
7:10
like 30 years ago. Wow. And he's like,
7:12
Oh, you can do physics. No problem. Just
7:14
do it. I'll help you through. And they
7:16
had never had a female physics graduate at
7:18
the campus that I was at at Rutgers.
7:20
So I said, Okay, so I started taking
7:22
courses with no prerequisites, which was a nightmare.
7:25
And I got through, I got through physics, I got
7:27
through it. I wouldn't say that I'm
7:29
a physicist. I wouldn't say that I was
7:31
a rock star. I had like a B plus
7:33
average through the whole thing, but I worked
7:35
my tail off, I'll tell you. And by the
7:37
time I decided I wanted to go to
7:39
medical school, I'll tell you medical school is nothing
7:41
compared to really business of studying physics, honestly.
7:43
I could at least understand medicine. I could at
7:45
least understand anatomy. So I
7:47
took a job in a research
7:49
lab for a couple of years after
7:51
my five year stint at university
7:53
because I had to go longer for
7:56
switching. And I really enjoyed
7:58
the lab. But again, that wasn't it
8:00
for me. I mean, I was the head
8:02
researcher technician, but I didn't want to
8:04
be a technician. And again, no offense to
8:06
technicians, but it just wasn't my calling.
8:08
I was so bored after a while. We're
8:10
doing tissue cultures and we're doing gel
8:12
chromatography and column chromatography and all kinds of
8:14
exciting things, but it didn't excite me.
8:16
Yeah. You know, microtubules.
8:18
It was microtubules is what we
8:20
were looking at in nerves. And
8:23
but that doctor that employed
8:25
me was very supportive of my application to
8:27
medical school and encouraged me to do it
8:29
and I applied and I got in and
8:32
then I went and It was pretty uneventful. I
8:34
got through medical school. I wrote a book
8:36
called Rising from the Dead, which details in
8:39
graphic detail my experience going through medical school
8:41
and how I arrived to where I am
8:43
today. So I went to
8:45
medical school just like everyone else. I went
8:47
and did a residency in the South Bronx because
8:49
I just felt like that's where I was
8:51
going to get the most experience. And
8:53
I really liked the, it was a social
8:55
medicine program, a bunch of liberals now. I can't
8:57
even believe I actually was able to intermix
9:00
with them because my politics to them today is
9:02
so radically different. You know, they
9:04
would completely disown me if probably they
9:06
already have. But
9:08
it was a really good experience. And
9:10
I really did enjoy that program.
9:12
But I left feeling like, yeah, I
9:14
learned a lot about, you know,
9:16
how to interact with patients and community
9:18
medicine and that stuff, but I
9:21
didn't feel like I'd really mastered medicine
9:23
very well. So I thought, and
9:25
I also felt like I was really
9:27
seeing the damage that preventive surveillance
9:29
medicine can do to people.
9:31
So healthy people were coming into me and
9:33
I was just doing stuff that was
9:35
hurting them a lot of the time, you
9:37
know, vaccinating them, doing unnecessary testing on
9:39
them, you know, colonoscopies where you can perforate.
9:41
And yeah, like, I think there's a
9:43
time and a place for just about everything.
9:46
But I felt like, well, let me
9:48
apply my medical knowledge to people
9:51
that really need it. And people that
9:53
don't have kidney function do need
9:55
medicine. You will. Unless you have a
9:57
miracle you die with failing kidneys
9:59
And so that's what I did. I
10:01
specialized in nephrology and I loved
10:03
that I mean the kidneys are fascinating
10:05
and they just they control pretty
10:07
much metabolism of the whole body in
10:09
some way control the production of
10:11
red blood cells that controls calcium Controls
10:13
your bone density your vitamin D
10:15
production. I mean there's so much going
10:17
on with kidneys And so
10:20
I really loved that. And I really
10:22
loved being the dialysis patients and that whole
10:24
experience. I used to bring my dog to
10:26
the dialysis unit and patients really loved it.
10:28
And so those years were really good and
10:30
very prosperous. And I had a beautiful house
10:32
up in Maine. Everybody loved
10:34
me. The administration
10:36
of the hospital, people that needed nephrologists
10:38
were coming to me personally because
10:40
I had such a good reputation. And
10:43
then one day, I
10:47
went in after having a few days off.
10:49
I went into the dialysis unit and a
10:51
patient said to me, no,
10:53
I said to the patient, because the first
10:55
thing when I meet a new patient on dialysis,
10:57
I say, oh, you're new. How long have
10:59
you been on dialysis? And as if he had
11:01
told 20 people and no one listened, I've
11:04
never been on dialysis and I've never had any
11:06
kidney trouble. And I was fine until I got
11:08
that shot. And I was like, oh, what shot?
11:10
That flu shot. So
11:13
that was the year
11:15
that the... It was
11:17
a 2009. H1N1
11:19
was a separate shot
11:22
to the regular flu. And
11:24
sure enough, his kidney function was normal beforehand. I
11:26
went back and checked the GP, and
11:28
then he was on dialysis straight
11:30
afterwards. And I thought, hmm, can
11:33
vaccines cause kidney problems? I'd never
11:35
been taught that. I never. heard
11:37
that. And then I started to
11:39
review the medical literature and yes,
11:41
vaccines can and do cause kidney
11:43
problems, all kinds of kidney problems.
11:45
And I've written extensively on this.
11:47
There's an article out there that
11:50
I wrote on
11:52
vaccination and kidney patients. There are
11:54
articles in the New England Journal
11:56
of Medicine. I've done a video
11:58
called honesty versus policy that details
12:00
that entire situation. And I
12:02
would probably still be a
12:04
nephrologist earning 350 ,000 plus dollars
12:06
a year in living in my
12:09
beautiful house if I didn't
12:11
get so much flak from the
12:13
doctors around me and from
12:15
the administration simply for presenting information
12:17
to them. asking
12:19
them to stop vaccinating my
12:21
acutely ill kidney patients. That's all
12:23
I did, okay? Because
12:25
what happened is the policy
12:27
in the hospital changed so
12:30
that... I could go
12:32
up on, this is what happened one day. I
12:34
went up, I had a 75 year old woman
12:36
who had a severely inflammatory kidney problem, losing massive
12:38
amounts of protein in her urine. I didn't know
12:40
what the problem was, so I had to do
12:42
a biopsy because that's really the only way you
12:44
can see what part of the nephron or interstitium
12:46
is affected or the tubules or whatever. And
12:49
when I got up there, she had
12:52
been given an H1N1 shot and the
12:54
order had my name as the ordering
12:56
physician. And you had done. I
12:58
just stood there and I looked at the nurse
13:00
and I was like, oh, this has to be a
13:02
mistake because I didn't order this. She's like, oh,
13:04
no, this is how we're doing it now. I was
13:06
like, wait, how what? I haven't even admitted the
13:08
patient. I haven't even written an admission note yet. I
13:10
haven't even examined her. And she
13:12
said, well, the pharmacist comes by and
13:14
gives them patient information. And if they
13:16
agree, they get the shot. And then
13:19
the attending physician's name is written as
13:21
the ordering physician. So, you know, that's
13:23
when I started really researching and I
13:25
drafted like a 40 page document with
13:28
tons of conventional medical peer -reviewed
13:30
papers to support my position and
13:32
presented it to the chief
13:34
executive officer, to the director of
13:36
nursing, to anyone that I
13:38
thought would listen. I heard nothing
13:40
back from them. Finally, the
13:42
chair of medicine told me they were
13:44
going to have a meeting to discuss my
13:46
concerns, and I asked if I could
13:48
attend, and they said no, but he would
13:50
report back to me. I know, how
13:52
ridiculous. Yeah, it's kind of... No, so
13:55
they couldn't... Of course, they couldn't respond because
13:57
they knew nothing about what they were talking
13:59
about. So they hired some guy from New Hampshire.
14:02
And I actually named him in honesty
14:04
versus policy. And I showed the document
14:06
that was sent back to me. So
14:08
he basically told me that this is
14:10
going to be a policy for all
14:12
hospitalized patients and that I should get
14:14
used to it. And his supporting evidence
14:17
was that flu shots were given to
14:19
patients with AIDS and they mounted antibodies. That
14:21
was it. That was it. That's what he
14:23
gave me to support. So
14:26
I just thought, okay.
14:29
At that point, I realized that nobody in
14:31
the conventional medical world that was going
14:33
to make a difference would listen to me.
