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Silence and Dissuade Whistleblowers

A study on whistleblowers finds that they go through hell in the act of blowing the whistle. Almost all of them get fired, some attempt suicide, losing their homes and spouses and much more.

Facing this, would you blow the whistle?

Our whistleblowers tend to be smeared rather than held up on a pedestal for doing the right thing.

The fact is there are LOTS of whistleblowers when it comes to Big Pharma and their regulators.

This is the first in a five-part series on whistleblowers.

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Medical Monopoly Musings #55
Silence and Dissuade Whistleblowers

Donald Soeken conducted a study with 233 whistleblowers in government and the private sector. He found:

90% of the whistleblowers were fired or demoted
27% had lawsuits brought against them
26% sought psychiatric or physical care
17% lost their homes
15% got divorced
10% attempted suicide
8% were bankrupted

And yet only 16% said they wouldn’t do it again. But maybe it’s because these ones got through it…

A NY Times article covering this 1987 study stated, “Mr. Soeken said there are seven stages of life for the whistle blower: discovery of the abuse; reflection on what action to take; confrontation with superiors; retaliation; the long haul of legal or other action involved; termination of the case, and going on to a new life.”

Few make it to the last stage. In other words, whistleblowers go through hell. While we know of quite a few successful cases, how many are effectively stamped out by such actions?

If Big Pharma is as corrupt as I’ve been showing then why don’t we have more whistleblowers? THIS is a big part of why.

Understand that whistleblowers were a big reason that Big Tobacco ultimately lost the public battle.

Understand that the PR Firms and lawyers that worked for Big Tobacco learned from those lessons to better serve other industries.

And the fact is there are LOTS of pharma whistleblowers…you just don’t know about it because the media often doesn’t give them credit, especially these days.

Senator Chuck Grassley stated in 2005 that “According to the Department of Justice, there are currently under seal in the neighborhood of 100 whistleblower cases involving allegations against over 200 drug companies. During the past four years, the [justice] department recovered nearly two and a half billion dollars from whistleblower cases against drug companies. Unfortunately, it appears that some drug companies are placing greed ahead of drug safety.”

Peter Rost MD is the author of “The Whistleblower: Confessions of a Healthcare Hitman” about his whistleblower experiences at Pfizer, Pharmacia and Wyeth.

After blowing the whistle the companies hired private investigators to dig up dirt on Rost. He obtained these files which “implied that I might put a gun to my head so my family could get my life insurance”.

Rost worked hard to expose the dirty secrets of the industry, especially around drug costs and reimportation.

In his book he reports on an internal survey conducted at Pfizer. This included 49% of employees not agreeing with the statement, “Management is willing to give up short-term gain to do the right thing.”

30% didn’t agree with “Senior management demonstrates honest, ethical behavior.”

He writes, “If an individual is convicted of a crime, we call him a criminal; however if a company is convicted of a crime, what do we call it? We don’t call it a criminal corporation, but perhaps we should…[W]hen you look at the public record, these companies appear more like mob enterprises than law-abiding organizations. The only explanation I have is that money corrupts—again and again.”

Why is being a whistleblower so tough? “I was up against not just the largest pharmaceutical company in the world and the best lawyers money could buy, but also the best PR machine ever invented,” explains Rost.

It is not only that the media doesn’t cover whistleblowers often, it is that they are, more often than not, used to smear them.

How many do NOT blow the whistle because they’ve seen what happens?

Peter Rost was finally fired from Pfizer despite employee protections. In 2005, the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) named him “Whiny Whistleblower of the Year” an award for those that who “outrageously defied his or her employer, regardless of loyalty, science or even common sense.”

The ACSH’s tagline is “Promoting science and debunking junk since 1978.” They’ve been funded by Pfizer, Bristol-Meyers Squibb, Merck, Abbott, Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson, PhrMA and many others.

Whistleblowers may be the most devastating enemy of those in power. All the more reason to use every tool possible to keep them quiet. All the more reason for you and I, the people, to look at what they’re saying.

References:
https://www.nytimes.com/1987/02/22/us/survey-of-whistle-blowers-finds-retaliation-but-few-regrets.html
Rost, P. (2006). The whistleblower: Confessions of a healthcare hitman. Brooklyn, NY: Soft Skull Press.
https://www.acsh.org/news/2005/12/30/whiny-whistleblower-of-the-year-award

Two Fun Guys Talking about Fungi (and Alchemy)

  • The difference between Mycelium Extracts and Fruiting Body Extracts (and what the science says…)
  • Terpenes, polysaccharides and more including the importance of dual extracts…and even triple extracts of mushrooms
  • Why Alchemy was not really about turning lead to gold…and how this “Forgotten Science” works to make more powerful fungal and herbal extracts
  • The Alchemical Transformation of Calcination…and how this applied to my house burning down!
  • How external alchemy and internal alchemy reflect each other according to “As Above, So Below” and “As Within, So Without”
  • Understanding Astrology as a Language
  • And much more

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

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About Jason Scott:

Jason is the founder, owner and curator at Feral Fungi where he produces mushroom spagyric tinctures and Alchemycology where he explores the links between fungi and alchemy. He has a deep passion for the wonderfully weird world of fungi especially as they are applied to our health and health sovereignty. Jason has a passion for the natural world and healing the golden threads that weave between them. Jason has articles on the topic of Alchemycology published in Peter McCoy’s book Radical Mycology and Verdant Gnosis volume three, a companion book to the Viridis Genii conference which he has taught at on multiple occasions.

Links:

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Medical Journals and Pharma Advertising

Find out why the medical journals are basically bought and controlled by Big Pharma including:

  • Twice as much advertising directed at doctors compared to the public
  • Top editors of the journals themselves say the journals are bought
  • How a full-court press is used by “gold-toothed pharma goons”
  • The critical difference between advertising and editorial, yet how the former leads to the latter
  • Science showing how advertising sways prescribing by doctors
  • And much more

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

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This episode also includes details about a new journalistic project I’m working on, why its important, and how you can support it. More details here.

Click the link below to see written articles and references.

 
Read Full Transcript

As much as lay people are advertised to in the direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising recently covered, its only a fraction of the marketing that is done. Most of it is aimed at doctors. They are really the pawns in the game. Because of their authoritarian position, if you can influence them, you can influence the masses.

In 2016, DTC advertising was $9.6 billion. Meanwhile, $20.3 billion was aimed at healthcare professions! A large portion of that is the journals, the topic of today.

Richard Smith, former editor of BMJ wrote, “Many medical journals have a substantial income from pharmaceutical companies from the purchasing of advertising and reprints and the sponsoring of supplements. Is this funding corrupting journals?”

Furthermore, he shares, “One of my first experiences of the relation between medical journals and pharmaceutical companies occurred in the early 1980s after the BMJ had published papers suggesting that a new non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, benoxaprofen, might have serious side effects. We were visited by three stern men from Eli Lilly, the makers of the drug. Tony Smith, the deputy editor, conducted the meeting and asked me to join him. The men, whom I remember (probably wrongly) as having gold teeth, threatened us with legal action, at which point Tony said: ‘In that case we'll see you in court.’ They backtracked hastily and asked simply to be able to publish a prompt response.”

Full court press using every tactic available to them. Richard shares the following important points:

● The journals are typical free for doctors
● The journals livelihood depends on income from pharmaceutical advertising
● The advertising is often misleading
● Editorial coverage is more valuable than the ads. Often the advertising income influences editorial coverage
● Scientific studies can be manipulated in many ways to get desired outcomes
● In addition to advertising, medical journals get income from supplements and reprints paid for by drug companies (i.e. publish this and we’ll promise to buy 10,000 issues)

And the drug advertisements have been shown to effect prescribing by doctors. Like the TV ads, so to does this form of advertising work.

Smith writes, “In one sense, all journals are bought—or at least cleverly used—by the pharmaceutical industry. The industry dominates health care, and most doctors have been wined and dined by it. It's not surprising, therefore, that medical journals too should be heavily influenced by industry.”

And once again, the influence on the journals themselves may be the more important part of paying the bills.

In an article titled “Advertising in Medical Journals: Should Current Practices Change?” Fugh-Berman, et al. write, “Clinicians rely on medical journals for scholarly articles and the latest information on drugs and devices. Advertisements in these journals are unreliable sources of information, since they “educate” physicians to prescribe the newest, most expensive drugs (which may not be any superior to existing, less expensive alternatives). The scholarly nature of journals confers credibility on both articles and advertisements within their pages. By exclusively featuring advertisements for drugs and devices, medical journals implicitly endorse corporate promotion of the most profitable products. Advertisements and other financial arrangements with pharmaceutical companies compromise the objectivity of journals.”

The problem of journals is well-described. Many top editors of the top journals themselves such as Richard Smith, Marcia Angell (see #27), and others have stated as such.

Why are we still trusting anything in them?

References:
https://www.mdedge.com/hematology-oncology/article/192294/practice-management/spending-medical-marketing-increased-122
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1126057/
https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2020/02/after-free-lunch-drug-firms-doctors-increase-prescriptions
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1450016/

Why I’ve Left California

I’ve moved from California to Oregon. While several reasons are involved the primary one is medical freedom and health sovereignty.

This episode also includes details about a new journalistic project I’m working on, why its important, and how you can support it. More details here.

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I’m trying something new here that I’ve never done before. For the past year or so I’ve gotten into the citizen journalism game, specifically around exposing corruption, most notably in the health and medical space. (Since our media isn’t doing it, someone’s got to!) To spend time here takes away from time devoted to my businesses which I still need to do to pay the bills. With my recent positive experience in using GoFundMe after my house burned down, the idea occurred to me to try this method out.

If you’ve enjoyed my journalistic endeavors (Medical Monopoly Musings , Pandemic Updates , or my writing in general) than this is an opportunity to support me doing more of it. At this time I feel like it is the more important work to be done. But as I said while this new endeavor is passionate…it has not been profitable. I want to create the following special report. I will be giving it away for free when it is done. But this is a chance to support this work so I can spend less time in my businesses specifically and more so here.

How Big Tobacco Won - Important Lessons for Today in Corporate Power Over Law, Science, Media and Culture. “Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it.” We’ve all heard this phrase. But as it’s become somewhat cliché, few really aim to understand history especially what I would call its seedy underbelly.

Everyone I know is vaguely aware of what Big Tobacco did in peddling cigarettes. Vaguely being the key word. Ask yourself how did they get away with being hugely profitable for decades and decades when the science was actually quite clear about these risks? Although many think that Big Tobacco eventually lost I think it is more accurate to say that they won instead. The fact is all these companies are still around and hugely profitable. I’d say that is winning especially given the unethical behavior and crimes they committed.

I would also argue you MUST understand the details. Why? Not because you’ll get tricked by Big Tobacco in the future. But because these same strategies and tactics are used by industry after industry. Many industries are successfully using them today and most people are none the wiser. They haven’t learned THIS history. But some did. The PR firms that Big Tobacco worked with learned. The predatory CEO’s that put profits over people learned. Those that would control scientific opinion learned. Those that would buy politicians and regulators learned.

Although they manipulated public perception for decades before, we can say the conspiracy really began to turn darker in 1953 when the tobacco companies colluded seeking to control scientific opinion. It wasn’t until 2004, over 50 years later, that they were charge and found guilty of these crimes. 50 years…but some believe conspiracies don’t ever actually happen. (This was a Racketeer and Corrupt Organizations, aka RICO case which means conspiracy by a group.)

Not only must you understand what has become known as the “Tobacco Playbook,” but you need to find out how this was brought into the 21st century right as Big Tobacco was finally falling from grace. Still, you can NOT understand how it is being done today, if you don’t understand the genesis of these methods as pioneered by Big Tobacco. The truth is that tobacco is simpler than what has gone on in other industries for a variety of factors that I plan to explore.

Head on over to health sovereign.com/tobacco. And you'll be taken to the GoFundMe page where you can chip in whatever you feel is appropriate, whatever you can do, no pressure, but for those that can and want to, this is available for you once again, that's health sovereign.com/tobacco.

Thanks for listening to that donation add, I guess you could call it trying something new, as I said we'll see how it goes. So just so you know, this podcast actually costs money to run a is not really a profitable endeavor in and of itself, but you're listening to it. And if you want to support this moving forward, here is an opportunity to do so. Depending on how this goes, maybe more like this in the future, we shall see now on to today's main topic, which is why I left California. There are a couple of reasons, but first and foremost, it is a matter of medical freedom. And that's why I'm talking about it here on the podcast today. So what do I mean by medical freedom specifically as for my daughter? So my daughter, Elka, she's a little over two and a half years old right now in California.

They have passed a couple of laws and maybe mixing these two up, but there's SB two seven, seven, and SB two seven, six. I believe they are. The first one of those past a couple of years ago made it so that only medical exemptions were allowed for children not getting vaccinations, to be able to go to school, you can still homeschool, but you could not go to not only just public school, but private schools as well without having up to date vaccinations. According to the CDC schedule, then recently I believe this was passed last year was the one that modified that even further, that you could still get medical exemptions, but the medical exemptions had to be approved by a basically board of bureaucrats at the state level. And not just by your doctor themselves, the, I guess, marketing for this was that, Ooh, there's these bad doctors that are just writing anyone medical exemptions, really what, how this is hurting people.

As there are doctors that say like, Oh, your kid was vaccine injuries. Hey, vaccine injuries are a real thing. This is why the national vaccine injury act was passed back in 1986. You can't deny it. And I guess people kind of like Holocaust deniers. There are vaccine injury deniers out there and sorry, folks. It's, it's more than one in a million. I'll talk about some cases that anyway, so with this, this new law, they made it so that only like approved medical exemptions could go through your doctor no longer really had a say they could petition and whatnot, but these are cases. Some kids, they get a vaccine injury, not like super bad, but moderately bad to the point where like, Oh, it's clear. If you get more vaccines, you're going to further injure your child. But if this is not on the approved list of what counts for a medical exemption, then Hey, you're shit out of luck.

So this is what has taken place in California. It's somewhat similar in New York, a few other States like this. So one of the things to understand about this is that big pharma, because vaccines are the same companies as big pharma. Not a lot of people put those two together simply because it's not advantageous to the propaganda for that to occur. But big pharma has, although they certainly operated on the federal level, they moved more into the state level because they could do these different things. And while big pharma used to be more in the pocket of Republicans at some point, for whatever reason, that did seem to shift more to the democratic side. And it's interesting cause I have something of a libertarian bent. You know, I talk about self responsibility and sovereignty, and I do see that as tied into all other people because of our interdependency. But with that libertarian bent, it's, it's interesting, like libertarian the way I see it used to be more allied with the democratic side, but has certainly shifted at some point in a, not too many years past towards more of the Republican side where that conservative are real still fighting for medical freedom for people's rights and that sort of thing. Whereas the democratic is, Oh, it's all about the collective.

So with these laws, as I said, It took place in California. So our plan was to have our daughter go to school. The only other option once again, would be homeschooling. And we've certainly looked at that, that that's a possibility. So we've now moved up to Oregon, Oregon. They tried to pass the same sort of law here as far as getting rid of philosophical and religious exemptions. But in Oregon, this bill was defeated. Hopefully it will remain that way. I have no illusions that Oregon is a perfect state by any stretch of the mean, it also leans blue. So a is more in control of Democrats, which seemed to be pushing for this. I imagine they will try for it again. That's a thing that happens with these laws. When you have lobbyists and lawyers and all kinds of people you can pay such as big pharma does have, then you can try, Oh, it fails.

Okay. Let's try again. Let's wrap it in some other clothing. Let's use some other messaging and let's see what happens. So these kinds of laws and different variations of these laws they're are trying to pass them in state after state, after state, after state. And it's a move forward, two inches move back. One sort of deal. They're fine with this moving slowly because it is giving them more control with every single step along the way. Fortunately, some people are trying to introduce legislation that locks in more of the medical freedom that actually helps people in this way.

So I believe that hopefully Oregon is enough, but I make no illusions. It may not be completely. We were planning to do this. We kind of solidified our plans as far as moving out to California at the end of 2019 tried to sell the house to do so then we were just about to list the house back on the market. That's when covert hit and the pandemic, we decided to lay low for a little while, then we decided, okay, let's so go with it because with COVID and that obviously playing into this whole vaccine debate and agenda we weren't sure what was going to go on. Is there going to be a nationwide, mandatory vaccination law? It's possible. It's still possible. We'll see what happens. But what we'll likely see is, or what we are seeing thus far is different. Not even States like universities and nursing unions, that sort of thing are mandating this vaccine before the vaccines even available. And they're making more mandates of the flu vaccine. Not just COVID because they don't well, they're using that same line again. They don't want the hospitals to be overwhelmed with flu patients when there's also COVID patients. That's the reasoning there because the hospital got so overwhelmed previously. Right?

Right. So of course, tThere are some other reasons the really high Texas in California, you know, you get a raise moving anywhere else. And then the cost of living as well. It's super expensive to live in California. Of course, some areas more so than others. I lived in Santa Cruz in the Bay area. It certainly was expensive. So I get an automatic raise moving out of there. That's not so bad. I am certainly looking at money as power to be able to fight such things and using that money and power appropriately because well, it is largely a power game. My studying of all this stuff, it is about power. Big farmer has tons of power, average people, people that are worried about medical freedom. Do you not have so much power? If we can consolidate that, if we can actually use it, then we can fight such things, especially, you know, having the truth on our side.

It is facing a mass Exodus for some people it is the medical freedom issue for other people, just the cost of living. Of course, the wildfires being a big thing that certainly threw a kink in my plan losing my house seven days before we were sold. But were moved out of state. Nonetheless, one thing I want to bring up this just actually kind of recently got triggered for us, a former client of my wife. She, we hadn't heard this story before, but in talking about moving to Oregon that got brought up she had moved out of state to a different state based on vaccine injuries. Her daughter got injured at and a half years old. So right at elk, his age to the point she got vaccine where it caused, I believe it was a nine day fever. It caused a whole bunch of stuttering. She was speaking before and then could not put a sentence together. Of course, the doctors denied that this was related to the vaccine. You know, it was just one of those coincidences where a child loses all things and sure. There's other reasons, but this is what happens when we deny vaccine injuries. It makes us blind to actually seeing when they happen. But thankfully the mother saw it. She stopped vaccinating. She had another child after that did not vaccinate there. So it can't be in California for these reasons. I mean, you can homeschool, but that's not available option to most people, I guess, you know, with this whole COVID thing and everything that's going on with schooling there, that's certainly changing things up. Maybe more people will move into homeschooling.

When I was thinking about having children and certainly as I had my child, this has made me look out more into the world previously. I was content to keep my head down, kind of focus on myself, focus on my business, but you know, I want the best for my daughter and the best for my daughter cannot happen just by me focusing on her. Cause she has to live in the world at large. And you know, thinking even further ahead to her children and grandchildren, assuming she, him, we're all tied together. It's an interdependency. So even though I'm all about self responsibility, I recognize we're all tied together. And if we do not have the choice for medical freedom, so it's, it's in a, I guess if you want to call it subtle way. So there's only medical exemptions and it's only matters if you're going to school, but how much longer until you can't travel until you have your UpToDate vaccine record, both as a child and an adult. There's this myth that vaccines do not make a lot of money.

Well, okay. Their drugs may be much more profitable. Vaccines do absolutely make a lot of money. They can be very profitable. And if they're mandated, then that is just guaranteed future income. So as a business, it makes sense that vaccine manufacturers, the drug companies would seek to do such things. Of course, if you understand they're hurting people or killing people, then you understand that these, although it makes dollars and cents cents it is not a good thing to do. It's not moral. It's not ethical. This is what we're dealing with. So I'm looking out into the world, understanding more of the world in order to better be able to fight for myself and for my family and for future generations as well. The medical freedom is fundamental to me. You can't have health sovereignty. If a government can say like, you have to get this largely untested thing injected into your body.

And it simple as that comes down to that, the good news is there are people that are fighting this, the children's health defense that Rob that's, Robert F. Kennedy Junior's nonprofit organization. I had that big tobacco. One of the things that I learned from this was what allowed the regulation and revelation of really what big tobacco had done largely occurred in the courtroom. And that's something that I plan to be exploring as I further resource research that and write it out. The courtroom, the discovery that got involved, the whistleblowers that came out children's health. Defense is suing government agencies is suing big pharma companies, even though they're exempt from liability. There are possible ways around that in order to get the truth out there. They're winning, they're winning these battles, small battles here and there, but they are actually winning them. And we see the same thing with Monsanto and Roundup, right litigation.

They're losing these trials. Now Bayer is in a lot of trouble because they're having to pay out massive amounts of money, which is a good thing. And we see from those trials, some sneaky, sneaky stuff like running intelligence operation against activists and people that had an anti Monsanto message. So children's health defense is doing this. I can is another one, the informed consent action network. They'll big tree being behind that one. These are two organizations that I am currently supporting and plan to do even more so in the future. So for me, thankfully with how I've set up my life, I have the optionality one to homeschool if needed well, not even needed. It seems more and more of a smart choice to do so, but I'm able to do it and have the optionality of the optionality of just picking up and moving out of state.

And you know, who knows might need to be out of country at some point, stuff's going crazy. We'll only get crazier by wanting to share this message to explain why I'm doing it. Because first and foremost, although the, you know, the quote unquote pay raise is great. It is about a medical freedom issue. That is what's important. And I don't think any average person that may not be open to this or considering this before Emma's listening this far, but there's so much evidence. If you're willing to scratch below the surface, you can not trust the experts the experts have been bought and paid for in so many cases, case after case, we have the evidence. It is there, the science is not settled. Well, it may be settled, but in the opposite
When we're talking about health sovereignty, yes, it begins with self responsibility, but we need to understand it goes beyond that because the powers that be, do not want you to have that it's not in their self-interest for you to have that. So in order to maintain it with where we are right now in history, we do need to be better at collectivizing and fighting against it. This is what I have arrived at once again, I would rather just keep my head down and do my own thing and not be concerned with this, but I've been called to be concerned with this. It is in my self interest and my family's interest to do so. And I share this message in the hopes that perhaps you'll recognize the same. I do want to say this. A lot of people I've seen it. A lot of people resist the looking into vaccines because well, this information was not available years ago. I mean, there's trickles of it, but we didn't have it wide open, like the internet, which is why they're all censoring this now as well.

So I don't want this message to come across as blaming other people for vaccinating. We just need to get this message out there. I mean, I was vaccinated as a kid. I seem to be doing fine. I have this theory that maybe everyone is vaccine injured. It's just a matter of degree. It's hard to say we don't actually have the science to really look at that because there are subtle in longterm consequences as such. And it may be some people just can't detox the aluminum or other toxins in there, and don't actually have a problem with it. I don't know the true answer to that. I don't begrudge my parents for vaccinating me with what information they had. I mean, ideally yeah, probably not. Based on what I know now, it seems that vaccines are worse than they are better. Absolutely. They do seem to protect against some of these diseases.

And I think they do have some possible case uses. So you gotta look at risks and rewards, but the standard just fall along with it. The CDC says that does not teach you about the real risks and rewards this day and age. You gotta do research for yourself and for your family. So once again, just sharing this message to put this out there. I haven't talked about vaccines a whole lot, starting to get into it. And for large part, I did want to talk about this more after I had left California, because it is a sensitive issue. As I was reading something that put it like the population is weaponized against us. I know people seemingly reasonable people that hate anti-vaxxers that think they're stupid and they deserve to die. They deserve their children to die.

Propaganda works well when you don't have to enforce it, you get the population to enforce it themselves. Unfortunately, that's where we seem to be at at this point. But the good news is as children's health defense, as the informed consent action network has tons and tons of other people get to know this. And there is more conversation despite censorship, despite ridicule, despite harassment, despite all the weapons against this movement is growing. And to me, that that warms my heart. That's a good thing. And I hope we can continue the momentum before it is too late with if with this covert thing, there definitely is going to be increased demands. We see vaccines in the headlines just crazy right now. And it's very interesting to see this conversation about is this safe? Is this effective being in a more public ground with this vaccine and now politicized, you know, the Trump vaccine versus the Biden vaccine. It's kind of crazy how things are going here is at this point, I feel I'm just rambling. Hope you've enjoyed this message gained something from it. If you have questions, head on over to IU health, sovereign.com/fifty, this is our 50th episode. I'm going to keep going. We got a lot more to discuss a lot more on health sovereignty. Thanks for listening.

How Non-Profits Fuel the Monopoly Machine

Non-profit. A charity organization must be doing good in the world, right? After all, they’re not making money.

…if only that naïve statement were true.

Because many people believe it so, it is all the more possible to use these entities for other than benevolent aims such as lining pockets.

Andrew Dunn at BioPharma Dive did a couple of great articles in 2017 about “the opaque web of connections between pharmaceutical companies and nonprofit health systems at the highest levels of power.”

This is another layer of the interlocking directorate. While we looked at it with media and Google, here we see it involved with non-profits.

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

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Medical Monopoly Musings #53
How Non-Profits Fuel the Monopoly Machine

Non-profit. A charity organization must be doing good in the world, right? After all, they’re not making money.

…if only that naïve statement were true.

Because many people believe it so, it is all the more possible to use these entities for other than benevolent aims such as lining pockets.

Andrew Dunn at BioPharma Dive did a couple of great articles in 2017 about “the opaque web of connections between pharmaceutical companies and nonprofit health systems at the highest levels of power.”

This is another layer of the interlocking directorate. While we looked at it with media and Google, here we see it involved with non-profits.

BioPharma Dive found that 12 of 19 of the largest pharma companies had board members on non-profits involved in healthcare. As you’ll come to see this is mostly hospitals and universities. (Influence where people work and learn…)

Understand it was more common than not. And here's the added fun. The majority of these conflicts of interest (16 of 22) were NOT disclosed on websites, biographies, etc. They flew under the radar.

Meanwhile each of the people involved was making on average $475,000 in annual compensation for their board positions, while holding an average of $1.7 million in stock for the companies.

Do you think that these conflicts of interest ever sway policy that benefits the companies? Especially if it is not public knowledge? Again, you’d be naïve to say it never takes place.

Here’s a partial selection from the Dunn’s article linked below. Look at the Pharma companies you’ve heard of. Look at the non-profits involved.

AbbVie
Robert Alpern – Yale School of Medicine’s Dean

Eli Lilly
Marschall Runge – University of Michigan Medical School's Dean

Gilead Sciences
Kevin Lofton - CEO of Catholic Health Initiatives
Richard Whitley - Associate director for University of Alabama

GlaxoSmithKline
Laurie Glimcher - President and CEO of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Jesse Goodman - Director of Georgetown University's Center on Medical Product Access, Safety and Stewardship

Johnson & Johnson
Mary Beckerle - CEO of the Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah
Mark McClellan - Director of the Margolis Center for Health Policy at Duke University
A. Eugene Washington - President and CEO of the Duke University Health System

Merck
Thomas Cech - Director of University of Colorado, Boulder's BioFrontiers Institute
John Noseworthy - CEO of the Mayo Clinic

Novartis
Charles Sawyers - Chair of Memorial Sloan Kettering's Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program

Pfizer
Dennis Ausiello - Director for Massachusetts General Hospital's Center for Assessment Technology and Continuous Health

It’s not just about the influence of the person, but how that control can ripple out.

"These are leaders in medicine. These are people who can squash your career in no time," says Walid Gellad, the Director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing, University of Pittsburgh. "There are rules being put in place for physicians, but no one is paying attention to the folks making those rules."

Gellad published a paper in JAMA that showed 40% of the 50 largest pharmaceutical companies had at least one academic medical center leader on their board.

This subject has almost zero light shined on it yet is a crucial piece in the widespread control of the medical paradigm.

References:
https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/memorial-sloan-kettering-scandal-raises-questions-for-pharmas-biggest-corp/540750/
https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/who-are-the-22-pharma-board-members-who-also-lead-healthcare-nonprofits/543144/
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/1853147

Lessons From My Home Burning Down

On the night of August 19th my home burned completely to the ground in one of the California wildfires.

I surprised even myself in the positivity I demonstrated afterwards. I wrote two articles about this that turned out to be extremely popular, so I thought they were worth sharing in audio form on the podcast here.

This episode explores these ideas in more detail. It really is about psychological health, robustness and antifragility. This example shows what putting in practice the methods and insights covered in the Health Sovereign Podcast can do for you.

If you’d like to read the articles you can click these links:

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

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Is Google a Pharmaceutical Company Now?

Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has taken some big steps into the healthcare space.

They own several companies and are invested in dozens more.

That would not be a problem in and of itself.

BUT we see patterns of Google and Youtube controlling the information they want you to see…including health information.

Can you say conflicts of interest? I sure can!

It was actually seeing the increases in censorship that led me to talking out about the subject. (That’s called the Streisand effect, when censorship leads to greater publication.)

Most people didn’t see it happening earlier on as it was largely relegated to the fringes.

But censorship doesn’t just stop by itself. It creeps and it creeps ever forward.

We haven’t got to outright book burning yet but that doesn’t mean this isn’t censorship.

And today it is seldom outright banning, though that is happening. Far more so it is more subtle and therefore devious tactics of downranking, shadowbanning, demonetization and more.

The latest episode dives deeper into the subject and what it means for your health.

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

Subscribe Now!

Click the link below to see written articles and references.

Thyroid, Hormones and Longevity with Dawn Sylvester

  • Is this the #1 reason that women have more thyroid problems than men?
  • The major flaws of the diet and cardio approach to weight loss
  • Why your doctor may know nothing about your thyroid health despite testing it!
  • What it takes to have abundant daily energy with hormones, metabolism and more.
  • The endocrine disruptors (including thyroid hormone disruptors) in your environment and what to do about them.
  • Thyroid medications – when are the necessary, when are they not?
  • Is Iodine a good place to start with thyroid issues? The possible benefits…and the pitfalls to watch out for.
  • And more

About Dawn Sylvester

Dawn Sylvester is a vital and strong 50+ gal despite her diagnosis with low thyroid. As a gym owner, and women’s health and wellness coach in the biz for 20+ years…Dawn coaches women on how to live with vitality, strength, and to empower themselves with smart choices to help them feel, move, and look better at EVERY age!

Links for More from Dawn:

Social Media:

Click the button below to see the transcript.

Read Full Transcript

Logan (00:03):
Welcome Don. Great to have you here.

Dawn (00:05):
All right. Great to be here, Logan.

Logan (00:08):
So I want to start with your story a little bit. You can give the cliff notes version, but how you went from, I mean, fit person and everything, but the low thyroid, which is the plague of so many people now as we'll get into yeah. Share your story.

Dawn (00:24):
Oh, well, yeah, it could be a long one, but not, I will try to share the cliff notes. It's the biggest issue like you have already mentioned was that it took me so long to be diagnosed with a thyroid disorder. The craziest thing was my mother was diagnosed when she was 40. It took me about 10 years to get diagnosed because I think they almost practically profiled me. Where if you see me, I'm very petite. I'm pretty energetic. So, you know, five feet tall gaining 12 pounds in six weeks to mostly any other woman, wouldn't be that big of a deal. But when you're five feet tall, it doesn't have a lot of places to spread out. And then when I find myself pulling over in the morning after dropping my son off at school, because I almost want to fall asleep, well, someone tells me you work out too much or you need more rest or this or the end of lights.

Dawn (01:17):
No, no, I I've had a pretty decent lifestyle. And I had already been in the fitness and wellness industry for years. So going to a doctor then going to a wellness practitioner and integrative this, and it, it was a battle and you know, that famous wine, well, your thyroid numbers are on the fence. Kind of a thing. It just led me to dead ends and dead ends, which made me start digging deeper, finding out ways and becoming my own doctor, becoming my own self care advocate. And I'm a, I'm a very organized person. So I ended up putting folders together of what I learned. And I was looking at the biggest advocates of thyroid hormones and menopause. I didn't get diagnosed with Hashimoto's autoimmune thyroiditis and low thyroid until I was 42, because at the time I was trying to get pregnant. So I already had a child from when I was 36, but you know, segway forward, new husband, new life, new everything. And it was just very odd. So now I feel better than I probably felt or looked better than I probably looked when I was in my late twenties, because I probably was struggling then. And didn't realize it, you know, then I was like a crazy maniac. Did cardio every day and was eating diet foods. So the weight didn't really, I was, you know, I was pretty miserable as far as my lifestyle because I was doing what every other woman did. That was a big mistake.

Logan (02:43):
We're following the paradigm to a T what you're supposed to do. Right.

Dawn (02:47):
And it was probably in some form of adrenal fatigue too, that I wasn't really aware of. And so then all of a sudden, when it started to snowball and I, you know, my friends call me the Energizer bunny and I'm 60 now, but I feel like I go like a, lost a bunch of years trying to figure out what was going on with me. So I made it my mission to kind of, I'm going to put this out there that, you know, every time you go to the doctor and they say your numbers are fine, it's like, well, what about when you have 10 symptoms? And what about, how do you sleep at night? And you don't just gain 12 pounds when you're eating really clean it up. So there's so many questions.