14:35
I was told that I needed to
14:37
conduct my own research study to prove my
14:39
point. And I said, since when does
14:41
a clinician have to prove that an injectable
14:43
substance that is harming numerous other patients
14:45
have to do her own study? So I
14:47
just said, you know what? this isn't
14:49
working out for me anymore. I cannot work
14:51
for you people. I cannot work in
14:53
the hospital. I told them I was in
14:55
a private medical practice. I said I
14:57
quit. I don't want to be here anymore.
14:59
Well, my partners are practically in tears.
15:01
They were like, please don't leave yet. We
15:03
have to replace you if you're going
15:05
to leave. So I stayed on for two
15:07
more years. And I
15:09
felt like I was living among
15:11
the enemy, honestly. I was praised
15:13
and louded all those years up
15:16
until then. And after that, all
15:18
my charts were reviewed. notes
15:20
were reviewed. I was called up for
15:22
writing orders not to. So as soon
15:24
as I would come see a patient
15:26
in the hospital, I would write an
15:28
order, do not vaccinate this patient unless
15:30
I agree to it. And I was
15:33
admonished for doing that and told I
15:35
was not to stop those orders anymore.
15:37
And I didn't stop. I continued to
15:39
do it. I reported every vaccine reaction
15:41
I saw to the adverse event reporting
15:43
system in America. And
15:45
I got kept getting escalated up the
15:47
food chain, getting all saying Someone else will
15:49
be calling you. Someone else will be
15:51
calling you. And I'm like, great. So
15:53
finally, the food chain got to the
15:55
infectious disease director of the state of
15:57
Maine where I was living. And we
15:59
had a very unpleasant chat on the
16:01
phone. And he said to me, what
16:03
happened to you? I said, what happened
16:05
to me? You woke up. Yeah, what
16:07
happened to me? I read the medical literature.
16:10
I now know that those, because they
16:12
were given the inhalable nasal flu shots to
16:14
children with the warning saying that to
16:16
stay away from immune compromised people and that,
16:18
you know, basically they get all the
16:20
symptoms of the flu. I said it's spreading
16:22
the flu. So that bothers me. I
16:24
said it bothers me that none of my
16:26
colleagues know the effective vaccines upon the
16:28
kidney when it's evident from since like the
16:30
1940s, what vaccines can do to the
16:32
kidneys and that people like you are pushing
16:34
me back when I'm the one presenting
16:36
the medical literature. I'm the one putting all
16:38
45 papers in front of you saying
16:40
Here's my position. Yeah, challenge me. And then
16:42
I get a letter back from your
16:44
friend over in New Hampshire with this nonsense
16:46
about AIDS patients. I said, that's what
16:48
happened to me. And he just kept rattling
16:51
on and I just hung up on
16:53
him at that point. And I thought, come
16:55
and get me because I, you know
16:57
what, I just know you're pregnant. So
16:59
I never heard anything back from them
17:01
again. So I carried on, you know,
17:03
filing the reports, whether or not they
17:05
ever made it to the VAERS system.
17:08
Formally, I don't know because I'd never I
17:10
didn't know to follow that up until much
17:12
later. So anyway, I left and I left
17:14
literally not knowing where I was gonna go
17:16
next I just I just prayed to God
17:19
that he would find a way for me
17:21
through this thing I left with no money.
17:23
I because my house I had this big
17:25
house that I was still paying off Yeah,
17:27
so I literally had no money and for
17:29
the first few months I was literally going
17:31
around collecting aluminum aluminium cans to get change
17:33
to put petrol in the tank. You're kidding
17:35
me. What a story. I could
17:37
reinvent myself because you know, I basically
17:40
only knew conventional medicine. I did not want
17:42
to go back to that. I didn't
17:44
want to have a conventional medical office of
17:46
my own. I knew I wanted
17:48
to do something different. I knew since
17:50
early years in my medical residency that really
17:52
what I was was a high paid technician
17:54
for the pharmaceutical industry. And I was really
17:56
always unhappy about it. So I
17:59
thought, fine, I'm going to
18:01
figure this out. So I started
18:03
studying toxic metals and chelation.
18:05
I started studying actual real cell
18:07
biology, the mitochondria, you
18:09
know, oxygenation, oxidative stress, you
18:11
know, reductive treatments, intravenous
18:14
vitamin C. I studied vitamin C for
18:16
about a year. I studied polio for
18:18
probably about three years. And then I
18:20
wrote this book with Roman Bistrianic called
18:22
Dissolving Illusions. So that kind of got
18:25
me off my slump. Um, and I
18:27
had a little bit of an income
18:29
and I continued to reinvest that into
18:31
different courses and going around to different
18:33
workshops and learning more and more. And
18:35
then I finally started seeing patients again.
18:37
And, you know, so since then I've,
18:39
I've done a full ozone study in
18:41
Madrid, Spain. Um, I pretty much, I
18:44
do IV vitamin C ozone. You're insatiable
18:46
man. Like your, your drive is just
18:48
insatiable to keep going and keep learning
18:50
despite this massive and, uh, you know,
18:52
I know what it's like to have
18:54
to start again and to lose everything
18:56
that you've had. Been there a couple
18:58
of times, been there, done it, about
19:00
to do it again. And
19:03
it's damn scary and to leave
19:05
everything that you know. And
19:08
this is, you're like, OK, so let's go
19:10
back to these original patients where you started to
19:12
see damage from the vaccines. And
19:14
then you go and you wake
19:17
up your colleagues and say, hey, this
19:19
is happening. And then you get
19:21
completely ostracized, victimized, you know, hostility. you
19:23
know this starts to happen
19:25
to you and you bravely stand
19:27
up against that and give
19:29
up your whole successfully huge successfully
19:31
career to to go and
19:33
step out and go not this
19:35
is not right and then
19:37
you've you've actually got you are
19:40
part of the the vaxed
19:42
documentary which yeah the second one
19:44
and you've been a part
19:46
of bringing to bringing to light
19:48
what's actually happening with traditional
19:51
vaccines like the
19:53
MMR vaccines, polio, the
19:55
smallpox, HPV, you've
19:57
been uncovering it and all with
19:59
you know the scientific literature or
20:01
everything's backed up by what you're
20:03
not just shooting from the hip
20:06
and saying hey this is my opinion,
20:08
this is all backed up. Can we
20:11
just go back into a little
20:13
bit about what vaccines actually are meant
20:15
to be doing and why why
20:17
are we having problems and why why
20:19
you know like The Polio one
20:21
gets brought up now, right, in the
20:24
current COVID situation. Oh, we
20:26
eradicated Polio. Therefore, this vaccine is
20:28
good. That logic to me is
20:30
completely skewed with because for starters,
20:32
you'll be able to tell us
20:34
the whole Polio story. But it's
20:36
also a completely different thing. And
20:38
it's a completely different technology for
20:40
a starter. So there's no comparison.
20:42
But can you give us a
20:44
bit of background on that? So
20:46
basically only the pro -vaccine can
20:49
get away with the simplicity argument.
20:51
Vaccine save lives. Get your vaccine, or
20:53
you know, like Kamala Harris, this will save
20:55
your life, or Jacinda Ardern, get this vaccine
20:57
to save your life. It's like, and
21:01
then I follow the science. So
21:03
the pro -vaccine have always got
21:05
away with the minimalist argument because
21:07
the mythology around vaccination has been
21:09
so pervasive and so convincing to
21:11
the public. I
21:16
knocked up against that very early on.
21:18
So when I would start showing the scientific
21:20
evidence, and I don't say things without having
21:22
something in black and white to back me
21:24
up, because I can't get away with it.
21:26
I can't just give a quick explanation for
21:28
things, because that's not how it works. So
21:30
if a pro -vaccine person wants to just
21:32
tell you, this is a simplistic argument, you
21:34
have to say flush that out for me,
21:37
please, and ask them questions, because they won't
21:39
be able to answer. Namely, the toxicity
21:41
of aluminium. Ask them about that, because that's
21:43
an argument you cannot lose. Um,
21:45
so when I would argue against the
21:47
flu shots in my own patients, I was
21:49
hit with, well, what about polio? I
21:51
almost called my chapter. Well, what about polio?
21:53
Cause that's what you're so often. What
21:55
about polio? And I'm like, what about polio?
21:58
You tell me about polio. What about
22:00
polio? Well, that vaccine was amazing. And Jonas
22:02
Salk and Albert's happened and blah, blah,
22:04
blah, blah. And I, well, you know, maybe
22:06
it was, let me do some research.