Logan (03:21):
That's about the, the testing in the beginning was it that I've heard and still some doctors do. It's like, we're just going to test thyroid stimulating hormones.

Dawn (03:29):
Exactly. The famous TSH levels, which could be something from 0.8 to 4.2 or some astronomical. The gray area is so massive. And when someone tells you you're on the sense of low, I mean, that to me sounds like I'm really low. And then at the same time, I went through menopause a few years after that. And that same testing again. Well, you're on the low really, really low testosterone, but women don't really need that. I'm like really, I was a pretty heavy duty weightlifter. And now anything that I do, I feel like I can't keep the muscle. I'm too tired. My recovery takes too long. So again, where, you know, I'm explaining to the doctor something, and then you start going to someone who's a little more cutting edge and whole body scenario, instead of just numbers on a graph, you know,

Logan (04:20):
Don, you don't have a medical degree. What, how could you possibly know more switching online or anything than doctors?

Dawn (04:26):
That's for sure. My parents always tease me and say, well, thank God we can call you dr. Don. And we never had to pay a fee to go to medical school. And I said, because it had the word school after it, I said, I'm way better on my own. I, I can dive in and go a hundred percent and find really good sources, which I have great access to really good sources. Now I had a, someone that I saw in integrative health that I was paying $450 to four times a year when I finally left is when the last day that I was there. And she says, can you write down that information? I want to, like, I'm going to start passing this out to my other patients. I'm like, and I'm paying you $450. No, I think I'm going to start doing something on my own.

Dawn (05:06):
You know, that's when I really knew I had something that I could, I could help people. My information was available. Plus I had done here for 30 years. So if you don't think I know what women have issues with and complain about standing behind the chair, you learn what every woman wishes they had, which is more energy because people say, you wish you were thinner. You wish you were. I said, no women, or most people wish they had more energy. Then you have the energy to shop for healthy groceries. Then you have the energy to consider working out and you have the energy to take a walk for mental clarity. So when you don't have energy, which is obviously low thyroid and aging and all those things that were told you lose out on a lot of life, you know? So that's a huge part of it, the energy thing. So that's why my business is kind of the energy fitness, my Gmails energy wa I mean, it's like, everything's constant energy because I want it to be constant though. I don't want it dipping and dropping and no one knows why, you know, I feel like I can kind of gauge it a little bit.

Logan (06:07):
Yeah. Energy is so important. I think men too, it's, it's, it's a hard subject to talk about this because it is so kind of a loose word. Like what do you actually mean by energy? Like energy systems where you can talk to subtle energy. There's so many different ways. So for people to understand and often say the, the energy levels people have, it's slow decline over time, right? As you age, as the thyroid metabolism starts to go out the window, it's so slow. People don't notice it. That's why I like the herbs that my company lost empire herbs a bunch of 'em people. What I really am for is people that feel like a noticeable difference in their energy levels. And that's great for the reasons you were saying. It's like the jumpstart to the system when you have energy, Oh, then it becomes easier to do the things you should be doing, like eating better exercising

Dawn (06:58):
Of course, a 100%. And, and, and back to your, your herbs. I mean, the ashwagandha drops that to me, that's way better than a cup of coffee, because I know those ancient healing methodologies that have been around for centuries are there for a reason. And we just happen to be tapping into that now and learning about that, where you still have rows and rows at the stores of the energy drinks that I'm just like, there's no crash and burn when you've got these really good, you know, medicinal type herbs that are from a doctor and they're not, and it can with 500 things that sound like it was created in a lab. You know what I mean? We I've really tried to get my whole group of women that I coach and people in my world more aligned with that way of thinking, you know, that's a whole other thing too.

Dawn (07:46):
You have to change how you think, because for years, women were told, you know, less food, more exercise, more cardio, it makes you more productive. No, no. So women feel guilty when they're not the super woman that they're supposed to be. So everyone has these badges of I follow this diet, or I follow that. I consider myself a diet hacker. I follow a little bit of everything and as close to nature as possible and as whole foods as possible, but it doesn't have a title. And I won't name any of the top, top titles right now that everybody follows. Cause everyone knows them. You know, there's no Dawn diet. And then maybe I have a different need. What might you know, when I had a shoulder surgery a year ago, I thought I better take in more protein and I better not eat as many carbs because I'm sitting on my butt, recovering my laptops more. I don't, you know, not lifting weights. So like, that's how I think what's my activity level has to kind of dictate how I'm going to eat that day. Or, you know, you know, it's not a calorie counting or anything like that. It's just a, I energizing,

Logan (08:52):
I haven't looked at calories in a long time and I feel very good about that. Same. Oh my

Dawn (08:56):
Gosh. I know, I know I'm coaching a woman online out of state right now. And she just says having the hardest time wrapping her head around, what do you mean? We're not counting calories? I said, well, it wasn't, I'm counting is that you're getting about eight grams of fiber a day, which is about not even a third of what you should get. You know, I was just like that kind of stuff of not, let's not talk about what you're adding and subject. Let's talk about what nutrients you're missing. Right. That's what I tell people. I look for a missing link and I'm sure you do too. Like when I was telling you my story and what things were going on with me, it's like, you know, you gotta go that little bit deeper of, it's not just omitting a whole food group. It's like, you're also omitting nutrients and things that your body might do well with metabolism. Yeah. Right.

Logan (09:40):
Article I did awhile ago on thyroid to brush up on the topic. Cause I knew my model as I am still fleshing this out. If health is really about inputs and outputs, right. What's coming into the body and we look at the physical level, like micronutrients, macronutrients included in there. This is important stuff. If you don't have those, like no amount of positive thinking, no amount of exercise is going to make up for a mineral that is used or vitamin that is used for enzymatic reactions in the body for your hormones to actually function. Right.

Dawn (10:15):
Exactly. That's the thing. Yeah. And that's what I talk to women about constantly is that you can, you know, you don't have to be a doctor and you don't have to be on a medication to still be able to manipulate to some degree whether your body works against you with hormones or for in your favor, you know, so right. The input and the totally.

Logan (10:35):
Yeah, yeah. Thinking about this, like hormones are super important. I've deep dive into all of them, especially around the sex hormones, looking at that, it's a big part of what we do. And so many things that can support it and often like root cause is a interesting thing. And the more I think about this, like there is no real root cause it's always like going back, you can always chase it back further, but micronutrients, lack of them, like if there is a root cause that's

Dawn (11:02):
Oh yeah. Right. And that could be a simple one that can take someone to a really great level. And you know, it's funny. I just recently coached an extreme athlete and this woman has a PhD and she's done tri she's done. What is the ultra marathons? She's also done the iron man three times. And then her, you know, the verbiage is I eat clean.

Logan (11:27):
What does that mean?

Dawn (11:28):
Clean does not mean it has a label that says it's all natural on it. And then you turn around the back and it's got 50 things that you can't even pronounce. You know, I said to her, if you can't read it, you can't eat it.

Logan (11:39):
Yeah. Oh yeah. I eat clean. I eat healthy. Every person has a different meaning for these. Like it's a vague nebulous term and yeah. A person that believes one diet versus another completely different things. So that's what you mean by

Dawn (11:54):
That. Well, exactly. When you were speaking of, you know, the output type of thing. So I said, I already had to come up with, in my head, just speak to this woman thinking the first thing she said to me is I'm not going to hire you. If you're going to tell me to work out less. I said, I'm not going to tell you to work out less. Obviously it's in your blood. You're an extreme, active, it's what speaks to you. But how sooner or later I feel like some wheels going to fall off the bus, whether it's already happening internally with too much inflammation, I said your recovery and how your body recovers on a cellular level from the inside out so that you can keep doing this, you know, is what is the utmost importance to me? And I knew from myself when I, when I turned 50, I did a bodybuilding competition as, as a personal goal to myself, you know?

Dawn (12:43):
And I was squatting. I feel like I'm telling this story about someone else. I mean, I was squatting 180 pounds when I weighed 98 pounds. And I mean, now I could probably squat 115 on a good day, but I don't have to. And I don't need to, but my intake of calories was quadruple of what it is. Now. I try to explain that to any woman, you know, meeting with the coach and him telling me how you lift weights, are you kidding me? You need to triple your calories. You need to triple your protein. You need to triple your water intake. And I was like, dude, I'm trying to lose body fat. But I knew, I knew in my head and that's why I hired him. But it's that barrier to get through with people. This is how the body works, yours, mine. And everybody's even though there's nuances with each one of us, you know?

Logan (13:30):
Yeah. Calories can be important in like bodybuilding competition. There's one place where you do want to count calories and be very,

Dawn (13:36):
Especially when you're deficient and trying to get stronger, if you're trying to be healthy, right. Not at all. No. That's why I'm saying in different times in my life, my body has had different needs. And that's why I went to a coach that knows more about it than me. You know, you train, you train weightlifting athletes. I will listen to you. If you train someone that's, you know for some other right key or whatever, I'm going to listen to you, you know, go to the experts. Right.

Logan (14:07):
I wonder if you had asked your client, like if you could get the same, like performance results compete at the same level or better in your competition while working out less like spending less time, would that be of interest?

Dawn (14:21):
Well, you know what, we did have those kinds of conversations and it was more of, I think what, and this goes back to women and how we view ourselves and what we've been told too. I mean, she was a very, a plus plus personality. And when she sent me and I had met this person years ago, in-person so now with COVID I couldn't get, see her in person. Well, I could know, but anyways, that's beside the point. So she sends me pictures of herself and telling me she wants to get rid of her belly. And my first thought is women would kill you to hear you say that sentence. And they would die for that body, that skin so that you can bend, you know, I mean, but her idea and what she did, what her output was though for how strong she was, she really did not appear to be very muscular.

Dawn (15:08):
And I knew then when I dug into her diet and looking at her nutrients, macros and all that, not counting a single calorie, she was extremely deficient in protein, which to me meant, okay, you know, there's an argument of how much protein, too much protein plant protein and all that jazz. But she was clearly way below what I would have recommended for how much she put out in strengths. You know, most of her activities were more cardio based. So she was also very low fat. I mean, she was a little sad. She was low carbs. She was low everything, but her brain is what kept her body going, which was even a little scarier to me saying, I'll never tell you to stop working out. However, something in your body might make you stop working out because of not having the nutrient density that you need to do. It is fascinating. Yeah. Right, right.

Logan (15:56):
So going back to thyroid. Yeah. This is one of the biggest, largely undiagnosed problems. Almost every, especially women, women have it like five to eight times,

Dawn (16:08):
Five to eight times more boy, that is the truth. And I think I've witnessed it besides my own self. I've witnessed it with so many women, those classic symptoms too. It's like the thinning eyebrows, the hair loss, the fatigue out of nowhere. And then it's a different fatigue. It's not like you can lay down or have a cup of coffee and be refreshed. It's like the deep down, you know, the cold hands, the achiness of your body, that it just can't take another step. So all the brain power in the world sometimes doesn't make your physical body stand up and do that. Unless you end up with that, that reverse thing of forcing yourself because you have that kind of personality and then it hits you harder after. And then, you know, I didn't get sick. I didn't get cold, but if I was run down who baby I was, I was down.

Dawn (16:59):
So, I mean, I do take a compounded thyroid medication and it's very low and I get it monitored regularly. And I love my doctor. She's a Dio and we work together and she says, she loves it when I come in, she always books off extra time because we just talk about people, how they live their lives and what they're look for in their medical care, instead of being a huge self care, taking care of themselves and knowing that they have some degree of control, you know, actually that whole thing of just because your mom got diagnosed with heart disease or your dad died of liver failure does not mean you're good. Are you predisposed? Is it nature or nurture? Did you learn the behavior of the terrible foods in the sedentary lifestyle? And then you have a heart attack or is it, you know, I mean, there's just so many things to look at smarter, smarter than the gene pool. I hope as we learn more epigenetics,

Logan (17:50):
Like so much in nature is nurture. That is like encoded into

Dawn (17:54):
Yeah. Oh my gosh. Yeah. Then you can go so many layers deeper because I think too, that when you talk about thyroid and women going through menopause, that's the other thing, the hormone thing, women talking about menopause being seven years long. And I'm like, well, you're just like, people like to name something. I said, we take the word menopause out and steroid out and say, you're deprived of sleep. Your house is filled with air freshener and Downy fabric softener and all these chemical things. You're I mean, just, you know, you could go for a super dig in all the things that I think are so toxic to us,

Logan (18:31):
We're into that. Cause the missing micronutrients, the other side of it, and this has to do with the outputs, like detox or eliminating from getting them in the first place, the various chemicals the halogens also plastics, the various thyroid disrupting chemicals.

Dawn (18:52):
Yeah. That was the endocrine disruptors.

Logan (18:55):
What are some of the biggest ones? Like pretty much any client comes to you as like, okay, get rid of this. You're just going to be better.

Dawn (19:03):
Right. Exactly. So the first thing I say is all the chemical products that I love it. When you tell someone down to your skin care onto what you wash your clothes with. And there was

Logan (19:13):
Why women have five to eight times, so you think skincare and like,

Dawn (19:16):
I think it all plays a part. I think,

Logan (19:19):
Got guys do not do this stuff like barely even self up, right?

Dawn (19:24):
No, exactly. No guys walk around with their, you know, beer belly and their Speedo on and think they're hot as anything. And women stand in front of the mirror and put on 15 more layers of cellulite cream, more layers of spray Tanner. They put more perfume on and now you've just created the biggest tax hormonal dump. And speaking of that, then they're constipated because they don't get enough fiber and they got all these other things that just make their bodies not work. Right. So I just think to me, I think, and this could be my own thing from what I've experienced and what I've asked in my little questionnaires of, like I said, standing behind the chair and having done this for 25 plus years and coached women only is I think the women that have the, the women that I've known that had the biggest issues with weight and energy levels, they definitely have a hundred scented candles. The best air freshener is the hand, the flavored hands not flavored, but you know, sent it hand sanitizers and the things hanging from their car that makes everything smell to me. Horrible hurts my brain when I smell that stuff. I just think that

Logan (20:34):
It's a warning signal, right?

Dawn (20:35):
It is. I think my brain is telling me for a reason, getaway breathe, fresh air, and you go to take your dog for a walk and all you smell is someone's dry your sheets coming out of the house, you know? But all those things, I don't think if living in a small house with closed windows all winter, I don't think breathing in. So why would that not be any more detrimental to your health than smoking a cigarette? It's going in your lungs? It's going on your skin. It's creating some tax end result. You know, I think it all goes together from skin care to washing your clothes with something like that, to what we eat, what we put on. And then, you know, you go, I'm more into now even looking at the soil, you know, our soil quality. I don't spray my yard.

Logan (21:22):
Yeah.

Dawn (21:23):
I can pick my weeds out of my yard. I know my neighbors get their yard sprayed. Of course people tell me it's a waste of time. It's the sprays. Get a drift into your yard. I'm like, okay, but I'm not walking across. It's probably going to be less. I mean, I don't live in a bubble and I'm not like so snappy to that stuff.

Logan (21:40):
That's a thing. So even if you only organic, you don't use anything that like, we're still getting it. Cause it's in the very air that we breathe, like BPA from plastics can aerosolize and then it's acting as a Zino estrogen in the body having these effects. So we can't eliminate it, but we can do a whole lot to minimize.

Dawn (22:00):
And I'm telling you what, like, like when I was younger and when the snowball effect started to happen with the all of a sudden weight gain and then this hair loss, and then my eyebrows and my mom had gone through this horrific time where I literally thought my mom was going to die. She got so lethargic and her hair and her skin, she was laying on a couch and this was, let's see, I was probably 35. And cause it was right before I had my son and I remember thinking, Oh my God, if my mom's going to die this young, I better get to work and have a kid. So she didn't have a grandchild and your brain gets up. And then when I used to go to the doctor with her and the doctor was like, well, here's your Synthroid. There's not really anything else you can do about this.

Dawn (22:41):
It's gotta be something else. And I wasn't in invested like I am now in that kind of a health world. But you know, that was 20, some 30, some years ago, but boy, I wish I could go back in time with what I know because my mom would never have gone through. And she went to, you know, she called him a witch doctor at the time he went to this guy that she came home with all these little tinctures and all these you'll laugh at this, this, this doctor, his name was dr. Nugent. I said, just think of Ted Nugent. Yeah. I said, he's the guy lived on the land. He's got to have something in there that he knows about it. You know,

Logan (23:19):
That brings up some interesting points. I want to talk about medication. So yeah, the doctor, the standard frame is if you're low on thyroid, then we fix it by giving you thyroid medication. Right. There's ones that are actually like using the pig glands or different things versus the synthetic ones. Can you talk about that? And also I've, I've heard many times, once a person is on thyroid medication, that's really hard to get off. Can you speak to that?

Dawn (23:48):
Definitely. And there's still a lot of controversy. I think I, I think that even right now, between the combination of the medical field, the holistic, the integrative, all those together, so have very conflicting views on it. I, I personally believe that as long as your symptoms are lowered, like the way I am right now and the way the women that I've spoken to that either went from zero medication. I'd never want to take a medication, but had heart issues and things like that. You know, Hey, conventional medicine is there for a reason if you are taking per in it and trying to understand it, not just because your doctor says, take these seven medications. So I have lowered my medication because I think I've up things in my life that I am taking control over that I didn't think was in my control before I take a compounded T3 and T four, that's the other controversial thing, you know?

Dawn (24:47):
So you're taking a thyroid medication, but as your thyroid still producing the right hormone, is it converting to the hormone it's supposed to be? That gets so deep and crazy that, you know, so I did create a product that actually I call it the blueprint to fibroid health, because it walks you through whether you've been diagnosed or not what questions to ask your doctor. You know, it seems so daunting to go to an endocrinologist and they say, Hey, your, this here's your medication by, so you take your medication and three months later you still feel the same or worse and you're still putting on weight. So what do you go back and get more medication? No, it's like you start to look at what are the other factors and what are the other numbers? So there's a lot of T three to four. Then you get the, like we talked about the hormones, the testosterone, the estrogen, all those hormones combined into either that hormonal shitstorm or one that is, you know, got you feeling good. And got you looking at what choices you can make, just like any medical condition, you know, a diabetic, isn't just going to say, okay, I'm taking my insulin now. So I'm good. Right? It doesn't usually, and you can see the healthy people with diabetes and you can see the people that, you know, leave it all into their doctor's hands because they don't, they don't either haven't been educated enough or open minded enough or around the people that can help them know that they have options. There's options. There's so many options.

Logan (26:12):
Right? Well, that speaks to is one of the things when I was viewing my notes was cellular hypothyroidism. I don't know if you've heard that term or thyroid resistance. So similar, you brought up the diabetics and insulin. So this is insulin resistance. The body may be producing enough insulin, but it's not going into the cells. Right. And the way I think of that, the, the cellular membrane is like communication portal for the cell and that's made up of fat. So if we have low quality fats, like trans fats for instance, are not going to be able to talk to each other

Dawn (26:50):
Or break through the barriers. Like, I feel like if like you explain it to a layman, I said, imagine putting a film over all of yourselves, that's these toxic membrane that you can't break through it to send them messages to the rest of the body, to do what it's supposed to do. When you start stripping away, all that, all those, you know, invaders and your body, you know, it goes back to people always ask me what detox do you follow? And I say, well, I try to eat well, enough, move enough. I do some dry brushing. I drink a lot of lemon water with ginger so that my body is in a constant state of detoxifying. Naturally. I don't have to do a three day fat Slusher, you know, guzzle down something that makes me run to the bathroom or something for two days. And then I think I'm skinny or whatever.

Logan (27:37):
Yeah. So with, with the, the cell. So thinking of that, like hormones are chemical messengers. I think that's one of the best ways to think of them. Whether we're talking about testosterone, estrogen, thyroid, it is communicating a message to the cell for it to do something so understanding that we can look at different things. So yeah, there can be deficiency of T3 or T four. And I think it's useful for people know that the three and the four are iodine atoms, and that's one of those critical nutrients. I want to touch back on that. But so you can have sufficient quantities of there and still be having these problems just because the cell, your membranes aren't working. Right. And I think that speaks to one of our problems with testing as a whole. Yes. It can be definitely worth it to go into all the different numbers with thyroid or other issues you're having. But I don't think there's a test that can look at is your cellular membrane communicating well at all. Right. And that can be, that can actually be more of the root issue than the hormones themselves. Right.

Dawn (28:36):
Right. And I think that people don't even know what to ask. And I think that, you know, just like, you know, the girl, doctor, Google, you don't really know where to search. So it is very overwhelming. And I have so many people that contact me and say, there's no way that you have a thyroid issue. How can you act like that and do what you do and look like that. And I'm like, it took years of me figuring it out. So you don't have to do the legwork anymore. Let me, let me just please give you what I know. And even if you start applying some of it too, you know, it's not that hard work because when you start to realize your body is meant to feel better and it's a more natural state for it, if you start getting rid of those things and it doesn't happen fast.

Logan (29:22):
Yeah. Yeah. I think that's my philosophy is we should be energized, feel good, be healthy, pretty much all throughout life. We're all going to die at the end. Please do recognize that. And there's like a short, sharp decline at the end. That's like ideal to go. That's our best night. So if that is not happening, then something's wrong. And doctors are great in certain circumstances. Like you're, I'm being ripped off outside of that less so. And you just think your general doctor, right. They've heard about thyroid in school probably have not studied on it since then. So they, they're going by testing protocol. That is, there's the, what did they call it? The translational lag. Right. So 20 years of science ago, they're operating off that paradigm. Cause that's when they, they learned it. As opposed to going to a specialist, that's going to be much more up on the subject, be able to run the proper tests, be able to diagnose and give better recommendations

Dawn (30:18):
And hopefully listen to more of what you're experiencing. Because even though there's those five or six things across the board, that seemed to be the norm when you have, whether it be menopause or thyroid issues, there are still things that, you know, you'll have someone say, but I have this and I never read that. That was one of the symptoms. Okay. So we are all very unique, even though we have a lot of sameness, there's a lot of things that my body might present, something totally differently. And then you can go back to the nature nurture. Well, I was raised in a very activity based household and go get her mentally and physically. So that's probably a part of my chemical and nurtured makeup, you know? So that will make me not want to lay on a couch because I didn't think I was allowed to. Yeah.

Logan (31:07):
So with iodine being part of these thyroid molecules, in your experience, working with people how many people are deficient on this? I, I always recommend like simple tick iodine. See if it helps if I'm talking to someone with thyroid.

Dawn (31:22):
So now what, so here's the thing that so I was also diagnosed with Hashimoto's autoimmune thyroiditis. I was actually diagnosed with that before I was diagnosed with low thyroid. So I think that what I've learned throughout the years too, is I was I was supplementing with iodine because I had read that it was if you had the symptoms of low thyroid and this was in the very beginning stages of my really digging into all this I think that actually made it worse for a while because well, first of all, people have to know, you're not just putting more salt on your food. And then, you know, there was everything from kelp supplements to iodine infused this and that. So I was toying around with that suffering from massive hair loss getting super, super tired. So I just started, instead of adding more supplements in my life, I started taking less to see, okay, can I just work this with whole foods?

Dawn (32:16):
So I think in answer to your question though, Logan, I believe that for low thyroid iodine is essential. I don't think that many people in the United States are deficient with it because of iodized salt. But if you go to the healthier I'm making the quotation marks right now, most people don't even use the iodized salt anymore. They use Himalayan sea salt and they use all healthy salts that don't have any iodine. So you could go a little bit backwards and say, well, we might've been getting too much before now. People are going low salt and different salt seasonings. So you're not getting any iodine. You know, I think it's in the places that have the most shellfish and in Japan and places like that. No one's deficient tonight.

Logan (32:59):
Right. And so,

Dawn (33:01):
Yeah, so it's a little bit about, I know it's kind of a, not a solid answer, but I think if you're what I've read and what I've learned, and I think

Logan (33:07):
Biology, there's never a solid answer,

Dawn (33:09):
No solid answer, but I think low thyroid, you should probably get your iron levels checked, but Hashimoto's from what I've learned and what I experienced with a couple other people, as well as don't supplement on your own with iodine, you know, I made sure there are some stellar supplements out there and I have a cupboard full of tinctures and drops and you know, things just so that I can stay energized and focused. And I know that no matter how healthy I E I can't get every single nutrient I need. So supplements are a really cool tool. And I don't mean a one a day. People always ask me, do you take one a day? I go, no, I take about 20 a day, but one of them is drops. One of them is a powder in my smoothie. One of them is this

Logan (33:55):
As a rule of thumb, if it's a multivitamin in a single capsule a day, then it's crap, honestly,

Dawn (34:02):
Flushing it down the toilet. Exactly. Yeah.

Logan (34:04):
So a good rule of thumb.

Dawn (34:07):
Well, that's a good one for people to understand, but that's a harder rule of thumb because you can't just buy one magic pill,

Logan (34:12):
Right? Yeah. Need at least six of them.

Dawn (34:15):
Right. Right, right.

Logan (34:17):
And speaking of the, the toxic toxins along with it. So with iodine, we have the halogen, so RO mean flooring and flooring, right. Which come from various things and water supply and a lot of big goods and whatnot. And my understanding is iodine. If you are deficient in iodine, like these other molecules will take the place within the body, including the thyroid gland. So one of the parts of this is that it's not just lack of the nutrient, but also how it can play with these other toxins.

Dawn (34:50):
Right? Yeah. Well, I mean, that's such a huge part of it too. And I think you get to that what the body's doing, doing cellularly turns into people feel like they don't have any control. So I think that for a lay person, it's, if you start having symptoms and you aren't sure, and you are working with someone that you feel like is an integrative health specialist, not just an endocrinologist. You know, I did go to one of those for awhile. And then I went to the complete opposite. So I could combine the two furthest away from an endocrinologist right now I will have, I will tell you that. And that's where I started feeling way better. It isn't just the medication. So back to that, how things communicate on the cellular level? I think that we're so unaware of what's in our foods, in our water, and then you go back to those.

Dawn (35:39):
So I'm drinking, filtered water all day. Well, doesn't that strip out the minerals too. So it's almost like, you know, I try to drink some mineral water along with my purified water. And I know it sounds overwhelming for people, but when it gets to be, it's just your lifestyle, it doesn't turn into, it's not stressful. It's just how it gets to be. And you'd feel like I feel great when I'm drinking purified water. And I feel great when I add in a glass of, you know, mineral water, you know, I mean, some of those things that different nutrients that I think leach out of our body that we don't, we're not, we're so unaware of the, I mean, you're, you're digging deep there. You personally are, you know what I mean?

Logan (36:20):
This goes back a little bit to what we're talking skincare. So people have a hard time changing diet. We have so much emotional baggage when I'm helping someone with their health. I tend to stay away from diet. Obviously it's super important and I want to get there, but I feel like there's easier wins in other places. Do you feel like, do women oftentimes like, no, I can't get rid of my skincare. I'll look hideous there. That tend to be one of the things that like the easiest places to go. Just try that.

Dawn (36:53):
That's funny. That's funny. No skincare is probably at the bottom of the list because of exactly what you said. So when I talk about toxic load of environmental things, when I, I start out with the centered product, then I go from the centered products to what you're cooking your food in. Are you microwaving your food in a plastic container covered with saran wrap? I mean, Oh God, that makes me scared to even be in the kitchen or the microwave anymore. So stuff like that. And people think I'm crazy. And I'm like, well, you're asking for my help. You're wondering why you're miserable. You're, you're overweight. You're with your skin is lax. You, you know, so these are all the little things that you might not think matter, but when you start breaking these down and really look at these with a intelligent thinking mind, do you need scented candles?

Dawn (37:45):
Do you need scented laundry? Can you stick something on a pan and turn the gas on and heat it up in one minute longer than if you stuck it in the microwave microwave for 15 seconds? Is it a little teeny, more labor intensive? You know, maybe but at the end of the day, if you're miserable, I, you know, so back to the skincare thing. So even starting with you know, there's some great product lines that I even have a list that I recommend to people. And, and I will also say, Hey, I go to a dermatologist and I get, you know, facial lasering done every once in a while. It wasn't that bad for you. I say, well, you know, lasering at a surface level of doing something like that versus putting something that's going into your cores into your bloodstream every day

Logan (38:33):
Over a chemical glove. People

Dawn (38:36):
Literally argue, well, I put it on my skin. It doesn't go in. I said, do you know what an estrogen patches do? You know what the non smoking patch is? You know, what a pain patch is lighter came back, all these patches that you stick it to your skin because it goes directly into your bloodstream, you know? Oh, is that the same? I'm like, your skin is the biggest, most open Oregon with all those pores waiting to pull in everything terrible. So even just eliminating little bits and pieces here and there, even that like the lipstick thing, like I'm not a lipstick person, but I think of women that put on their lipstick and then lick it, put on there. You're like, why don't you just take a bite out of that lipstick, they would die in fish scales or something heinous. Like, I'm all about makeup. You know? I'm like, I'm not going to, you know, I like to be glammed up a little, but I don't know certain things kind of, as I've gotten older,

Logan (39:28):
There's natural vert and more natural and like completely natural version of the outfit. Yeah. You got to start with where you're at and make small steps. Some, some cases it's really easy. Some cases it is definitely harder to do

Dawn (39:42):
Prioritize. And then each person by themselves, you have to look at that person as a whole. Is this a person that wants to go in a hundred percent hard? Like tell me what I'm not allowed to eat. Tell me what I'm allowed to eat. I can do that. I mean, but is it sustainable? And is it enjoyable? She that's my thing. I don't do anything just for this. I mean, like I have said the line, if someone sends me, like, for instance, the ashwaganda drops, does it taste fantastic? No. Nope, no. Do I swish it around my mouth for 10 minutes now? I either drop her it down and smile because I'm doing something healthy for myself. Or I put it in a little shot of my ginger water. So when people say, Oh, what does it taste like? Or, Oh, with the phaser, I'm like, okay. You just told me that you're miserable on 10 reasons. So I'm giving you a real simple one and done remedy one time a day.

Logan (40:36):
Yeah, I think it's, it speaks to that. The phrase that came to mind is convenience is killing us, like convenient right now. And it's only in more recent years and still not general like public knowledge, how bad, so much of the stuff we do is for us, because it doesn't like acutely make you toxic or anything. It's this slow chronic buildup over time.

Dawn (41:00):
That is, you know, it's funny. I even thought of something recently. You'll probably find that you probably know way more about this than me, but how back to the soil thing and how there used to be people that literally I'm sure there are, you know, like certain soils are beneficial that we need in our bodies. Like, like literally like eating dirt. I mean, you know, there are there, I know there's people that there are people that eat dirt. Not because they're crazy because of the nutrient value and

Logan (41:29):
Microorganisms being the biggest thing.

Dawn (41:31):
They grow their mushrooms in a kind of soil. And it's like, that's part of the whole deal. So if you go real deep and talk about what the vegetable is that you're eating that the roots from the soil, from the nutrients that's what is in your body and makes your body function or, or not function. And someone asked me before recently, how did you get into all this? I said, well, it started out that I was so fascinated by how the body worked. And then I thought one day I thought when the body doesn't work, then it becomes a hundred times more fascinating. And then I really want to dig in.

Logan (42:05):
Yeah. Yeah. Most people get into health. If the vast majority, probably 99% of the people win either themselves or someone, they love start seeing massive problems. And typically what we're seeing today is when, what the doctor recommends does not work for them, then they start seeking the solutions and we live in the information age. So

Dawn (42:24):
I know, and I think you probably feel like I do about this subject, but this whole COVID thing was everybody running a thousand miles an hour to all of a sudden start boosting their immune system. I mean, I hate to say not recommending that because for 25 years, I've been telling people and trying to help people and coach people through your immune system is something that you should be conscious of every day. So that if you do get sick, you already know you've got some powerful guys in there that are fighting for you instead of all of a sudden, Oh my God, what if a germ touches my finger? I need to take some vitamin C or something. It's like, yeah. I mean, just,

Logan (43:05):
You'll be surprised to know that there's germs and viruses everywhere.

Dawn (43:09):
I know the antibiotics,

Logan (43:11):
We have viruses in us that are a part of us. It's.

Dawn (43:14):
And how about the whole antibiotic thing? We could spend another three hours talking about that you just you're killing every good thing in your body. Cause your nose was running and you went to the walkin clinic and bend it and got mad when they wouldn't give you the Z pack or whatever. I'm like.

Logan (43:29):
Yeah. Yeah. It's great.

Dawn (43:31):
We're so out of balance, but I just feel like I love talking about this and I love connecting with people that you, I mean, you're, you're you're smarter than me. You're you're, you've got the, you've got the, I've got the lay person's experience and I've spent probably 25 years doing a lot of really good research and really good places. And I have some really intelligent advocates on my side that have really helped me through a lot of things, but I love speaking to someone that's got the whole chemical and the whole cellular stuff. I get it. I get that.