22:08
So that's why I spent three years, at
22:10
least three years just buried in the
22:12
polio research. And I was gifted. the
22:14
library from one of the
22:17
early public health directors in Illinois
22:19
named Herbert Ratner. His daughter
22:21
sent me his entire, he was
22:23
one of the few doctors
22:25
and he was not a quack,
22:27
considered a quack. He was
22:30
the public health commissioner in Oak
22:32
Park, Illinois. And he
22:34
wrote books and he wrote newsletters.
22:36
He wouldn't let his kids take the
22:38
first vaccine. He later let them
22:40
have the Sabin vaccine, but he regretted it. And
22:44
So I was gifted that library and then Dr.
22:46
Sherry Tenpenny sent me a whole bunch of
22:48
books from her and then a lady named Hillary
22:50
in New Zealand sent me an enormous amount of
22:52
info. It was almost like God was saying,
22:54
you need to write about polio. Here it is,
22:56
dump. So I basically studied all that
22:58
stuff inside out. There were public health documents
23:00
that you can't get your hands on any other
23:02
way. I still have them live in digital form.
23:04
I have them in hard copy. I've sent them
23:07
to other people. So if I get knocked
23:09
off, they're still out there. They're still around. And
23:11
so at the end of it all,
23:14
You know I had to answer my own
23:16
questions because I was also brought up with
23:18
oh He were the little kids with the
23:20
short legs and the cast and of course
23:22
nobody wants that right no well what I
23:24
came to learn was that those kids First
23:26
of all, most of them were exposed to
23:28
toxins like DDT, which was sprayed in their
23:30
lunchbox. It was sprayed in their bed. It
23:32
was put on their food. There are
23:34
videos and pictures of kids at the beach and
23:36
in swimming pools being sprayed with looks like fire
23:39
hoses that contain DDT and they'd be dancing in
23:41
front of it because they never thought it was
23:43
good for them. The cows
23:45
that were dipped in arsenic
23:47
got polio. It's like polio is
23:49
a poison disease. Largely
23:52
and the poison. Now see there
23:54
are some people and I want to
23:56
back up because there's a big
23:58
debate within even the vaccine questioning community
24:00
of Are viruses real entities that
24:02
come from the outside or are they
24:04
exosomes that are secreted by your
24:06
body? I don't believe
24:08
that there is There is a black
24:10
and white picture on that because I
24:12
do believe there is a pleomorphic system
24:14
inside the body that can transform I
24:17
know that I see it and And
24:19
when I do live blood analysis, you
24:21
can see that. And there are also
24:23
infections that come from the outside. So
24:25
just stop this nonsense, people. Like, really,
24:27
I don't care who says it. I
24:29
don't care who you're worshiping, what God
24:31
of medicine is telling you that virus
24:33
contagion is not real. It's nonsense, OK?
24:35
That's my opinion. So
24:38
anyway, what I learned from
24:40
the scientific literature is that the
24:42
virus actually permeates the intestines much more
24:44
easily and gets into the nervous
24:46
system much more easily in the face
24:48
of these toxins, okay? So
24:50
if that virus is in your body,
24:52
circulating, and that toxins,
24:55
exactly. However, that
24:57
toxin can cause the very
24:59
same pathophysiology in the dorsal column
25:01
of the spinal cord. That's
25:04
called poliomyelitis. Poliomyelitis is not
25:06
the name of a microbe.
25:09
name of an entity that happens
25:11
within the nervous system. a
25:13
paralysis causing thing. And so
25:15
many things, in my book, Disolving
25:17
Illusions, a whole page of things
25:19
that still cause polio myelitis. It's
25:22
just not considered to be caused
25:24
from the wild polio virus. But
25:26
how those children were treated back
25:28
then. So there was the poisoning
25:30
aspect and then there was the
25:32
treatment aspect. So you take a
25:34
child who's screaming in pain off
25:36
to the operating room and cut
25:38
and sever their tendons and straighten
25:40
out their leg that's already having
25:42
an uncoordinated muscle balance. and
25:44
put them in a cast for two
25:46
years, and anyone will end up with a
25:48
short leg and be unable to walk.
25:50
In fact, they did mouse experiments where they
25:52
immobilized or, you know, changed their nervous
25:54
system very similarly, and there was atrophy of
25:56
the mouse limbs. And again, all this
25:59
physical literature is in book.
26:01
And so it was the treatment of
26:04
those kids that was causing a lot
26:06
of the problem. And then along comes
26:08
this upstart nurse from Australia in the
26:10
outback. who was facing polio myelitis and
26:12
the doctor basically said you know she
26:14
was back then they would send I
26:16
don't know some sort of a telegram
26:18
message to the doctor and the doctor
26:20
would write back the doctor basically said
26:22
to sister name a sister Elizabeth Kenny
26:25
because nurses back then were called sister
26:27
she wasn't none and said it's polio
26:29
myelitis be creative do whatever you can
26:31
so she did She was actually a
26:33
brilliant lady. She had actually invented it.
26:35
She was an inventor. She had invented
26:37
a stretcher and she was very young
26:39
at the time, probably in her late
26:41
twenties. And so she started doing different,
26:43
um, cum, um, poultices, warm poultices and
26:46
physiotherapy. She was one of the early
26:48
pioneers of therapy. And she
26:50
was not only getting these kids out
26:52
of trouble, getting them walking again to the
26:54
point that American doctors woke up to
26:56
her and invited her to Minnesota to go
26:58
lead a new clinic, um, which she
27:00
did, but they would only send her the
27:02
kids that they had already done everything
27:04
to and then said you fixed them and
27:07
she did fix them. She fixed a
27:09
whole lot of them. So
27:11
that proves the treatment aspect. So we've got
27:13
the poisoning aspect, the treatment aspect, and
27:15
then we have to look at the research
27:17
that was being done to show that
27:19
the vaccine got rid of polio, which was
27:21
just as much of a scam as
27:23
what we're seeing today. Except today's what way
27:25
worse and that's why I've been pretty
27:27
much silent with what's happening today because let's
27:29
like look I've been preaching this for
27:31
10 years. Yeah trying to tell the public
27:33
What's wrong with the vaccination program? Why
27:35
they don't work? Why vaccines cause new strains
27:37
out that are that can be more
27:39
virulent or more contagious because they put pressure
27:41
on a micro just like antibiotics So,
27:43
I mean, I've been saying if you hate
27:45
on a brick wall, right? Yeah, I'm
27:47
all out of wind now. So So
27:50
it's basically we're seeing and I saw the
27:53
build up. So I'm not surprised. People are
27:55
you shocked at what's happening today? No, I'm
27:57
not shocked at what's happened because I've been
27:59
telling you this is going to happen. There's
28:01
a big financial reset happening and this is
28:03
a tool to get there. Okay. That's all
28:05
it is. There's nothing to do with science.
28:07
This has nothing to do with it. It
28:09
has to do with politics and what the
28:11
puppet masters are telling people to do. So
28:13
anyway, back up to polio. And so we
28:15
have the research aspect. So what happened was
28:17
they had this big This
28:20
big campaign, the march of dimes,
28:22
so people basically started sending dimes to
28:25
the White House because Franklin Delano
28:27
Roosevelt, the polio president, who probably was
28:29
poisoned by some sort of chemical
28:31
coming out from a stream processing plant
28:33
upstream of where his estate was
28:35
in New York State, I think it
28:37
was. Don't quote me on that. Got
28:40
paralyzed straight after that. was
28:43
treated wrongly just like everybody else and
28:45
ended up with a limp. So
28:47
he was the poster child later determined
28:49
to have Guillain -Barre syndrome and not
28:51
actually polio. So all this
28:53
energy was put into this vaccine.
28:55
So much energy, so much American
28:57
hype, you know, the polio, you
28:59
know, heart strings, pictures of the
29:02
children donate, donate, donate. Nobody wanted
29:04
this to happen to their kid.
29:07
Theaters were shut down. Swimming pools were
29:09
shut down. You know, it was a,
29:11
it was My mom loved it. Yeah, an
29:13
epidemic, and it was funny enough,
29:15
happened around orchards. Wow, that's interesting. Yeah.