Logan (44:03):
Yeah. Well, thank you for that. I did want to loop back to testosterone because as you know, it's super important for women just as important as for men, although men have like 10 times as much that, that I think it's really speaks to this as there's like three to five times as much testosterone coursing through your body than there is estrogen estrogen. Like there's more quantity of it. And it's super my understanding. I'm still pretty novel and researching this, but it's not thought of for women, but what we actually see as testosterone tends to go down before progesterone and estrogen do which is the big thing around menopause. And I don't know, it's part of the reason women have more thyroid problem may be related to the lesser amounts of testosterone as well. Have you heard anything about that?

Dawn (44:55):
I don't know that that would correlate to why they would have a thyroid issue or low thyroid. I almost go synonymous with the women that have gone through menopause that I've spoken of. That's when they find out that they've probably all along, been low thyroid and at the time they also get their hormones checked. So speaking to what you said. So when I got my hormones checked right after this whole menopause thing, right after being diagnosed, I find out that, you know, and back to that range, well, of course men are supposed to be in the hundreds where I think the woman's high was around or the woman's average is around 36. First time I got my levels checked. It was two I'm like, well, okay. And then, you know, right away that particular doctor says, well, we're going to give you shots or a cream.

Dawn (45:44):
Well, of course then what happens right after them? I'm like, I don't know about that. Let's try a lower dose. I'll try it. Well, of course, then you start to grow facial hair and I'm like, Oh, okay. That's not what I'm looking for. That's going to counteract that. I want to be stronger. Keep maintain my muscle mass and you have a high, and I have a high libido. I don't want to be the dude with the stash. You know, that wouldn't go in for my husband's 11 years younger than me. I think that would be detrimental to I'm like, you know, I'm like, that's not what I was talking about. What I thought I should have. My testosterone checked

Logan (46:19):
Women. They typically, they think of that, like hear the word testosterone that they're going to be this huge bodybuilder, have a mustache acne, all that. And yes, that can happen at too high of levels. Especially like if you're tough bodybuilders women that are into that, that can get you there. But an ideal range of testosterone is going to be super helpful. And two is maybe that may be even more undiagnosed than thyroid problems.

Dawn (46:48):
I think it probably is because I literally had to ask my doctor to check my hormone levels. And they're like, well, we are, we're checking your thyroid. I'm like, well, there's other hormones that I think are playing into the same part. And you know, when you try to explain to even some medical even made, it makes it worse because I say, I know how I felt five years ago. There's no way that

Logan (47:08):
This is science. It doesn't have to do with feelings.

Dawn (47:11):
I know exactly. I remember I'm one of the PA is at one of my doctor appointments when I told her about gaining the 12 pounds and saying, I think my testosterone is low. I, I have less muscle mass. I'm a weaker. And she said, well, you just turned 50 and gained 12 pounds. What do you think you're supposed to weigh? And I'm at her thinking, all right, lady I am petite. I am fit. I'm a weightlifter. And just because she looked like she needed to really take care of her health a little better, that's all I will say. I was probably 10 years younger than me. She just acquainted to, well, you're older, you get fat. And that's just the way it is babe. You know? And I'm like, I, I haven't had none of that. And yeah, so, I mean, there was a while that I supplemented with progesterone, testosterone patches.

Dawn (48:00):
And I think that, I mean that waxed and waned a few times too, because I monitor it. And then I learned more about that. And I think that, I mean, a lot of good integrative health has a place. As long as you, again, you have to experience all the angles and you have to, you can't walk into a doctor and say, my stomach hurts. You know? Well, when, when you, it just hurts, you, you have to at least go in there, whether it's your natural path or your endocrinologist and be specific and write down your three priorities and then, you know, be able to either make a diary. If you feel terrible. When are you tired? Are you tired every day too? Like for me, I would wake up super energy at like a horse out of the gate, 10 o'clock I'd want to pull my car over because I thought I needed to take a nap.

Dawn (48:50):
Well, my progesterone at that time was so high. And then that doctor was having me take it in the morning. So then I go to the naturopathic doctor and they're like, why are you taking this in the morning? I said, that's what the doctor told me to do. And this was when I was real new, you know? And they're like that's a calming hormone. You should only take it at night. I'm like, Oh my God, someone helped me. You know, then you have to turn into your own doctor and then you have to realize, you do know something about what your body feels like. And if you think something's wrong, it probably is. When you get rid of all the mental things that make you overwhelmed. And no, I think most of the time when people think there is something wrong and they bounced around that, they're probably right. Doesn't mean you need to take a new medication and go to a new specialist. It just means you need to maybe document how you're feeling, what you're feeling. How often is that? Is it over the course of 10 years? Or was it in the last three months? You know? I mean,

Logan (49:49):
Yeah. Yeah. Our medical system is kind of based on people, abdicating their health and there's plenty else to focus on life. So that's where most people are in why it takes that ill health experience personally, or family, oftentimes to try people to go other directions. But the truth is like, we all need basic knowledge of health. And I'm talking about more than you learn in school. Cause that's based on this medical model where I remember learning like, Oh, if you take more than a hundred percent of any vitamin or mineral, then you're just flushing it out. Like you never need more than that. The RDA of these things. So you need that. You need basic information. We definitely could do a better job educating people on this. I mean, that's why there's podcasts such as this. It's just,

Dawn (50:39):
Oh, I think it is. I think it's interesting for people to learn this way because it is a conversation. And when I do things like this and interviews that I've had with, you know, naturopathic, medical doctors, chiropractors been guest speakers at some women's events, stuff like that. My hope is that you always take someone, someone leaves with something, they never thought of something that they can actually do that they're interested in trying and not just walking away going, Oh yeah, that was over my head, whatever the answer. Like I, this stuff is so awesome to me. And I think it's so helpful. I just love this kind of stuff.

Logan (51:14):
Yeah. Yeah. And what you were saying, working with the different people, I think that's important, like recognize your health is your own, I mean this health sovereign podcasts, like it's you yourself and look at whether it's a Western doctor or functional specialist or a shaman or whatever, like your board of advisors and they all have different perspectives, they're all gonna make different recommendations. Ultimately it's up to you to experiment with them and try it out, see what works and then

Dawn (51:42):
Exactly. No one cares. No one cares more about your health than you, maybe your mom. So it's like, you should really take it very seriously. Not to the point of making yourself sick over it. Like some people they've Googled 500 times the one same symptom, you know, it's like, that gets a little overwhelming too, but being smart. And I don't use the term common sense because if we're kind of, when people would have it. And so, you know, it's just, you know, it's trying to find a couple different places to get information from, you know? And like you said, a combination of, you know, Western medicine, Eastern medicine, like you said, the combinations of all the different options and modalities and being open minded to that, there's something to be learned about your own body and to make it feel better.

Logan (52:31):
Yeah, absolutely. Because ultimately that's what it's about. You're the only one in there. And if there's something that's wrong, like how many times do we have to hear about doctors, dismissing people, especially women there's symptoms like, Oh, you're just a hyper-conscious yeah,

Dawn (52:50):
That is the truth. And then, you know, and I think that's why they say women take more antianxiety medication, women take more antidepressants. It's like, you know, I'm sure a lot of men can laugh and say that's cause you're crazy. And it's like, well, maybe we're crazy because some things do chemically happen in our bodies and we were never taught or never, it was never learned how to take care of ourselves from our grandmothers or our moms. This is pretty new still. And I think that's why it's exciting that there's people that are interested in branching out into especially stuff that's been there for hundreds and hundreds of years and used ins for centuries and other cultures that I love it when they act like, Oh, well just get all the mushrooms. They're a new thing that they're using to study cancer with it, you know, John Hopkins and Cleveland clinic. And I'm like, how many thousands of years have been those venues? Have those been used in Japan and mushroom tea and all these, you know, it's like, I mean, I love that stuff.

Logan (53:45):
Right. Does he modern research back up these things that have been around

Dawn (53:48):
That is fantastic. I get excited about that too. You know, it validates that it's real and it's been around for a long time and hopefully it gets more on board with stuff like that.

Logan (53:59):
Just the more we look like as forgotten, I know fairly recent study, just showing that working with people with a nonclinical hypothyroidism is a good one and that we didn't really get to that, but the whole, no fatigue, how that's related into the thyroid, those tend to come other, because it has to do with the messing up of the, all the hormone signaling pathways and the chemicals hurting so many different things.

Dawn (54:23):
Yeah. And that's the other thing that you have, what people will say. Well, so if you're low testosterone, just have your doctor give you testosterone. Well, then that alters the other production of the other hormones. They're trying to get that synergistic balance. You don't just take a ton of one and all of a sudden everything's fine and cozy. It's like, no, I said getting the balancing act and instead of one and done thing, it's usually something that is not just one factor. So you have to want to feel good and everybody should have.

Logan (54:50):
Yeah. So that will just kinda came into my mind. It's like the Western medicine is built on like a reductionist materialist philosophy. And even though people, most people probably don't even know what those words mean about medicine that this kind of bleeds over to them where they're okay, I have this problem. What's the like one fixed solution, not Rex recognizing the complexity of our biology, how one hormone is connected to 50 other hormones. One nutrient does 10,000 things within the body. And I wish it were easier, but this is complex we're working with. And so it's important to gain like a base knowledge of it. And when in doubt, like more natural, it seems to work.

Dawn (55:34):
I agree too. And right. You're not making something up in a lab to make you feel better right now. We all know how the one medication to make you feel better. It gives you a side effect that you need the other medication for. And they said, what did they say? The average person over 50 is taking five medications. Well, if that's the case, I should be taking six or seven or eight. You know, I think I'm doing pretty good with my thyroid medication. That's a compounded, you know, it's the T three T four compounded and it's actually been lowered in the last year or so. And I feel great. I feel, I feel fantastic.

Logan (56:09):
Yup. Yup. Medications have their place.

Dawn (56:11):
Exactly. Right. Right. And there's not that. And like I've already said, it's not like I don't do a whole lot of other things on the outside, including mindset stuff. You know? I don't think that's perfect. Yeah.

Logan (56:21):
Kind of look at like taking a drug is like extreme there's time and place for that. Then more natural stuff. We have herbs or whatnot. Ideally, if you can just like lifestyle, just your normal diet, how you move all that, that keeps you healthy. Then you, you need less of these bigger interventions to go there. And you start there, like go to the endocrinologist, you see your really low testosterone, whatever it happens to be, then notice, can you start to wean yourself off that? I think that's a, a good approach. It's not the approach many people take, but I think your way to go.

Dawn (56:55):
Right? No, I think so too. As long as there's people like us and there's a lot, there's a lot of us, I've met a lot of like you and I and our group and in, in our world that I think if we keep getting this out there and you know, that's what I'm so passionate about is really helping people educate themselves in a simple, doable way. Not, you know, they don't have to know the cellular basics of how T3 to T for converts or any, I mean, but just the bait, like he said, the basic foundational understanding of what you put in your body and on your body breathe in and cook in, does have an effect on how you move, how you feel and certainly how you look, you know, and how you think at the end of the day. Because if you're stressed out that you feel like you look terrible and you're too tired, then, then your brain just gets sluggish too, you know?

Logan (57:48):
Yeah, absolutely. All tied together. Hold on. This has been a great conversation. Thank you so much for this. Where can people go to find out more about you and your work?

Dawn (57:56):
Well, I have a blog which is constant energy, fitness.com. And then I will give you a link to my thyroid offer, which is called the thyroid factor. And we can put that in the below in your link, however you don't do that.

Logan (58:13):
Yup. So this is health sovereign podcast number. I believe 46 here. Go to that. You'll find the show notes, transcript. All of that is available. Thank you so much, Don. It's been wonderful.

Dawn (58:23):
Thanks Logan. This has been a blast. I love having this conversation. I appreciate you.

Medical Monopoly – Interlocking Directorates

Anyone who doesn’t think there are any conspiracies at play in today’s political and economic environment is, well, a coincidence theorist. Yeah sure, chalk everything up to coincidence buddy…

I think it is safe to say that one word can shut those people up…Epstein.

Now, there certainly are plenty of crazy conspiracy theories out there. It sure is tough to separate the wheat from the chaff in this field.

I do NOT have all the answers. And my aim is not to tell you what to believe.

I’m more concerned with HOW it’s possible. Because at least with so lower level conspiracies (fraudulent marketing, fraudulent science, bribery, lobbying, etc.) the proof is easily found.

So many cases hiding in plain sight.

And this little-known phrase “Interlocking Directorate” is one of the key components.

In my latest podcast episode I discuss the interlocking directorates of mass media companies and Big Tech.

Did you enjoy the podcast? Let me know by leaving a short review and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss any future episodes!

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Click the link below to see written articles and references.

Read Full Transcript

Medical Monopoly Musings #50
Interlocking Directorates – Media and Pharma

An “Interlocking Directorate” is when directors from one company also sit on the boards of other companies. As most companies are public, this means such officers have a fiduciary responsibility to do what is in the best interest of each company. If one such company is a media company, this translates into being a conflict of interest.

A 2009 report from Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting found the following. Of the nine major media corporations such as Disney, Time Warner, NY Times, and others, six had directors that were also part of pharmaceutical boards. In addition, five out of the nine shared directors with insurance companies.

That was 2009. There are now just five major media companies. While it’ll take more digging to vet out current data, do you think this problem has gotten better or worse since then? As we see consolidation of the media companies themselves, we’ll see further examples of consolidation of power among the interlocking directorates.

“Let me put it in perspective for you, these board members wake up, they go to a meeting at Merck or Pfizer, and then they have their driver take them over to a meeting with NBC to decide what kind of programming that network is going to air. For those board members who aren’t pulling double duty with a media conglomerate and a big drug company, they still understand that they can’t be honest and objective about big pharma because big pharma pays their bills,” says lawyer Mike Papantonio. “Drug companies spend about $5 billion a year on advertising with these corporate media outlets, so when Pfizer or Merck or Eli Lilly, or any of the drug companies, kill or cripple Americans with defective drugs, do you really think these board members are going to allow their story to be told on the air? It can take anywhere from three days to a full week before the media reports on a drug or a medical device recall, if they report at all. In the case of Invokana it took 32 days before television outlets reported a single story involving an FDA warning about the potential problems with the product.”

From the FAIR website (undated) you can see examples of this. CBS/Viacom shares directorate with Pfizer and Cardinal Health, a large distributor of pharmaceuticals and medical products. Remember in the previous post where CBS journalist Sharyl Attkisson ran into problems from executives over her critical pharma coverage?

New York Times Co. shares directorate with Bristol-Meyers Squibb and Johnson & Johnson. On and on it goes.

Does this cause problems? Back in 2009, some people looked at this in relation to healthcare reform. Kate Murphy from FAIR, wrote, “In all, though healthcare reform has been mentioned thousands of times in the output of these media corporations’ major outlets, single-payer was mentioned in only 164 articles or news segments from January 1 through June 30, 2009; over 70 percent of these mentions did not include the voice of a single-payer advocate.”

So yeah, it is absolutely is affecting journalistic coverage. Even if only some stories get squashed or altered, this leads to compounding problems over time.

And of course, it’s not just the media. Martin J. Murray published a paper titled, “The Pharmaceutical Industry: A Story in Corporate Power” in which he stated, “The thesis of this paper is that small-scale drug manufacturing firms have been gradually replaced by large-scale multinational conglomerates. Production and sales are no longer dependent on pharmaceutical products. In the typical case, large-scale pharmaceutical-producing firms have been increasingly linked to financial institutions through interlocking directorates.” This was written in 1974!

Think there are some interlocking directorates between Big Pharma and Big Tech, these days? In the future, we’ll go even deeper.

References:
https://fair.org/home/single-payer-and-interlocking-directorates/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giVY-Qnqd5Q
https://fair.org/interlocking-directorates/2870/
https://pnhp.org/news/single-payer-interlocking-directorates/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/730410/

***

Medical Monopoly Musings #51
Interlocking Directorate of Alphabet (Google)

Last post covered how “interlocking directorates” can be problematic between media companies and other companies which the news should be digging into. These conflicts of interest may stop or hinder balanced coverage from happening such as about pharmaceutical drugs. While we will be returning to traditional media later on, it’s important to look at Big Tech’s role in all this too.

Are any of the board of directors from Alphabet (Google’s parent company) also on boards of Big Pharma? Yes!

One of Alphabet’s more recent additions is Robin L. Washington, former CFO of Gilead Sciences for 10 years.

While she is now on Alphabet’s board, she is still on the board of Gilead Connecticut, Gilead Sciences International, Gilead Sciences Europe, Kite Pharma UK Ltd., and others.

There’s the names you may know (Page, Brin, Pichai)...then there are the names you’ve probably never heard of. Robin is the only one with current direct pharma ties…but there are various high tech biology companies involved.