29:17
So, so
29:19
there was so much hype and
29:21
money put into this March of Dimes
29:23
campaign that it wasn't allowed to
29:25
fail. Yeah, yeah. And there were scientists
29:27
at the time that I quote
29:29
in the book that were saying, initially,
29:32
Many of the scientists were arguing
29:34
the veracity of the design of the
29:36
study and the vaccine. They argued
29:38
that the vaccine was going to cause
29:40
problems because they weren't actually killing
29:42
the polio virus properly and it was
29:44
coming back to life. And
29:46
all those doctors were got rid
29:48
of, not just fired. And
29:50
then the end, everyone was very
29:52
agreeable was the exact quote. And
29:55
so the Francis trial was the big trial
29:57
that looked at hundreds of thousands of children
29:59
after they were vaccinated and looked at the
30:01
rates of polio. And those
30:03
numbers were so highly manipulated. There was a
30:05
doctor named Dr. Frederick Plenner, which most people
30:07
have heard of because of his vitamin C
30:09
work. But he broke down the
30:11
trial study and said everything that was wrong, he
30:13
was really angry. And there were lots of
30:16
doctors just like today going, wait a minute. It
30:18
doesn't make any sense. And this is completely
30:20
wrong. And I'm not going to give this to
30:22
my patients. Well, back then they weren't fired. They
30:26
were just ignored. there's
30:29
a federal register from I
30:31
believe 1986 because there was so
30:33
much controversy about the polio
30:35
vaccines. There was an announcement in
30:37
the federal register that said
30:39
any doubt as to the safety
30:42
of the vaccines is not
30:44
allowed to exist in order to
30:46
in order to maintain public
30:48
belief in the vaccination. And that's
30:50
exactly what's happening now. That's
30:52
right. So they learn each time
30:54
they do this, pull this stuff on the
30:56
public, they learn how far they can push
30:58
people, who's going to push back, and how
31:00
to deal with it. So over
31:02
time, they've dealt with the chiropractors. They've
31:04
dealt with the holistic doctors that
31:07
wanted to do something different. They've dealt
31:09
with vaccine denying parents. And
31:11
now they're dealing with all of
31:13
us with basically toxic you
31:16
know, injections, I won't even call them
31:18
vaccines. So that's the basis that it
31:20
was built on this polio. And even before
31:22
that, there was an even bigger scam in
31:24
terms of the smallpox vaccine, which I wrote
31:26
a chapter up to see that's a couple
31:28
of generations away from us, whereas most of
31:30
us know an adult who had polio who
31:32
has the short leg. And
31:34
we don't see that anymore. So I had
31:36
to say, okay, well, If I'm going to
31:39
say the polio vaccine didn't work, then why
31:41
don't I see short legs anymore? And that's
31:43
when I had to really research the treatment.
31:45
And that's the answer to that one is
31:47
why we don't see. And we do. If
31:49
you go over to India and those places,
31:51
you will see that. Is this also a
31:53
renaming thing? Like they've called it something else.
31:55
And it's like the statistics now with all
31:57
of a sudden the deaths from flu have
31:59
disappeared. The statistics have dropped like in Australia.
32:02
I know from 880 or something to zero,
32:04
where did they go? They went
32:06
to somewhere else. I was just going to get to
32:08
that because that's part of the research. So basically
32:10
the study, after they
32:12
invented the vaccine and did
32:14
this study, they changed
32:16
the definition of polio. So
32:18
before the study and
32:20
the vaccine, you were considered
32:22
polio. Anyone could report
32:24
it because it was considered
32:26
a public health, you
32:28
know, mitzvah to get financing
32:30
to the patient. So
32:32
anyone could report the case of
32:34
polio. All you had to have was
32:36
paralysis in one muscle group that
32:38
lasted 24 hours. After
32:40
the vaccine, you had to
32:43
have a specialist diagnosed
32:45
polio and it wasn't considered
32:47
polio unless you had
32:49
paralysis on two separate exams
32:51
60 days apart. Well,
32:54
the fact of the matter is most people would have
32:56
recovered by 60 days if you just left them alone. And
32:58
there were many other, so I'm just
33:00
giving you one major issue as far
33:03
as the renaming. And there was a
33:05
study in Michigan where they looked after
33:07
the vaccine was implemented all throughout Michigan.
33:09
There were 2000, some around 2000 cases
33:11
of polio in kids. They tested the
33:13
stool for polio virus. They tested the
33:15
blood for evidence of polio virus infection.
33:17
And they looked for other infections. And
33:19
they found in about three quarter of
33:21
them that there was no polio. Whatever
33:23
there. So now the argument is yeah,
33:25
but other things cause polio, but we
33:27
got rid of that one. Okay Well,
33:29
congratulations because we still have a whole
33:31
lot of you know, enteroviruses causing nerve
33:33
problems in children and and after you
33:35
vaccinate them They start making announcements. Oh
33:37
polio like virus happening in children. Well,
33:39
it's not polio though because we've eradicated
33:41
So you just call it something different
33:43
and that's how it works. Yeah, yeah
33:46
Just interrupting the show to let
33:48
you know about my longevity and
33:50
anti -aging supplement range. I'd love you
33:52
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33:55
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33:57
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33:59
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34:01
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34:14
there. Stuff that I give to my family.
34:16
that's what's in my range. So go and
34:18
check it out at leesatamati .com. And
34:22
this is just mind -boggling. And
34:24
then if you go forward
34:26
into time, things like the HPV,
34:29
which is when I was
34:31
a young woman just coming into
34:33
trend for cervical cancers and
34:35
stuff. Now, what's wrong with that
34:37
one, for example? it
34:44
was very similar to this injection that we're
34:46
seeing now in terms of what's happening with
34:48
the nervous system and the denial of the
34:50
medical system. So all I can tell you,
34:52
so I was well out of the medical
34:54
system by the time HPV vaccines came along.
34:57
And I researched it and I thought,
34:59
oh, let's see, every vaccine I
35:01
sat down and I said, okay, let's
35:03
look at what the disease is
35:05
like, how lethal it is, how
35:07
it can be treated, what
35:09
the vaccine efficacy is. and what the
35:11
safety of the vaccine is. These are the
35:13
five questions you need to ask before
35:15
you take any vaccine or give it to
35:17
your kid. OK, because, you know, there
35:20
may be a matching vaccine for the disease,
35:22
but it might that any protection you get
35:24
might not last very long. And it's
35:26
certainly possible that when and if you get
35:28
the disease, it can actually make things
35:31
worse. It was vaccinated. So we found that
35:33
there was negative efficacy in. women who
35:35
had the vaccine who already had HPV in
35:37
their bodies and they never tested for
35:39
it first. You know, you could be born
35:41
with HPV. Lizards have HPV. There are
35:43
so many strains of HPV out there and
35:45
it's so prevalent. It comes and it
35:47
goes, giving your throat come and go, giving
35:49
the cervix come and go. You can
35:51
have pathology in the cervix that can go
35:54
away if you change your rotten lifestyle
35:56
and stop smoking and, you know, eating. So
36:00
there are ways to deal with
36:02
the infection when you have it. And
36:04
yes, it can be associated with
36:06
certain cancers, but it's not the only
36:09
association. There are lots of other
36:11
things usually surrounding that and lifestyle issues.
36:13
So they come up with this vaccine
36:15
that's loaded with aluminium. And then the
36:17
second round had twice the amount of
36:20
aluminium, more than any other vaccine that's
36:22
ever been made. And
36:24
it has these different strains in it.
36:26
And so it might have lowered those
36:28
particular strains, but then other strains cropped
36:30
up around it that ended up being
36:32
even more troublesome. And look, my videos
36:34
go into this in great detail. My
36:36
youtube page was just newt, but I'm
36:39
putting all my videos on odyssey. Yeah
36:41
odyssey and my own website dr. Suzanne
36:43
It's dr. Suzeta double any net dr.
36:45
Suzanne net all my videos will eventually
36:47
be up on there My website been
36:49
hacked and attacked every which way you
36:51
can imagine, but I've got somebody on
36:53
it right now Managing it for me
36:55
So yeah, so I've already, you know,
36:57
I've been through pretty much every vaccine
37:00
except for rabies and yellow fever and
37:02
the ones I just don't care about.
37:05
They're not affecting newborn infants. And
37:07
that was really my concern. So I started
37:09
out with adults and then I started to, I
37:11
saw the abuse that was happening. Look,
37:14
I had an employee that was hired
37:16
to work in our hospital kitchen who
37:18
was mandated to get a measles shot.
37:20
She ended up on dialysis. And
37:22
then she ended up with thyroid disorders. I
37:25
mean, the woman never came off dialysis and everyone knew it
37:27
was from the vaccine. It was written in a chart in
37:29
the vaccine, but it was like, oh, but it's only one
37:31
in a million. She was just one in a million. They
37:33
all seem to be one in a million. There's a lot
37:35
of one in a million. She could be working in the
37:37
kitchen right now instead of coming to us. The
37:40
life destroyed, actually. So I've seen high,
37:42
middle and hypertension happen after tetanus vaccines.