Here are some of the other Alphabet board members:

Frances Hamilton Arnold is on the board of Illumina, Inc. which is a bioinformation company and Donna & Benjamin M Rosen Bioengineering Center.

John LeRoy Hennessy is on the board of Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, which is a research partnership for diagnostics, drugs and vaccines.

Louis John Doerr is on Cardinal Analytx, Inc., now called Prealize Health for machine learning in healthcare, and Life Technologies Clinical Services Lab, Inc. which develops molecular assays for clinical and pharma customers.

Alan R. Mulally is on Mayo Foundation and Mayo Clinic boards.

Ram Kavitarak Shriram is at Stanford Health Care.

Roger Walton Ferguson is at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (see posts #30 and #31 for big and hidden conflicts of interest going on there) and Rally Health, Inc., a health data company.

And it’s not always an interlocking directorate. For example, Mary Ellen Coe is not on Alphabets board, but she is President of Global Customer Solutions for Google. Meanwhile, she is also on the Merck Board of Directors. (See post #37 to learn how Merck is the second biggest serial criminal in Big Pharma paying almost $9 billion in fines thus far.)

Is this cause for alarm? You would expect powerful people to be involved with many things, right? And lots of people are justifiably interested in health. By itself, interlocking directorates are only potential conflicts.

So we must look beyond them for actions and patterns that occur.

The name Gilead may be familiar to you. They’re the ones behind Remdesivir, the expensive antiviral drug hot in the news today…and one we saw significant conflicts of interest behind its approval in issue #44…while seeing the concerted push against cheaper hydroxychloroquine in #45.

Is Google manipulating search results in order to push one thing and denigrate the other?

Have we seen online censorship of information, such as on Youtube especially, for doctors speaking out about how hydroxychloroquine works?

You be the judge. Next time, more about Alphabet’s big steps into the healthcare space and increased censorship.

References:
https://www.wsj.com/market-data/quotes/GOOGL/company-people
https://www.gilead.com/news-and-press/press-room/press-releases/2019/4/gilead-sciences-chief-financial-officer-robin-washington-to-step-down-in-early-2020
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-ellen-coe-0371025/

***

Extra references discussed regarding Twitter and Facebook:

https://www.wsj.com/market-data/quotes/TWTR/company-people
https://www.wsj.com/market-data/quotes/FB/company-people

Chlorella and Spirulina with Catharine Arnston

  • Is it really about acid vs. alkaline, or is there something deeper and more fundamental going on?
  • 1 tab = 1 plate of vegetables?!?
  • The importance of chlorophyll…especially when it comes to COVID
  • The long strange road of a Nobel Prize laureate, Hiroshima, and how Chlorella became popular today
  • What biological dentists know about Chlorella…
  • The power of the oldest and lowest in the food chain
  • How supporting nutrition (which is widely depleted) and supporting detox (which is widely misunderstood) are the keys to health
  • And much more

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Catharine Arnston has a thirty year career as an international Attache for the Canadian and British Governments, publisher of an international magazine and Founder of three startups. But in 2009 when her younger sister was diagnosed with breast cancer and advised by her oncologist to change her diet to an alkaline one because it would help her heal, Catharine put her career on hold to help her sister. In the process, she discovered algae, the most alkaline, nutrient-dense plant in the world that no one seemed to know about. Catharine knew algae would be a game changer for the world if she could just help Americans understand it. And ENERGYbits was born.

Get special discount at www.EnergyBits.com by using coupon code LOSTEMPIRE

(Note this is an affiliate relation in which the show will get a commission to fund its operations. Just know that we would be promoting these great products if they were great and we weren’t personally benefitting from them.)

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Click the button below to see the transcript.

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Logan (00:00:03):
Welcome Catherine to the health sovereign podcast. Really excited for our conversation here today.

Catharine (00:00:08):
Me too. And it's always my pleasure to share my knowledge of algae. It's not many people doing it, so here we go.

Logan (00:00:17):
Yeah. And we want to get there, but I do want to dig a bit into your backstory because I think it's important. And also this topic, I like how people come to, I guess, a bit of a different health paradigm is a interesting topic I've been exploring. So your sister was diagnosed with breast cancer. You want to share the story at any point you want to pick up on that?

Catharine (00:00:42):
Yeah, so I you know, I have an MBA and I was doing I'm Canadian, but I've, I've lived in Boston, Massachusetts for 33 years. But everything kind of ground to a halt about 12 years ago when my younger sister in Canada was diagnosed with breast cancer, she's fine now, by the way, just want to assure people that and her oncologist advised her to change her diet to alkaline diet, because it would help with their healing. Now they didn't tell her what an alkaline diet was or why it would be good for her, but, you know, she's quite beautiful. Unlike myself, following instructions from her medical professional. And so she called me because I'm a really good researcher and obviously I love my sister. So I said, I have no idea what an alkaline that was. You know, I had, I had a career in interior design before that.

Catharine (00:01:34):
So not exactly nutrition, but I'm very, very deep in research. So I said, I'll find out and we'll get this, we'll do this together. So I did find out for her what an alkaline diet wasn't. It was basically a plant based diet because of the phytonutrients and the chlorophyll that have been documented for decades to build your immune system. So she did go through chemo. She completely changed her diet. 10 years later, she's still cancer-free. But in the process of helping her, I started reading all these books about plant based nutrition. Now this was 12 years ago and a plant based nutrition was not mainstream like it is now. So I saw the science, I saw how powerful it was. I thought, gosh, somebody needs to share this information with the rest of the world. Oh, heck I don't have no idea how to do it, but I'm going to give it a shot.

Catharine (00:02:22):
So I gave up my 25 year corporate career and I thought, well, I need some sort of education. So I got a one year certificate from the Institute for integrative nutrition in New York city. Which basically taught me how to be a health coach. It gave me some science, but not a ton. I've pretty much self taught ever since then, but it gave me enough. And then I put together a curriculum teaching plant based nutrition for free at corporations and hospitals, basically anybody who would let me in. And that's really when I had my epiphany about algae, you know, I got introduced to it through my sister, but my epiphany came when I was teaching people about the importance of plant based nutrition, eating more vegetables anymore greens. And the Tiffany was this. Everybody knows they should eat more vegetables. Everybody knows they should eat more salads.

Catharine (00:03:13):
But the reality was that most people either were too far away from a grocery store or they didn't have time to log home, heavy vegetables, clean them, cook them, eat them. Maybe they didn't like the flavor of vegetables. Maybe their kids wouldn't need them. The husband. So the bottom line was there were all these barriers between people getting the nutrients that they know they needed. Cause we know our food chain is damaged because the soils have no nutrients in them. But so I thought, well, how can I help people be healthier if I can't get them to eat green? So that's when I thought, okay, I've got to go back and research further. The things I had found for my sister and maybe I'll find something that was easy, fast green that would work for people so that it would take away all the burden and the cleaning and the eating and the key, whatever.

Catharine (00:04:05):
So, so I tried a bunch of things, nothing was working. And then I found, I got to algae, which I'd found for my sister. And that's when I was like Alice in Wonderland, falling into the rabbit hole because it turned out that Al algae was the most alkaline food in the world, which was what got me started on this journey is also the most nutrient dense food in the world. That's not my opinion. That's a quote we have from NASA that says one gram of algae has the nutrients of a thousand grams of fruits and vegetables. And that's why they've been feeding it to the astronauts for 50 years and they want to grow it in space. Algae is the most studied food in the world. It has over a hundred thousand studies. There's about 60,000 on spirulina. That's one of the allergies we're going to talk about in the other boat, 40,000 and chlorella.

Catharine (00:04:48):
So it's on solid scientific foundation. The trouble is that scientists like to talk to other scientists. And so nobody has really shared the science with you, consumers, which is one of the things I've been doing. So anyways, solid scientific foundation used for hundreds of years around the world. Most notably for the last year, 50 years in Asia, where it's a multibillion dollar agricultural crop. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, LG is a food crop. It is not supplement. It has grown in fresh water. We're going to talk about that. Cause we grow ours in triple filtered, spring mountain water. Then it's just air dried and present to the little tablets or some people sell it as powder, but it is not a supplement. And the reason why that's important is supplements are made in factories with high heat, with extracts that your body can't recognize so that you have to have such high numbers on those vitamins and you don't absorb most of them anyways.

Catharine (00:05:41):
So with algae you get 90 it's 99% bioavailable. So it checked all my boxes off. You know, it was alkaline, nutrient dance, scientifically proven use for 50 years. And easy to take because all you need to do is toss a couple of these tablets in your mouth. You can swallow them or to them, and you're done each one of these tablets. And we're going to talk about those that we sell are the size of a baby aspirin. Each one of those has the nutrition equal to a heaping plate of vegetables that you didn't have to buy from the grocery store, carry from the grocery store, cook, clean or eat. So it's what I call efficient nutrition. So they only, there were really only two things wrong with algae that I could see one in America. Nobody really knew about it and that if it was avail and it's been sold here for 50 years, but it's usually in weird packaging and it's on the bottom shelf of some health food store gathering dust.

Catharine (00:06:40):
So not no visibility, no education, no taking the mystery away of what LG is and why it's good for you. And number two, the quality that's been available has been very poor. Most of it came from China mostly with an undocumented nutrients. We do third-party lab tests and full of binders and fiber, other stuff, other gunk that doesn't deliver the nutrient density that you deserve. So I decided 10 years ago, I would devote the rest of my life to educating people about algae, what it is, why it's good for you, what the differences are, how to take it, how to judge your different suppliers and to make it take the mystery in a way. So you don't think it's pond scum because it's so far from that, it's a, I call it, everyone knows as a superfood, but I call it a super duper food because it's way more than a super food.

Logan (00:07:40):
So many jumping off points there. So it sounds like with you were kind of new to the whole health journey when your sister had her diagnosis as well.

Catharine (00:07:50):
Absolutely. Absolutely. I was a newbie,

Logan (00:07:54):
A little perplexed by that. The oncologist actually told someone to change their diet. That's pretty amazing. I'll share a little bit about my story. My mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. She went through standard Western treatment. It went into remission, but then it came back later. And do you remember? I was, I was a bit younger at the time but they're telling you like avoid antioxidants. You can't take it cause it will interfere with the treatment. Right. And she died. I did not have a happy story and to mine and for me that was like, I was starting down this one called alternative health path or like learning about nutrition and whatnot. But for me that was a kind of pivotal thing that spurred me to go deeper. And it's interesting for you, it's the same thing, better outcome. But th that does seem to be a big part of what launches people into

Catharine (00:08:45):
Really, almost everybody I've met in this community had a personal or a family experience similar to yours in mind where they there was a sudden shock to a, in a, in a urgent need to respond with something that was not known. And with my six sisters situation, I'm still stunned. When I think about 12 years ago that her oncologist told her about this. But I, my, I think the reason why it happened was number one, she lives in Canada and in Canada we have national health care. And so there's not the same kind of control of the pharmaceutical industry as there is an America. So it's to the doctors, they're, they're, they're more motivated for a positive outcome because there's less financial reward as there is here. Number one, number two, her oncologist was a woman and women just, I'm sorry. We tend to be more driven to find health solutions because in the family, we're usually the ones that look after people.

Catharine (00:09:53):
So there are exceptions. I'm sure you're one, but the so I I'm just, and she did still have her go through the chemo, but she did at least recommend this to her. And I'm so grateful because her life changed. And so did mine. I never knew anything about nutrition, so that, and probably it's it's has turned out to be a good thing, because as I've mentioned, the science about algae has been available and around for at least 50 years. But as I mentioned, scientists like to talk to other scientists, they know all the jargon and they have PhDs and they kind of, they, they speak an accurate act in star turnover, but because I'm a normal person consumer I had to back into the science and once I learned the science, I had to then reinterpret it into ways.

Catharine (00:10:49):
And I'll give you some analogies that your other mainstream consumers could understand. So there's no jargon if you want the science and I can go toe to toe with PhDs and I do at conferences. And they're always very impressed because I know my science because I need to know if people are counting on me. My integrity is in question. If I have an educated myself and I'm always educating myself, we talked earlier before we started the conference about how we both have like 10 books on, on deck waiting to be read. And it will, it's a journey that I enjoy. And I, and more importantly, I enjoy sharing my knowledge. It's not just for me to it. It's not enough for me to know. I need to help other people benefit from my knowledge.

Logan (00:11:35):
Yeah. I really liked the point you have that. We need something simple. Right? So taking spirulina or chlorella, it's like a whole bunch of vegetables compacted together, essentially in that the nutrients that provides it, doesn't have the soil depletion and whatnot, because behavior is hard. It shouldn't be as difficult as it is. Like it should be taught in schools. Like how do you actually change habits and whatnot? I think that would help people out a whole lot if that was made more accessible and people are starting with where they're at. So if we can give them the essentially kind of a magic bullet, something that's going to jumpstart the system, give them some quick results, then we can move on to the harder stuff a little bit later on. I'm seeing more and more. That's just so important.

Catharine (00:12:21):
Yeah. Baby steps. Life is all about baby steps and it's about a repetitive pattern. So if if something is too ominous to sh like changing your diet, that's why I love algae so much. You don't need to change anything. Just take a couple of these a day, that's it. And you don't have to, you don't have to do anything, just open your mouth. And when I finally, because we, that quote we have from NASA about one gram of Valjean equals a thousand grams of nutrition. So we did, I did the math and I found a bag of our LD tablets that have a thousand tablets in. It has the equivalent nutrition of 551 pounds of fruits and vegetables, which is about 30 grocery carts of food. And I used to, I was telling people that, but that still didn't resonate. It was still too big.

Catharine (00:13:08):
But now that I've gotten, I've realized, cause I did the math again, that one of these tablets is the equivalent of a heaping plate of vegetables. And we've done some photography to help people that that is resonating with people. And usually if this was visual, I would be talking to you and I would pop one of these tablets in my mouth because I chew mine, but you can swallow them. And I go, just had a plate of vegetables. It doesn't get any easier. Especially when you have kids who won't eat vegetables, husbands, who don't eat vegetables, by the way, pets love this stuff. And that's the true Testament. Whether something is good for you, not because your pets are smart, animals are smart. And if we could just pay more attention to them, if they could talk to us other than in Disney, we would have a lot to learn from them. So, so when you can see any, everybody can look at one of these tablets and if they can conceive that it's equal to the nutrition of a heating plate of vegetables, that's all they need to know.

Logan (00:14:06):
Yeah, no, that, that is a great visual. And that's, that's impressive. And yeah, the animals haven't had all their instincts beat out of them. So that's makes sense. I will feed some to my cats. I have not thought of that yet, but I've given some other herbs, but not LG.

Catharine (00:14:21):
Yeah. Yeah. They'll love them. They'll you know, just be aware they want more,

Logan (00:14:27):
I have a question regarding the alkalinity, cause what I've looked at and for me, it's one of the best works on nutrition was Western Maine prices, nutrition and physical degeneration. Have you read that book? Are you familiar?

Catharine (00:14:39):
Not that particular book, but I'm a big fan of of his work.

Logan (00:14:42):
Yeah. When he went around and he was looking at indigenous people's diets all over the world, all kinds of different diets, none were really vegetarian except the Indians. And they had some more problems, but very diverse in it. And he actually looked at the pH and I think this may just be in the appendix of the book and the pH of the diets was all over the place. So I'm trying to come to this conclusion, like it's not the pH so much of a pH is kind of saying like an alkaline diet is a healthier diet, like more fruits and vegetables. You're getting those phytonutrients. Do you believe it's a pH that really matters? Or is it the other stuff in your opinion?

Catharine (00:15:20):
I think it's the nutrients, but let me just talk a little bit about the pH. So everybody knows that your body temperature needs to be 98.6 to be healthy and all of your different organs and cells, your skin, everything has a particular pH that it tries to strive for, for homeostasis, but they're all different. Your blood pH needs to be at 7.34. That's smack dab in the middle between the pH, which is the lower. The pH is acidic. And the high pH is alkaline. Now your body is so intelligent that if you eat too many foods that are acidic or you are emotional, there's a lot of things. Exercise releases, lactic acid, which is acidic. It's it poles. It causes the blood to become more acidic and move away from that 7.34. And so what your body automatically does is that it pulls minerals from your bones, your organs, your skin, to neutralize that acidity to bring you back to the 7.34.