37:45
I've seen all kinds of things happen
37:47
after the chickenpox, shingles vaccines. So.
37:50
My determination in adults is any vaccine
37:52
can be a problem. Maybe it
37:54
won't be maybe it won't be obvious
37:57
early on but later on probably
37:59
sorry, is it the aluminum
38:01
and mercury and the whatever
38:03
other shit they're putting in these
38:05
things Well, a complicated
38:07
question because because then I went
38:09
and I started looking at
38:11
childhood vaccines and what I did
38:13
was I studied the development
38:15
of the fetal and infant immune
38:17
system how it works how
38:19
it's supposed to be programmed to
38:21
be maximally effective and protective
38:23
and non -reactive to things it
38:25
shouldn't react to. And
38:28
the problem is that babies are
38:30
looked at in terms of being insufficient
38:32
or being, you know, lacking something.
38:34
But that's absolutely not true. Babies
38:36
are born with a quiescent immune system
38:38
because what's supposed to happen doesn't mean
38:40
the immune system's not there because it
38:42
can react. But it's it's
38:44
it's almost like it's got clamps on
38:46
it to hold it down while it's
38:48
drinking its mother's milk that are loaded
38:50
with antigens Loaded with activated T cells
38:52
loaded with antibodies loaded with proteins that
38:54
can kill cancer cells literally that they
38:57
use in the oncology Wow, you know
38:59
The acronym for this one protein is
39:01
hamlet H a m l e t
39:03
Yeah, and it's actually a nutrient it
39:05
can fight off encapsulated bacteria like pneumococcus
39:07
So so I so that showed me
39:09
that okay. Well, there's a plan in
39:11
place there I didn't really care where
39:13
the truth fell. I didn't have an
39:15
investment. All I did have done is
39:17
lose money, lose reputation, nearly get killed.
39:20
You know, it's it's like I've won
39:22
nothing over this except for my soul.
39:24
That's all I've won. That's all I
39:26
ever cared about. So integrity.
39:28
It's code, Susan. I saw what was
39:30
happening to these infants. And
39:32
so your question just now was
39:34
related to other vaccines. So what's
39:36
the problem? So the problem, I
39:38
would say the biggest problem with
39:41
the childhood vaccines especially
39:43
before the age of two years,
39:45
is that they are disrupting
39:47
the normal programming, normal blueprint of
39:49
that child's immune system and
39:51
causing them to be hyper reactive.
39:54
And once that happens, all
39:56
hell breaks loose. That's when the
39:58
ear infections start happening. The ear
40:01
tubes, the antibiotics. So you
40:03
have a kid on antibiotics. already sick,
40:05
microbiomes destroyed, and then what do you
40:07
do? You throw another vaccine into them.
40:09
And that, in my opinion, is why
40:11
the MMR was labeled as one of
40:13
the worst ones. When in my opinion,
40:15
it's actually probably one of the better
40:17
ones, because it's at least a live
40:19
viral vaccine that's not loaded with mercury.
40:21
It's not loaded with alimony. It doesn't
40:23
have any of that crap in it.
40:25
The program's the immune system towards the
40:27
TH1. which is the more cell -mediated
40:30
frontline system as opposed to killed vaccines
40:32
that have your aluminium and your mercury. Those
40:35
go to HTH2. The
40:37
thing is, that pro -vaccine will tell you, they're
40:39
good for your baby, they'll save your life.
40:41
I'm telling you, look, I can't explain this
40:43
to you in two minutes, but basically it
40:45
defies the normal development of the infant immune
40:47
system and causes it to be psychotic. I
40:50
was introduced to a Steiner school
40:52
population around this time that I
40:54
was waking up. And I
40:56
was like, and I told one of the mothers
40:58
off because her kid was playing with hammer
41:01
and nail and hadn't had a tetanus shot. And
41:04
someone in the room said to me, well,
41:06
Suzanne, what do you know about tetanus? And
41:08
I perked up with my arrogant doctor attitude.
41:10
And I said, well, I know you don't
41:12
want to get it. And I know it
41:14
causes lockjaw. And I know she's not vaccinated.
41:17
And then after a while, I sat back
41:19
and I watched week after week after week.
41:21
And I realized these kids have never been
41:23
on antibiotics. They don't
41:25
have autism. Yeah, they are creative. They're
41:27
happy. They can play by themselves
41:29
all the things I could do as
41:31
a child. I was constantly on
41:33
antibiotics I was a way of life.
41:35
How did the population survive without
41:37
I figured there must be so much
41:39
death before antibiotics. Well, there wasn't
41:41
Most people that were dying were dying
41:43
either in infancy or because of
41:45
you know, psychologists who refused to wash
41:47
their hands and gave purple fever
41:49
to the mother or falling off a
41:51
cliff or hunting accidents, that kind
41:53
of stuff. So this mythology
41:55
about the lifespan being increased because of
41:57
vaccination, another lie. And I tell you
42:00
all the details of that in dissolving
42:02
illusions. So, so here I
42:04
have this unvaccinated population. And now
42:06
there's been several facts on that studies
42:08
that show that the rates, yes,
42:10
the rates of infections for the Quote,
42:12
vaccine preventable diseases is higher in
42:14
the unvaccinated kids. Yes, they'll get chickenpox.
42:16
Yes. They're
42:18
all going to get hooting cough. Even if you've had
42:20
four shots, you're eventually going to get hooping cough. It just
42:23
won't be called that because the doctor will say, oh,
42:25
it's just a bad cough, but it's not hooping cough. So
42:27
measles vaccine is probably the most effective one.
42:29
It would be nice if it was just given
42:31
by itself. I would have preferred if it
42:33
was never given at all on the planet, but
42:35
now that it's unavailable and you basically can
42:38
stand the risk of getting it as an adult,
42:40
which can be worse. you know, we're in
42:42
a bit of a pickle because of the vaccine.
42:44
So my determination at the
42:46
end of this was that
42:49
I don't personally believe that
42:51
any vaccine is worth taking. None
42:53
of them. I don't care
42:55
if you decide to vaccinate yourself, if you're an
42:58
adult that can make your own decisions, but
43:00
those kind of bother me that you're going to
43:02
enlist your child into a vaccine. And isn't
43:04
it funny how nobody cared, okay, oh, kids need
43:06
their shots, but now that they're coming for
43:08
us, all of a sudden it's a big problem
43:10
when they're coming for you, but you're perfectly
43:12
happy to hand your baby over to the doctor
43:15
and have it come back screaming for three
43:17
days. Believe your bloody doctor. Yeah, to believe them.
43:19
Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, the lies are
43:21
stacked on top of lies. written on top of
43:23
mythology. And I don't
43:25
believe that any of the vaccines
43:27
are worth taking. Now, get it started
43:29
as a benevolent endeavor, maybe. But
43:32
look, all the data is there
43:34
now to say we should be
43:36
questioning the programs. But the problem
43:38
is, and even conventional pro -vaccine
43:40
doctors will tell you, like Dr.
43:42
Peter Abe, AABY, that once a
43:44
vaccine is introduced into the program,
43:46
they won't take it out. Even
43:48
if they take out. They've proven
43:50
in Africa that if you give
43:52
these killed vaccines, like DPT, the
43:54
death rate is much higher after those shots
43:56
than it is if you were to just leave
43:58
them alone. It's not from the death theory
44:00
or the pertussis or tetanus. It's from other things
44:03
because of what I've just told you about.
44:05
It's to skew. So today
44:07
we're in this situation where The
44:10
public has swallowed the Kool -Aid, believed the
44:12
mythology, terrorized, afraid to die. We're never
44:14
supposed to die, right? Nobody's supposed to die
44:16
anymore. It doesn't matter what kind of
44:19
life you're living. So long as you didn't
44:21
die, it's worth the intervention. Get your
44:23
KFC with your vaccine. And
44:25
so they've swallowed this one because A, they've
44:27
been terrorized, B, they've been told they can't work,
44:30
can't take jobs anymore, and they believe in
44:32
vaccinations. Well, I think a lot of people are
44:34
going to wake up, but it's probably going
44:36
to be too late for Too late for most
44:38
people, yeah. And the horrible thing
44:40
is they're coming for pregnant women, they're coming for
44:42
children. Unless
44:44
you're a scientist like you are,
44:46
or you're even like a
44:48
lay person like me who researches
44:50
the crap out of everything, then
44:53
you don't have a show of
44:55
understanding the science. So of course,
44:57
you're going to believe the narrative
44:59
from the authorities that you have
45:01
trusted your entire life. You
45:04
watch especially in the older
45:06
population, they are used to
45:08
the 7 o 'clock news
45:10
or the 6 o 'clock news.
45:12
That's the way they consume
45:14
their information. And that's the
45:17
only source. All of those
45:19
mainstream media, which have been
45:21
all bought off from whoever's
45:23
behind this whole thing. And
45:25
it's one track mind. And
45:27
it's been proven overseas, not
45:30
even this situation.
45:33
We know that it's doing damage. And
45:35
I mean, I've spent the last
45:37
six years rehabilitating my mum, now going
45:39
through a cancer journey. I
45:41
tell you what, it's the same thing with
45:44
cancer. It's the same bullshit. It's the same
45:46
bullshit when I see, you know, like with
45:48
mum with a brain injury, that hyperbaric
45:50
oxygen therapy is a powerful intravenous
45:52
vitamin C and all the other things
45:54
that I do. is a
45:56
powerful intervention for people with brain
45:58
injuries or for people with dementia
46:00
or for other things. Never going
46:03
to see the light of day
46:05
unless people listen to things like
46:07
this because there's no money behind
46:09
it and we are facing this
46:11
massive problem with pharmaceutical companies running
46:13
the entire ship. They're running the
46:16
whole medical system, the whole medical
46:18
schools. Everything has been influenced by
46:20
this and I can't prove that
46:22
but that's my opinion. And
46:25
I've seen it in my own family's health
46:27
and I've had to fight to get what
46:29
I need for them. And
46:32
this to me is
46:34
just another episode of the
46:36
same BS. Yeah, in
46:39
a lot of ways it is. I'd say
46:41
the exception is that I do think the field
46:43
of oncology has something to offer. The
46:46
field of vaccinology has
46:48
nothing to offer, but an
46:50
oncologist is selectively using
46:52
chemotherapy in cases that can't
46:55
actually be cured. But
46:57
then, but you can get like my
46:59
dad had rip -roaring cancer diagnosed with basically
47:01
tumors just popping up in his body overnight.
47:04
He got chemotherapy and we got
47:06
nine good months with him. I
47:08
consider that good. And someone I work
47:10
with now has leukemia. He's 84.
47:12
What didn't want the drugs? Didn't want the drugs
47:15
for three years. Then when the white count
47:17
went up to 240 ,000, he took a low
47:19
dose of an oral monoclonal antibody. And
47:21
he's doing great now, but he stopped it. OK?
47:23
So you have to selectively use it and
47:25
then body. I'm doing the same. Yeah.
47:27
Do everything like you're doing. And
47:29
then the other thing I'd say is
47:31
that with this current vaccine, with
47:33
this current biological, I should
47:35
say, Yes, it doesn't make
47:38
look all the other ones made a little
47:40
more sense in this one like what disease
47:42
do you know of that if you have
47:44
the disease you're told that you're you don't
47:46
even though the medical literature tells you that
47:48
you've got solid immunity that like you're the
47:50
90 % chance you're not going to get reinfected.
47:53
and you got an over 99 %
47:55
survival rate in certain age groups
47:57
that you still have to take
47:59
the vaccine, not once, not twice,
48:01
but probably ongoing. What
48:04
vaccine do you know of like
48:06
that? Like literally if I have
48:08
COVID, I can't say, here's my
48:10
antibodies, here's my doctor, here's my
48:12
PCR test. I don't want the
48:14
vaccine. They're like, nope, you have
48:16
to have it. No, sorry, that
48:19
doesn't make sense. Number two is
48:21
that this vaccine, was created way
48:23
too fast and the adverse reaction.
48:25
So if you have an anaphylactic
48:27
reaction to your first shot, you
48:29
will not be allowed to be
48:31
exempted from your second shot. You're
48:34
told that you have to go
48:36
into the intensive care unit, which
48:38
is supposedly overrun with COVID patients.
48:40
I don't know where they're going.
48:42
I've got a girlfriend that's in
48:44
the executive thing. They had anaphylactic
48:46
reactions. to, in her case,
48:48
flu vaccine. And she's still being told she
48:51
has to get it. And if she
48:53
dies, they'll resuscitate her. Even
48:56
you had anaphylaxis to the COVID
48:58
shot, you still have to get
49:00
the next one in intensive care
49:02
unit unless some doogie Howard doctor
49:04
that's put in charge of exemptions
49:06
approves it, which they're not going
49:08
to, not approving anything. So
49:11
that's why I say, when people are
49:13
like, why do you think it's going on?
49:15
Well, all I can tell you is
49:17
that the science doesn't make sense. The politicians
49:20
that are touting science don't make sense,
49:22
and that there has to be a bigger
49:24
agenda here, and they're setting us up
49:26
for something. Now, what it is, I have
49:28
some clues. I think this financial reset
49:30
part of it. I think conditioning the younger
49:32
generations towards, you know, the QR codes
49:34
to get into places, bribery, coercion, and the
49:36
problem is they've got the majority now. So
49:39
unless people start waking up in
49:41
droves, we're done. Yeah. we are done
49:43
if we don't wake up and
49:45
this is why you know we're having
49:47
these brave courageous conversations at great
49:49
expense to ourselves possibly because we somebody
49:51
has to stand up if we're
49:53
not going to stand up then who
49:55
the hell is you know and
49:57
we're slowly you know heading into a
49:59
really horrific scenario where we're losing
50:01
more and more of our freedoms and
50:03
we're being more and more controlled
50:06
and this you know apart from the
50:08
whole vaccine side of things this
50:10
is you know scares
50:12
the crap out of me to
50:14
be blatantly honest. And all
50:16
we can do is keep trying to
50:18
hit our heads against the brick
50:20
wall and let a few people know
50:22
and hopefully wake up more and
50:24
more people to what's actually going on.
50:26
And none of us understand we're
50:28
not the elite billionaires of the world.
50:31
We don't know exactly what they
50:33
have planned for us, but it ain't
50:35
anything good, I don't think. And
50:37
it's all part of this new reset.
50:41
So if anybody is listening to this
50:43
and they're like, who the hell
50:45
is Dr. Suzanne Humphries? And what she's
50:47
saying is just completely blowing my
50:49
mind, but I want to check all
50:52
this out. I want you to
50:54
encourage you to go and read dissolving
50:56
illusions and rising from the dead.
50:58
And you may understand a little bit
51:00
more. Dr. Suzanne Humphries
51:02
is a absolutely brilliant
51:04
scientist and doctor and is
51:06
really world renowned. Like
51:09
you are really well known.
51:11
You know, when I first heard
51:13
of you, I was not
51:15
sort of aware of your celebrity
51:17
status, shall we say, in
51:19
this realm. But
51:21
it's so important, you know, this work that
51:23
you're doing. And I think it's so brave
51:25
of you to give up. I'm
51:30
going through a situation in my own
51:32
family where my husband and my brother
51:34
are losing their jobs. I can't work
51:36
either properly because of the current mandates
51:38
that are coming in. It
51:40
is a huge loss to
51:42
us, to our families, to
51:44
our whole careers that we're
51:46
passionate about. Do you
51:48
think, do you really think we're
51:50
tin hat wearing weirdos? that
51:52
have nothing to lose. We have
51:54
a tonne to lose just
51:56
as you lost so much when
51:59
you gave up your very
52:01
lucrative practice in order to bring
52:03
the truth to light and
52:05
to actually research this. And we're
52:07
doing the same thing. Do
52:09
you think the 1300 medical staff
52:11
who have left their current
52:13
positions are all idiots? Or
52:15
do you think they're seeing things and
52:17
know things that you don't know? you know,
52:19
like this is the question I want
52:21
people to just think in their own minds
52:23
about, you know, because this is this
52:25
is really, really important. Dr.
52:27
Suzanne, anything else that you'd like
52:29
to add? I mean, I didn't
52:31
really go into the whole aluminium.
52:36
The adju... How do you say that
52:38
word? Adjutants? Adjuvants? Adjuvants,
52:40
I can never say that word. In
52:42
all of them or in many of
52:45
the vaccines and I
52:47
would like to also just touch
52:49
briefly if I can on the
52:51
mRNA technology, because this is a
52:53
new technology that is more, is
52:55
it altering our genetics?
52:58
That's a question that I have in
53:00
my hand. Is it actually getting into
53:02
our DOOM line? Is it changing us
53:04
permanently? Lisa, don't you
53:06
know Helen Petusas Harris says that is not
53:08
altering your genes and then it just
53:11
goes into your muscle and it stays there.