Catharine (00:16:22):
Cause if it didn't do that, you would die. But if that, if that happens over and over and over again, this is what causes your immune system to weekend because it's having it's important minerals because minerals are important for every process in your body. Minerals are important for your bones for flexibility. And also and we're going to talk a little bit about COVID and I'm going to just sort of give you a quick injection because everybody knows covert as a respiratory illness. But what the doctors are starting to realize is also a blood disorder, because what the COVID does is it goes into your blood and your blood has hemoglobin that inside your hemoglobin is a iron cell that carries oxygen. So the, the virus inserts itself and kicks out the iron Adam and insert inserts itself. We'll talk later about the three different things that that does, but the virus is acidic.

Catharine (00:17:18):
Cancer is acidic. All diseases are acidic. Why is that important? Well, mother nature and her intelligence in your hemoglobin, she put a negative charge around your hemoglobin. So if you've ever held up magnets close to one another, you know that they repel one another, whether your hemoglobin is this way, it has this negative charge on it so that they repel one another. Why is that important? When they repel, they can call their nice round shape, which allows them to hold the iron, which allows them to hold the oxygen so that you can get all nutrients. You need easily. It means they can move through your blood vessels. Very simply they're not. And when the negative charge gets stripped off, as what happens with COVID or with too much acidity that causes your blood to clump, which means it can't hold the iron atom. It can't hold oxygen very well.

Catharine (00:18:07):
It can't flow very well. And you get clumped blood vessels, you get blood clots, right? So, so the pH of your blood is very, very important. And I don't know whether that was why the doctor, my sister's oncologist wanted her to have an alkaline diet to maintain that blood pH, which helps with your blood health, which helps with your immunity, because we'll send you some documents to post with the Pope, with the blog, but you can go online. And this isn't any science book, you'll see that the chemical composition of your hemoglobin is identical to the chemical composition of chlorophyll with the exception of one Adam, and there's like 70 or 40 parts to these chemical compositions in your blood. The only difference is that in the middle of the, of your hemoglobin is an iron Adam. That's what carries oxygen. And in your chlorophyll that iron Adam, the middle Adam is magnesium.

Catharine (00:19:04):
Other than that, your blood and chlorophyll are identical. And chlorophyll is very alkalining. Chlorophyll builds your blood in the world war II. They used to give the injured liquid chlorophyll if they ran out of blood for transfusions and they would heal just as fast. Why? Because blood and chlorophyll are almost identical. So, so it's not just the alkaline. It's a very, it's wrapped up. The alkaline part is wrapped up with chlorophyll and the highest concentration of chlorophyll comes from algae. And that is probably why it's. So alkaline is because of all this high chlorophyll. So, so the, so the pH of your blood is critical, but then you have to remember that there is a pH that needs to be maintained in every organ of your body or the acidity of your stomach needs to be, it has to be more acidic than your, than your skin, for example, or your so it's a very complicated matter, but the pH of your blood is one that I think most people can understand because of this clumping situation that occurs in. And by the way, they're doing lots of biopsies now of people who have passed from COVID and they're finding blood clots everywhere. And that's exactly what happens because the virus is acidic causes the clumping. And anyways, that's the situation. So

Logan (00:20:29):
Very fascinating. Yeah. The chlorophyll being so similar to blood with magnesium, which is something people are chronically deficient and 80% of our seed different estimates.

Catharine (00:20:39):
Exactly, exactly. Would it help for me to explain the different allergies and what LG is? Or, or do you have a different I can in any direction you want me to

Logan (00:20:48):
Let's go, go into that. Cause I think that's important for sure.

Catharine (00:20:52):
Yeah. So what I help people understand is that LG is its own food group. Just like mushrooms are their own food group.

Logan (00:21:00):
I think all the lust food groups, right? Like seaweeds, a lot of people aren't needing insects can be one of like all these things that have a lot more nutrients than our standard foods, like get into the last food groups you'll be doing better.

Catharine (00:21:11):
Yeah. Yeah. So fruits are our food group. Vegetables are a food group. LG has neither one of those. So it's its own food category. And within algae, as a category, there are two main sub categories. One is called macro algae and the other one is called micro-algae. Now we're going to be talking about micro algae, but first let me explain what macro LG is. Macro LD is also known as a seaweed, dulse kelp, it's that big stringy stuff that washes up on shore. It's important for its fiber, excuse me, and it's iodine, but it doesn't hold a candle to the nutritional value of micro-algae now micro algae, which is what we're talking about is called, is called micro algae because it's microscopic in size. There's something like a hundred million algae LG that can fit on a head of a pin. That's how tiny this stuff is.

Catharine (00:22:09):
And it's and everything. First of all, Al micro-algae was the first life on earth, almost 4 billion years ago. I was mostly, it was spirulina in fact, and there's fossils to prove it. And it's in the oceans, it's in the lakes is in the rivers is in your soil. It's in your swimming pool. It's even in your aquarium. So there's thousands and thousands of strains of micro-algae. The two main strains are blue, green, and green. And there's thousands of those everywhere else. Now, if you Google blue green algae, and you might find something that says, Oh, toxic blue, green algae. Yes. If it grew in the ocean, just like, you know if you read about swampy water, you wouldn't drink swampy water, you would drink clean water, right? So swampy water doesn't mean that water is bad. It just means that that water's bad. So if you read about toxic blue, green algae, that's just the algae that's in the ocean.

Catharine (00:23:05):
The two that we're talking about are harvested as food crops. They do not grow in the ocean. They are grown in fresh water and we're renowned for having the cleanest purest toxin-free algae because we grow ours in triple filtered, spring mountain water in Taiwan, and we air dry it without heat. And we'll talk about that later on, but the two main algae that are harvested as food crops and have been harvested as food crops for 50 years in Asia are spirulina and chlorella. So let's talk about each one of them. Spirulina is an example of a blue green algae. Why is it called the blue green algae? Because it has two pigments. The green pigment you're quite familiar with is called chlorophyll. And we're going to talk more about that in a few minutes. The other pigment is called FICO Sinan and I'm sure you don't know about it.

Catharine (00:23:57):
It's a beautiful blue, a GM blue color that has a lot of healing properties that cannot be found anywhere else. And just as a side note, science scientists have found that it helps prevent the COVID virus from getting into your cells. But anyway, spirulina blue, green algae, it's technically a bacteria. Yes. Spirulina is a bacteria. Why? Because it has no cellulous wall or nucleus. It's a single cell organism. But the amazing thing about spirulina is that it has the highest concentration of protein in the world. Even the United nations had a global conference on spirulina in 1974, over 40 years ago and identified it as the answer to world hunger, because it has three times the amount of protein as steak, ours is 64% protein. There is nothing in the world that has more concentrated protein than spirulina. And even more importantly, all of that protein is already in amino acid form.

Catharine (00:24:56):
When you eat animal protein, your body needs to break it down into amino acids. So it can be absorbed, but that can take up to three days. And if you don't have all the factors and cofactors, you only end up with about five or 10% of it as amino acids. And it takes three days with spirulina because there's no celery this wall. And because the proteins already in amino acids, it gets absorbed instantly. So it's like 99% bioavailable. And not only does spirulina have this high amount of protein, it's loaded with the B vitamins, B vitamins are what convert aminos into energy. That's why we call ours our main, our first and main spirulina energy bets, because we thought that was easier to say than spirulina. And it gives you energy cause both mental energy and physical energy. Now it's not lightening bolts from the sky because there's no sugar, caffeine or chemicals is not as stimulant.

Catharine (00:25:47):
You just get energy from the protein, the B vitamins and the 40 other vitamins and minerals that work in synergy to help you basically just feel the way we describe it. As you feel fresh, you, you feel like you just had a great night's sleep or walk out in the fresh air. You're ready for anything athlete. We were a sports nutrition company for the first four years because athletes love it so much because it gives them steady energy and doesn't upset their stomach cause it gets so absorbed so quickly. So part of the energy is from the high protein that's in amino acid, the high B vitamins high iron, which as we mentioned earlier, is what carries oxygen. And when you have more oxygen, you have more energy. It's also loaded with essential fatty acids, like a mega three that help with your brain functioning.

Catharine (00:26:38):
And, and most people sadly get their, a mega three from fish oil, which is bad for you for bad for everybody because it overflowed kills so much of the ocean life. And most fish oil goes rancid after about a month, but I remind people where do you think the fish get the Omega three from it? They get it from algae. So you might as well go to the original source and get it for yourself as well. Really? Yeah, yeah. Bypass the middleman. You got it. LGL, ZOS, boron, which is really important for you or my lawn sheets and thought processing. So there's a lots of different reasons why spirulina gives you energy. It's all, science-based, it's all nutrition, but, and it's well-documented and acknowledged by nutritionists, even doctor Gundry who wrote the plant paradox, he even endorses LG, because LG is not technically a plant.

Catharine (00:27:32):
So it doesn't have any of the anti-nutrients that you might find in plants. Like it has no phytates. It has no lectins. It has no oxalates. So, so algae plays with everybody, whether you're vegan, paleo, keto low carb, low fiber. It's great. So spirulina, basically an energizing algae dense nutrition, great for intermittent fasting. Great for a snack. The only downside I will admit about spirulina is it doesn't taste very good. It's very chewy because of the high protein and the essential fatty acids. So most people swallow them, but you know, so in the morning you get up, you have whatever you have to your whatever toss, three or four of these down in like nanoseconds. And that will take the edge off your hunger will give you a little bit of energy to get going one calorie per tablet. So if you're watching your calories, it's, you know, as is very waistline friendly, as I'd say, and then you can have more in the morning, more in the afternoon, take it any time you are tired or hungry.

Catharine (00:28:35):
You can't have too much of it because it's just a plant it's like having too much broccoli or too much salad. Now we found that women weren't attracted to the packaging or branding. And as you know, I started because of my sister. So women's health is really big for important for me. So my girlfriends told me I should just package it in pink and give it a cute name. And because the high protein and the high end, the oxidants build your skin and hair health. I thought, well, what the heck? Okay. So I, we made a second brand of spirulina and color, the beauty bits, it's in a pink package, but it doesn't exactly same thing as energy bits. And someone said, Oh, you have a boy spirulina pretty much that's I guess the truth. So so that's spirulina unbelievable. Good.

Catharine (00:29:23):
For any age babies, newborns, granddads, pets, you name it not as in 50, 60 years of it being used. I don't think I've heard a single negative outcome of from spirulina. Very, very nutrient dense though. So if you have had a bad diet in the past, first of it's easiest thing to do to correct it, but take it slowly and start with maybe just three or four tablets a day. So you don't go, go a little nuts now, a billion years after spirulina, because it releases oxygen. When it's growing, there was enough oxygen for more life forms to occur and chlorella it's brother was next. Now chlorella does belong to the plant kingdom, although it's technically not a plant because it has the hardest cellulous wall in the plant kingdom. Remember I said, spirulina has no cellulous wall. Chlorella has the hardest. Why is that hard cell wall important?

Catharine (00:30:16):
Because it attaches to toxins and pulls them out of key lates, heavy metals lead, mercury radiation. It's it was used at Fukushima Hiroshima Chernobyl when the Fukushima disaster happened about eight years ago, the entire global supply of chlorella was bought up within 24 hours by everybody in Asia, because they know it's the only thing that pulls out radiation. We have some customers who use it, who are getting chemotherapy and they take it to help pull out the excess radiation. So they're not as nauseous. You'll be amused to know that it also identifies alcohol as a toxin. So if you take it after drink wine or beer or spirits of any kind you are sober in an hour and you never have a hangover. And it works every time we have summers have gone too well when they were traveling, they went to Vegas or they had their bachelorette party and they were the only ones taking the chlorella.

Catharine (00:31:13):
We call our chlorella recovery bits because it helps you recover your health or recover from your party or recover from sports. So it really did help. We also work with as I mentioned, athletes, they take the spirulina before a workout and they take the chlorella afterwards because it also identifies lactic acid as a toxin. So we feel NHL teams, the Olympic teams, they, they, again, they use the spirulina, they put like 75 and a smoothie before a hockey game. And then they take the chlorella afterwards to pull out the light to gas. But the lung in particular really love the chlorella because as you know, when teams travel, whether you're high school, well, you're not traveling now, but when you do again you're on a bus together or a plane together and you bunk together. And if one person gets sick, it travels very quickly through the team and chlorella because it has so much chlorophyll.

Catharine (00:32:11):
And we're gonna talk about that next builds your immune system. So it literally prevents you from getting sick of any kind, including quite honestly, viruses. So chlorella very grateful for detox of any kind that hard cell wall. And as I just mentioned, it's also the highest concentration of chlorophyll in the world. Spirulina has the highest concentration of protein in the world. Chlorophyll has the highest concentration of chlorophyll. It has a thousand times more chlorophyll than Chinese greens. Hundred times more than spinach has 25 times more than liquid chlorophyll, which are made from alfalfa sprouts. So if we're all desperately short of chlorophyll, and if you have a sensitivity and frankly, as I, as I do to lectins or oxalates which means that you can't eat oxalates or can eat things with oxide, that means spinach is certainly off the, off the food choice.

Catharine (00:33:03):
So Cale's probably not a good choice either. So, so people are looking for ways to get chlorophyll and there are no oxalates in our algae because it's not technically a plan. It's just, if you have to call it anything as a sea vegetable plants develop these things like oxalates to protect themselves from it, from, you know, bugs. And so unfortunately they also cause problems for some people which irritate their gut, which causes leaky gut. So chlorophyll and chlorella, LG have none of those problems. And yet they have this rich abundance of chlorophyll. Why is chlorophyll so important? Well, here's the deal with chlorophyll. It's a fat based pigment. Why is that important? Because all of your health starts at the cellular level. It's the mitochondria inside your cells and the cell walls. And if you don't get nutrients to the mitochondria, and if you don't get toxins pulled out from the cells that causes an acidic environment, remember we talked about that and that causes the cells to start behaving but poorly, and they don't communicate, they become sick, they become rogue and it's a slippery slope in diseases.

Catharine (00:34:16):
The next thing, so the great thing about Carville and here's one of my little analogies I like to help people understand is, you know, when you have dirty windows, you can't see out and sunlight can't get in. And if you have dirty windows in your car, that's even more damaging and that's an accident waiting to happen. So chlorophyll because it's a fat based pigment is like, I call it window washers for yourselves. It cleans your cell walls so that nutrients can get in and talk. Sins can get out. And that's, what's clay about greens, but you can't get anything more green. You can't get more chlorophyll than you can from chlorella allergy. Obviously spirulina has chlorophyll as well, but it has two pigments. Chlorella is just chlorophyll as the pigment. So it's a very rich source of chlorophyll that cleans your cells. And that's one of the reasons why it builds your immune system.

Catharine (00:35:12):
Now, remember I mentioned about how chlorophyll looks like your blood. So when you have a lot of chlorophyll, you're injecting a lot of oxygen. You're injecting a lot of magnesium. You're cleaning your blood. And if your blood is clean, then it's able to deliver other nutrients and oxygen to your blood, which helps you stay healthy. The other amazing thing about chlorella, we, because of that hard cell wall, it actually has fiber in the cell wall and we we're reading. And we'll continue to read about the importance of your gut biome, your bacteria in your biome need fiber. And the fiber allows them to release. What's called short chain fatty acids that heal your cell wall. A lot of immune auto immune system. A lot of auto-immune rather is a result of leaky gut, different food groups, poor get through your, your gut and your gut wall is PR is protected by a one layer, one cell layer of mucosal surfaces easily broken through.

Catharine (00:36:12):
And so when you get stuff breaking through, it gets into your bloodstream and your immune system starts attacking itself. So, so chlorella helps prevent that because it provides the fiber that the bacteria need. That's why it's been used for decades for IBS Crohn's disease. It heals the gut because it, the chlorophyll, which is cleansing that hard cell wall, which absorbs toxins and the fiber. So it also stimulates periostosis bowel movements are critical for you know, your health to get rid of the Botox ans so that's why we, you know, and there's so many other nutrients in chlorella, like vitamin K, too, that pull out excess calcium from your soft tissue to move it into your bones, which prevents heart disease, Alzheimer's wrinkles. So the thing I need you to understand is that chlorella is a health and wellness, LG. So I'll be call it recovery bits cause you recover your health. Spirulina is an energizing algae. So he takes spirulina in the morning when you need energy,

Catharine (00:37:16):
You're hungry and you're, you know, all that sort of stuff. And then generally we recommend chlorella at night because your body goes through a detox cycle when you sleep. So this will facilitate the detox. And in so many ways, you know, when you're asleep your brain, when you're in deep sleep, your brain shrinks and you have a cleansing system in your brain. And so that's one of the times, if you had something like chlorella, it can pull out the aluminum from your brain. And there's lots of aluminum in our brains because of glyphosate, it's all over the place. So this helps restore health to your brain, healthier, your biome. I think everyone in the world should be taking chlorella. LG every day. I say, it's like giving your body a shower from the inside. We shower every day outside. So chlorella

Catharine (00:38:05):
Shower on the inside. Now the cool thing about chlorella, at least I think is it tastes pretty good. Well, it's not sweet because obviously it's green, but if you eat it, it tastes like a soy nut or a sunflower seed. And I like to eat it with some sea salt. But it also tastes great, really great with macadamia nuts. So, but just like spirulina, if you do not like the taste, just swallow it, you get the same benefits. Now, and again, you can take three or four a day. If you want to just sort of up your wellness. If you're doing a detox though, you will need the full 20 or 30 tablets. So if you have wine and you don't want to have a hangover, you're going to need 20 or 30 or more. If you're, if you want to recover from sports, if you're a big person and all that sort of stuff.