53:13
It stays there in your immune cells.
53:15
Just come and talk to it and then
53:17
go do good things for your body.
53:19
So I mean seriously, this is your talking
53:21
head in New Zealand who was basically
53:23
forced through her PhD program to do the
53:25
job that she's doing. So
53:27
you have to just look at this nonsense.
53:29
These people are spewing. I mean, I know a
53:31
little bit about New Zealand because I've been
53:33
there so many times. So I think we can
53:35
still push this back. I think the key
53:37
is going to be more people waking up, resisting,
53:39
not saying, I'm going to take the shot
53:41
because I have to pay my mortgage. Look, OK,
53:43
I can respect your choices. But what you're
53:45
doing when you're doing that is you're consigning future
53:47
generations to a lifetime of vaccination so that
53:49
you can keep your job now. Hey
53:52
everyone, just interrupting the show
53:54
really briefly to let you know
53:56
about some exciting news. We
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54:08
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grab some rejuvenate in my shop
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at shop .licetarmity .com and the
55:11
link will also be in the
55:14
show notes below. Now back
55:16
to the show. Also
55:21
want to say, don't underestimate
55:23
COVID. So I'm not saying COVID's
55:25
a picnic. Look, I have a
55:27
friend in the States who's a
55:29
doctor, his mother died from it, his
55:32
brother just died from it and
55:34
his uncle died from it. So there
55:36
are certain genetic types and, you
55:38
know, basically allergic types that are going
55:40
to react very poorly to spike
55:42
protein, whether it comes from a vaccine
55:44
or whether it comes from an
55:46
infection. I suggest that people go to
55:49
that South African doctor videos in
55:51
your country. It's voices for freedom that
55:53
did the video on Dr. Shankara
55:55
Chetty. Chetty, Dr. Chetty. the man right
55:57
now. Like Zelenko, fine. Zelenko had
55:59
death, okay? His protocol is different. Chetty
56:01
has treated 7 ,000 patients, no
56:04
death, okay? That's what you want to
56:06
look at death. Okay, because death is the
56:08
bad outcome Yes, and so he looks
56:10
at the allergic phenomenon that happens on day
56:12
eight And that really needs to be
56:14
targeted and and and looked at and people
56:16
need to be prepared And so I
56:18
suggest go listen to that video. Don't take
56:20
COVID lightly Look isolation quarantine is a
56:23
biblical thing. It's been around forever. It's one
56:25
of the most effective do Do not
56:27
go if you think you're sick stay the
56:29
heck home. Okay. I say this all
56:31
the time Tell people that are coming to
56:33
visit you that is sick make sure
56:35
that they know beforehand Stay keep your distance
56:37
from them and have other people bring
56:39
stuff to your house because I don't care
56:42
if it's the flu I don't want
56:44
the flu. I hate the flu. I don't
56:46
really want any of these things I
56:48
don't want any of it. So yes, you
56:50
have to take this infection which it
56:52
is they've probably a
56:54
bio weapon infection that is now
56:56
mutating. You know, fortunately, the
56:58
mutation seems to be making it
57:00
less virulent, but more contagious. Yeah,
57:03
which is the usual path. Yeah. And
57:05
so take it seriously. Don't
57:07
spread it around. Don't go, oh, I want to catch
57:09
COVID. Let me go over COVID. Probably stop that. And
57:12
what would you do, like from a,
57:14
you know, vitamins and nutrients
57:16
perspective, what would you be doing like
57:18
your protocol for? Well, I don't have
57:20
a protocol because I don't like protocols.
57:22
That's one of the reasons I left
57:24
conventional medicine, the fricking protocols, the Ben
57:26
diagrams, the flow charts. It's like people
57:28
are not, you can't put them into
57:30
protocols. You can't put them into flow
57:32
charts. They're all different. We all have
57:34
different allergic profiles. We're all different ages.
57:36
We have different underlying conditions. We have
57:38
different degrees of scurvy or vitamin C
57:41
deficiency. We have different zinc
57:43
deficiency. I say
57:45
find a doctor that will work
57:47
with you, or naturopath even,
57:49
or a chiropractor. We didn't
57:51
talk about chiropractors, but chiropractors literally saved
57:53
my life when I left Conventional Medicine. They
57:55
got behind me and they held me
57:57
up. Every time I fell down, they picked
57:59
me back up, they would invite me
58:01
to their conferences, and God bless them all.
58:04
Wonderful adjustments, and still one
58:06
of my primary practitioners is
58:08
a chiropractor. So don't underestimate
58:10
the power of chiropractic, naturopathic. You
58:13
know, I'm going to rattle off a list of
58:15
things that I think you should have in your home,
58:17
but I'm not going to give you a protocol.
58:19
I'm not going to tell you it's going to save
58:21
your life because if you don't know what you're
58:24
doing, you need to get somebody that does. So go
58:26
watch Dr. Chetty's video. Everybody
58:30
needs to have some zinc. I like
58:32
the drops. That's one milligram drop in their
58:34
house. Everybody needs to have
58:36
sodium ascorbate in their house, not
58:38
with a bunch of binders and fillers,
58:40
not calcium ascorbate, sodium ascorbate. If
58:46
you want to get a flavored one for
58:48
your kids fine, but make sure it has
58:50
ascorbic acid and sodium ascorbate It's low on
58:52
sugar because if you take a lot of
58:54
sugar at the same time you take vitamin
58:56
C The receptors compete with each other and
58:58
you just can end up with a high
59:00
show Yeah, so that's one of the things
59:02
I do like high nebulized hydrogen peroxide. So
59:05
you need to it has to be food
59:07
grade. It's very important
59:09
food grade. Yeah, I
59:11
remember Kola did a video on exactly
59:13
how to mix it and and you know
59:15
get it but if you put if
59:17
you dilute it in saline you have to
59:19
have a compressor nebulizer like a loud
59:21
tabletop one if you a handheld one you
59:23
can't dilute in sodium. Chloride and
59:25
salt water because it will rust. Okay,
59:28
a lot of people are finding that out
59:30
a little too late But you can
59:32
nebulize vitamin C. You can nebulize food grade
59:34
hydrogen peroxide and it will make a
59:36
difference I suggest having some antihistamines present because
59:38
on day eight if you have an
59:40
allergic reaction You could you could require that
59:42
but you're probably if you have a
59:44
severe allergic reaction going to require a doctor
59:46
that's going to prescribe prednisone and inhaled
59:48
corticosteroids and my maybe even something called Montelucast
59:50
which is lucotriene It was it for
59:53
mom's cancer. Yeah Now the ivermectin hydroxychloroquine is
59:55
very controversial in terms of I'm getting
59:57
trouble for it even mentioning it But yes,
59:59
it's definitely an ion for which means
1:00:01
that it brings the zinc in the cell
1:00:03
if you take zinc without that You're
1:00:05
probably not going to have much effect. So
1:00:07
you are going to need somebody and
1:00:09
now if you go to the hospital You're
1:00:11
going to get put in an isolation
1:00:13
room neglected fed garbage and then when you
1:00:15
can't breathe They'll put you on a
1:00:17
ventilator and kill you. That's pretty much the
1:00:20
path that's taken in hospitals. So That's
1:00:22
this. So, so now here's the thing. I've
1:00:25
had so many upper respiratory infections. I never
1:00:27
once considered it would kill me. Never. Now, if
1:00:29
I start with a sniffle, am I going
1:00:31
to go? Oh, it's here. It's here. If
1:00:34
you start getting scared and freaking out
1:00:36
when you get that first sniffle or that
1:00:38
sore throat, you're basically suppressing your immune
1:00:40
system. So you've got to find the fear.
1:00:43
It's already being terrorized. So everybody's already at
1:00:46
a low level of distress. Keep
1:00:48
your vitamin C levels high. Get a vitamin
1:00:50
D level checked in your blood. Yeah, fun
1:00:52
every several months. Keep it up, you know,
1:00:54
on the high range of whatever your country
1:00:56
does the country's measure in different units. Keep
1:00:58
it on the high range of there and
1:01:00
checking it every few months. That is probably
1:01:03
the number one. Yeah, I agree with that
1:01:05
one. Yeah. So, you know, that way when
1:01:07
it does hit, because eventually we're probably all
1:01:09
going to get meet up against COVID one
1:01:11
way or the other. You'll
1:01:13
your body at least being prepared like,
1:01:16
you know, Keep the party and
1:01:18
down to a minimum, you know smoking
1:01:20
and drinking are two things that are going
1:01:22
to suppress your immune system really badly
1:01:24
Working out if you're working out really hard.
1:01:26
That is a real stress on your
1:01:28
body I know I know it You're fine
1:01:30
probably but the weekend warriors that want
1:01:32
to go out, you know jogging and overdoing
1:01:35
it Yeah, you know don't do it.
1:01:37
Don't do it that way be thoughtful You
1:01:39
know you you have to tell them
1:01:41
about that how to do that
1:01:43
speed because that's a lot
1:01:46
of oxidative stress on the body
1:01:48
and it will borrow um
1:01:50
alkali from the bones and then
1:01:52
your bones can become you
1:01:54
know less less dense as a
1:01:56
result of that yeah so
1:01:58
yeah expert on that part i'm
1:02:01
trying to think of what
1:02:03
else i would have so vitamin
1:02:05
d, vitamin c magnesium Yeah,
1:02:08
look, everyone should have magnesium in the house. You
1:02:10
should have epsom salts in the house and you
1:02:12
should have, I like bentonite clay around as well
1:02:14
because there's some uses for that. But
1:02:16
magnesium in a good absorbable, like
1:02:18
Magsitrates are very highly absorbable, but
1:02:20
it causes diarrhea. So if you're
1:02:22
constipated, that's a good logical solution
1:02:24
for you. Okay. Magsitrate oxide
1:02:26
is the least bio available, but
1:02:29
it's the most easy one to
1:02:31
get in the store. Yeah, unfortunately.
1:02:33
And what about bisglycinate? Yeah,
1:02:35
so there's magnesium orate. That's good for
1:02:37
people who have heart problems, magnesium glycinate.
1:02:39
That's the one I take because it's
1:02:41
bioavailable and you can easily get it
1:02:43
from iHerb, Amazon. Yeah, yeah. And the
1:02:45
citrate is unfortunate when you get it.
1:02:48
You can mostly get it in a
1:02:50
powder and it just goes into chunks,
1:02:52
you know, and it's very hard to
1:02:54
get down. But bisglycinate.
1:02:57
But it's so different here and
1:02:59
there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And
1:03:01
the glycinate is a good one.
1:03:03
The bisglycinate and the threonate. Yep.
1:03:06
Yep. It's okay. I think pretty much
1:03:08
all of them except oxide. Oxide. Thank
1:03:11
you. Magnesium oxide. Yeah. It's not so,
1:03:13
not so bioavailable, which is the most
1:03:15
common. oxide won't
1:03:17
hurt you. Yep. The cheapest is magnesium
1:03:19
chloride. Magnesium chloride liquid. Rather unpleasant
1:03:21
tasting, but you can put it on
1:03:23
the skin and you can drink
1:03:25
it. Oh, wow. And epsom salts for
1:03:28
bathing? Yeah, you're bathing in them
1:03:30
and you know, so what I do
1:03:32
is I like to so look the acid
1:03:34
terrain of the body is really important
1:03:36
thing to look at so You know if
1:03:38
I were to check everyone out there's
1:03:40
pH unless you're in the in the hospital
1:03:42
I see you you're gonna have a
1:03:44
pH of 7 .4 in your blood So
1:03:46
you're always gonna maintain that pH, but it
1:03:48
doesn't mean your tissues are gonna have
1:03:50
that say so if you have a sore
1:03:52
knee and I go in there and
1:03:54
take some fluid out it's gonna be acid
1:03:56
so the lungs and the
1:03:58
kidneys and the bones and your proteins
1:04:00
in your blood are helping that
1:04:02
blood pH to stay there because it's
1:04:04
vital to stay at that, say at
1:04:06
7 .4 range. Now you can have
1:04:08
7 .39. Well, that's a huge
1:04:11
difference because it's a logarithmic measurement. So
1:04:13
7 .39 to 7 .4 is a huge
1:04:15
difference. And you will see it was
1:04:17
7 .39. So having
1:04:19
a more alkaline terrain comes
1:04:21
from having an alkaline
1:04:23
diet. Okay, so I mean about that.
1:04:26
Oh, no, my battery's running low. Give me a
1:04:28
sec. So the
1:04:30
other thing is
1:04:32
what you're drinking. The
1:04:34
average 70 kilogram person needs
1:04:36
to be drinking two liters
1:04:38
of high quality mineralized water
1:04:40
per day. But what
1:04:43
I like to do is I
1:04:45
have a soda stream machine which
1:04:47
by itself is toxic. It's carbonic
1:04:49
acid. Give
1:04:51
the fizzy water and then
1:04:53
you put some magnesium hydroxide
1:04:55
powder into that. There's a
1:04:57
chemical reaction that leads it
1:04:59
to be magnesium bicarbonate, which
1:05:01
is an alkaline, slightly fizzy
1:05:04
beverage. You put it in
1:05:06
the fridge. You add
1:05:08
a little bit of lemon peel
1:05:10
to it or lemon juice
1:05:12
and you're going to alkalize even
1:05:14
more. As a nephrologist, I've
1:05:16
been using lemon juice forever. because
1:05:22
while it's an acid, when it
1:05:24
is metabolized by the body, it
1:05:26
creates bicarbonate. But you can
1:05:28
also just put some baking soda. It's just a
1:05:30
little pinch of baking soda. Yeah, it's going
1:05:32
to say like Elka Seltzer. Is that a good
1:05:34
thing to put in? If it doesn't have
1:05:36
aluminium, I would just use food grade baking soda,
1:05:38
sodium bicarbonate, cheaper. Sodium bicarbonate.
1:05:40
And it's not giving the pharmaceutical industry
1:05:42
any money. Okay, and epsom salts I'm getting
1:05:44
back to the epsom salts because you
1:05:46
can put a little pinch of epsom salt
1:05:48
Which is magnesium sulfate so for those
1:05:50
of us that I require a lot of
1:05:52
sulfur in my diet And so I
1:05:54
just do a pinch of that and sometimes
1:05:57
I'll put a little bit of potassium
1:05:59
chloride in there Or potassium bicarbonate so that
1:06:01
if you're drinking alkaline beverages when you're
1:06:03
not eating Okay, we shouldn't ideally you shouldn't
1:06:05
be drinking at all when you're eating
1:06:07
but you know I do because I need
1:06:09
to kind of lubricate the the softness
1:06:11
But just a little bit of regular water.
1:06:13
You don't want to drink alkaline beverages
1:06:15
while you're eating because you won't be able
1:06:17
to digest. Yeah. So yeah,
1:06:19
because that's the other thing. You do
1:06:22
want like betaine or you want good
1:06:24
stomach acids. Yeah. So you don't want
1:06:26
to be doing that at the same
1:06:28
time. Yeah. So your digestion is
1:06:30
super important. So people on, you know,
1:06:32
antacids, you're basically impairing protein digestion upstream
1:06:34
by... impairing your stomach acid. Now if
1:06:36
you have an ulcer you have to
1:06:38
do that but you really need
1:06:40
to work. But having
1:06:43
by carbonate of soda in between your
1:06:45
meal times is that going to disrupt
1:06:47
your your ability to digest your food
1:06:49
because that's always a question that I've
1:06:51
had in my head. Clean
1:06:54
eating your stomach pH becomes normal. It's
1:06:56
only when you're eating that you secrete
1:06:58
all that acid So so it starts
1:07:00
in the salivary gland start here and
1:07:02
now it's just what it's like a
1:07:04
domino effect of one thing your food
1:07:06
basically gets ripped apart So you start
1:07:08
food the purpose of eating food isn't
1:07:10
for pleasure. It's actually to create more
1:07:12
of yourself So it gets I see
1:07:14
is getting ripped apart so you get
1:07:16
alkaline in the mouth and then you
1:07:18
get acid in the stomach and then
1:07:20
you get alkaline from the pancreas again
1:07:22
and it just keeps going back and
1:07:24
forth and you ideally want to have
1:07:26
an alkaline colon, you want to
1:07:28
have an acidic stomach and you want to have
1:07:30
a neutral pH in your bloodstream and your tissues.
1:07:33
That's a really big part of immunity because
1:07:35
if the pH is the way God designed
1:07:37
it all throughout your body microbes can't really
1:07:39
get a hold on you as easily doesn't
1:07:41
say they can't but it's not going to
1:07:43
be an easy battle for them and it'll
1:07:45
be a much easier battle for you if
1:07:47
you're not starting out with you know and
1:07:50
busy water and carbohydrates are
1:07:52
hugely inflammatory so I'm more
1:07:54
in favor of a paleo
1:07:56
diet like a healthy diet
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