Catharine (00:38:54):
So spirulina energizing ticket in the morning and the afternoon chlorella health and wellness algae taking the evening for sure. But you can take either of them any time a day with each other, by themselves with food put them in a smoothie. They're, they're great for traveling. If you end up at a hotel and you don't know what's in that mini bar, if you have some algae with you, at least, you know, you can take the edge off your hunger, recover from your trip keep your health where it needs to be. It's I just think it's everyone's best friend certainly is mine.

Logan (00:39:32):
Okay. I'd like to ask a little bit more the specifics around the detox. I guess the more I've gotten into health, just we live in a very polluted world, as you were saying, glyphosates on everything and there's so much out there. So just recognizing more and more the importance of detox and how the average person doesn't think of that at all. Yeah. So how much of the research like chlorella has a huge reputation and justifiably? So for helping with detox, I'm curious how much of the science has looked at cause different things may pull different heavy metals or toxins better than others, for instance. So I'm just curious, you mentioned some of the things, the led mercury radiation aluminum there, how much of the science has specifically looked at the benefits with chlorella?

Catharine (00:40:19):
Well the dental community has known about chlorella for a very long time because they pull out, you know, our fillings, what they call they call AMA grams have mercury in them. And so the dentists have been using chlorella for a long time, the biological dentists, because, and they not only do they recommend it to their patients, they take it too because there will be fumes from the, the mercury in the air as they take this, these fillings out from people's mouths. And you don't want to have your, an average or your regular dentists do these sorts of things. Cause you have to really protect yourself because you don't want to swallow any of that. Mercury mercury is very, very poisonous.

Logan (00:41:04):
It can be what are in the process if it's not done right then. Yeah.

Catharine (00:41:09):
So the medic, the PR the dental community has known about chlorellas benefits with mercury for a long time. There are other holistic doctors like dr. Klinghardt who's runs a clinic up in Seattle and has been running it for 20 or 30 years. And he's a big proponent of chlorella. He talks about how it seems to work even better when you marry it with cilantro. No, I actually haven't read any of the science about that, but you know, I personally, I love cilantro, so it wouldn't certainly be a difficulty for me to have it. But in terms of so here's the, I'll tell you an interesting little side story about how algae even got started, particularly chlorella. It was discovered in, by the Dutch back in the late 18 hundreds to have the highest concentration of protein in the world.

Catharine (00:42:01):
And then in the early 19 hundreds, the Germans started doing research on it and Otto Warburg who's well known in the cancer. He was doing research on it and that's who, you know, found out that cancer is, can exist in an alkaline environment anyways, and he won a Nobel prize for it. So, so the bottom line is the, the Germans had done all this research on chlorella because of the chlorophyll. And then there was world war one and Germany was bombed out and there was no food or livestock, and I don't know how things happen, but anyways, the German government knew about the chlorophyll and they discovered about algae having the highest concentration of protein. So somehow they got chlorella algae into the Germans to feed them because of the protein. And and then it kind of just disappeared. Nobody really talked about it anymore.

Catharine (00:42:56):
And then there was world war two and there was Hiroshima. And as part of something called the Marshall plan, the Americans committed to helping the Japanese rebuild and to one of the part of that deal was to feed them. So they somehow research got in touch with the Germans and had learned about the chlorella, feeding their company, their people back in world war one. So with all the food that was sent over to Japan, somehow they included chlorella. I don't know where it came from, but anyways, there you go. Now, what was interesting is not only did the chlorella, because it still has 60% protein feed the Japanese, they found out the people that got healed from the radiation. This is back in 1948. And so when the world war II was over and I have the documents to prove it there were the the Rockefeller Institute spent four years researching chlorella algae and decided it was the answer to everything.

Catharine (00:43:58):
And and they start and they built a a pilot plant ironically here in Boston, which is where I'm based to try to grow from ASCA assumption, but they only gave it a year and after year they shut it down. And, and then the Japanese say, well, if you're not going to pursue this chlorella stuff, we will. And this was, so this was back in 1950. So all the research was sent over to Japan and took them 10 years to figure out how to grow chlorella for mass consumption. And that is why the entire chlorella industry started. That's an, that's what it was because the Japanese had been healed from the radiation from Fukushima, from, with the chlorella. And after chlorella started being grown for mass consumption. And the industries for chlorella is still based in Japan, but it's now grown into Taiwan and India and China.

Catharine (00:44:52):
And also then the spirulina started being grown, but they don't grow spirulina in Japan, interestingly enough. But so that's why the radiation issue is documented. It's on solid footing with the radiation because it's been used ever since the forties for, for that purpose. So there's lots and lots of others. And the United nations, they fed the chlorella to people after the Chernobyl again, for the same reason to pull out the radiation. So now chlorella, what you need to understand is that not only does it pull out the toxins it has itself it's loaded with 40 vitamins and minerals. So it does not pull out other minerals. It only pulls out toxins if you use activated charcoal as it to pull a toxic that pulls out everything that pulls out all minerals and that's can run into some problems. You don't want to do that. So I think chlorella is far safer because it only pulls out toxins. And the reason why it pulls that alcohol is cause when you, when you consume alcohol and I could find the chart, or there are article your body converts the alcohol into different toxins. And it's those toxins, the the the chlorella is detecting. I call chlorella intelligent food because it knows what to do in your body and you have to be intelligent to take it.

Catharine (00:46:23):
And you know, I really hope one day we're a much bigger company and I can do more. I can fund these kinds of studies. Most of these studies are done in Asia. Well, actually that's not true, India. There are done everywhere else. There's some here in America, I have access to about 2000 of them. As I mentioned, there's a hundred thousand, but I have links to NIH, pub med, you know, at least two, maybe 3000 articles. So I don't say anything publicly or on our website anywhere if I don't have the science to back it up. So and just on that note I'm constantly looking for new stuff. And about a couple of weeks ago, there was a great article that came out. The pharmaceutical department at the university of Pittsburgh has developed a nose spray that prevents COVID guess what the active ingredient is in the nose spray. It's algae. Now it's still going through clinical trials and it's not going to be available until the end of the year or early next year. So I I'm telling people why wait for the nose spray when you can take algae. Now

Logan (00:47:33):
You don't need to share.

Catharine (00:47:35):
Yeah, it just comes to our website, energy bits.com and you're locked and loaded, but it's just a confirmation that there's more and more awareness about algae. And in fact, I just got an art, a publication in the mail. It's actually for a beauty, it's a quarterly beauty. And there were four pages about algae being used in creams. You know, there's very expensive creams like Lemaire that have used algae for 20 years. But I tell people why cheat the rest of your body. If you put a cream on your face, only your skin on your face is getting the benefits of the algae. If you, if you ingest it that that's going into your blood, that's circulating everywhere. Not just your face is going everywhere. So people are always stunned when they find a hole. I am cause I'm, I'm a much older than people think. And it's because, Hey, I've been taking LT for the last 10 years.

Logan (00:48:31):
Yeah. Yeah. I think that's important. Cause trying to create a model for health it's, you know, the inputs and the output and something like the LG is, has tremendous nutrients coming in, but also helping with the detoxification at the same time. So that's why it's like such a good foundation.

Catharine (00:48:48):
Yeah. And I don't think people understand that, you know, up until about 50 years ago, we didn't have this kind of toxic load in our environment. I think there's something like 200,000 chemicals that have been released into our world since world war two. So that's like since the fifties and when they study a new toxin or chemical or whatever they did in isolation, they don't look at it as the one more on the layering of toxins that are already there. And so it's like right now, we're all like, we're like buckets with holes in them, air a boat with a hole in them and we're trying to stay afloat. But if you don't, but you can't make much headway, if you don't get, cause every day we get more toxins. And yet there's the, the, the load that we've had for, from the years of living are still there.

Catharine (00:49:39):
So you need to get rid of what's there and then you need to plug the hole. So you have, you know, plugging the holes is avoiding certain things, but there's some stuff that you can't avoid. I mean, if you live in LA or, you know, there's air pollution and there's, you know, even if you eat organic food, there's still contamination from glyphosate. And even if you wear only organic cotton clothing, there's still, you know, you can't live in a bubble, you go into buildings. And so it's, it's becoming informed as the credit is the big issue here, not becoming obsessed, just informed and, and finding simple ways like algae that will help fill, plug those holes, whether they're nutritional holes or helping you remove toxins, if it's complicated. And you know, there's a, you know, there's a lot of the biohacking community that we work with and they go to the cryotherapy and not everyone's near a cryotherapy, it's expensive and it's kind of cool, but you know, we're, I'm trying to reach out to the average person and try to help the average person manage their way through this complicated world.

Catharine (00:50:48):
We've created for ourselves with simple solutions. LG is a single cell organism. Okay. It's as simple as it gets. It was also the first life on earth. You cannot get any lower on the food chain, then algae. And it was created by mother nature and she's knows she's a smart cookie. She's the one that made our blood look like chlorophyll. And by the way, speaking of mother nature and mothers in general, I did an analysis. I saw that the nutrient profile of mother's breast milk is almost identical to spirulina the same amino acids in the same proportions. And I decide now think of spirulina as, you know, mother earth, breast milk for us. You can't obviously have breast milk after the age of two or three, but you can have spirulina every day.

Logan (00:51:42):
Well, time has really flown by here. I did. Can we really briefly, because obviously there are other companies, but the, the quality standards, like some have experienced chlorellas or spirulinas that have like a fishy smell or taste compared to yours, like very clean, I enjoyed chewing the tablets myself. And I do say chlorella is better than spirulina for that, but yeah. Could you just speak to that briefly? I guess?

Catharine (00:52:08):
Absolutely. yeah, they're, they're like my children, I hate to say anything bad about spirulina, but you know, swallowing is probably the better choice. So here's the situation. I wasn't planning on building a company. I just wanted to help my sister. And then I learned a little bit more and I thought, well, I can help a few more people. And, and there, I taught nutrition for a year, not even charging. And then I, then I stumbled across algae and I thought, man, this needs to get out to the world. So the reason I tell you that is because every step along the way in building this company that I wasn't planning on building the first place has been done with the decision to help people. So I'm not a big, you know, pharmaceutical supplements company trying to make a fast dollar. I just want to help people.

Catharine (00:52:57):
So I do nothing else and we sell nothing else except allergy. So we're experts on algae. And that being said we all the, you know, the strains of algae we use are higher quality than most people. We grow it in triple filtered, spring mountain water. So because which is important because algae will absorb whatever's in the water. And lots of, you know, if you go to, if you go to target or whole foods, though, I can promise you almost everything came from China. And there's not the same attention to detail or quality because they probably sell 500 or a thousand other supplements. It's impossible for them to spend the same kind of time or detail that we do. So it's the higher strain, high quality, clean water. We don't use high heat to dry it. This is important because heat kills enzymes. So we, aren't interested in getting the market fast, like everybody else.

Catharine (00:53:53):
So our enzymes are intact and also heat destroys some of the nutritional value. This is why I don't recommend supplements because they use high heat. And so that's why the numbers are so high on those supplements because they know you're only going to absorb about 5% of it. Algae is food, so no high heat. So you get all the enzymes and tact. Al spirulina is both of them are still raw food. Spirulina is considered a live food. And then we, when we dry them into these little tablets, we don't use any binders, no fillers, nothing. I've got pictures of other companies, who've got ground up, rocks mixed up with their algae. So that's why, you know, it's cheaper. Cause the high algae's expensive, certainly ours is then we package it in what's called UV protected bags so that the sunlight can't get in, cause that would pull out the chlorophyll, not everybody's is excuse me, as careful as that.

Catharine (00:54:46):
And then we package it here at an FDA approved location and we do third party lab tests. Cause we don't sell through. I chose not to sell through CVS and GNC because I'm not interested in that kind of distribution right now. I want to educate people first. So we only sell through our website energy butts.com. You can also buy them on Amazon, but we sell primarily through doctors, functional medicine, chiropractors, nutritionists, and they recommend and sell. They literally prescribe our algae to their patients. So they needed to see for sure that there were no toxins that the nutrients were exactly what we say they are. So we do all these third party lab tests. We even test for neurotoxins, which of course there are none because it's so carefully grown and packaged. And I don't know anybody else that does that. So so while I, you know, a large bag of our tablets is $120, although we have a 20% discount code for your listeners lost empire that works on everything all the time.

Catharine (00:55:55):
So it brings it down to 96. What I want people to understand is that that's really high value food. Remember there's 551 pounds of vegetables equivalent, you know, in a bag of the algae tablets. And if you were to buy 551 pounds of vegetables, that the average cost of $3 a pound for organic, because ours has grown organically, that's $1,500. So it's like, plus not to mention all the time of shopping, carrying them, home, cooking, cleaning, and your kids probably won't even eat it. So this way it's very efficient nutrition. And so it's, and there's nothing else in it. It's as clean. It's probably the purest, cleanest food you'll ever put in your body. We have people telling us they muscle tested it and we always pass the muscle test and your body knows intuitively what's good for it or not. And if you don't know how to muscle test go online and learn about it. There's different techniques. You can do it yourself. You can get someone to do it for you. Some people need more of the spirulina, some more of the chlorella, some, both. So it's, but I I'm Stan, I'm very proud of the quality cause I don't know how to do it any differently. I, you know, that's kind of just who I am. And I'm also

Logan (00:57:12):
Important when you, when you start with sort of like a, a personal reason or your sister, like you want the best stuff for yourself and for your family, right. It's, it's where people don't start for those reasons. They're looking for a quick buck that yeah. Things start to go downhill.

Catharine (00:57:27):
Well, you know, I tell people I don't even pay myself and I haven't for 10 years, if I have any, any money from the company, I, I just spend it on the company to do something more or we do research or we pay our team more. I'm hoping to be a positive influence in the world and do research and have an educational center teaching people I'd like to start a school, the LG Academy sort of what bum they've they've Asprey did with you know, with his Bulletproof coffee. He has certifications with algae is going to change. The world is already changing it. You just don't know it because you're not in it like I am, but you know Reebok launched a running shoe last year. It was all made of plants. The liner was made of algae.

Catharine (00:58:17):
Why? Because algae kills bacteria Gortex just launched an entire clothing line all based on algae. Why? Because it's the most, ecofriendly sustainable crop in the world. There's like Unilever just invested in a company in the UK. That's making packaging out of algae. Why? Because they w for condiments and, you know, juices water bottles, because you can either, once you finish your water bottle, you can eat the bottle if you want. Or it will self destruct in anywhere in 20, in, within 25 or 30 days. Cause it's so has no negative carbon footprint it's been used in Italy, in pastas. It's been, it's put in foods everywhere in Asia, by the way, in Japan, they have the lowest cancer rates, the best longevity great skin and hair. They even had very, very low COVID rates and, and LG builds your immune system naturally because it has all the immune support nutrients, your body needs. So so I mean it just, you know, the stuff that's happening with algae is exciting to me and I love to share it. And you know, it's just that you know, a lot of people just aren't aware of it. So that's what I try to do is just educate people. I'm not weird and algae's not weird is, and I tell people also, LG, isn't new, it's just new to you. It's well-documented long time used in other countries and we're just trying to help people understand it.

Logan (00:59:49):
Yeah. I think what you said there, that's the oldest living organism in the world and lowest on the food chain that, that if you understand things that says a whole lot right there. So I've known about algae for years been taking it on and off, but this definitely made me quite a bit more excited about it. Thank you very much, Catherine. This was great.

Catharine (01:00:08):
You're very welcome. And, and again if people want to come to our website, the energy bits.com and use the, you'll see a coupon box, lost amp put lost empire in there. And if you're not ready to buy a full bag, remember the spirulina are, there's two brands, energy bits, and beauty bits are exactly same, just one's pink and one's blue. Then we have the chlorella, which is recovery that's. And we also offer a fourth brand called vitality bits, which is a blend of the two algae. And if you aren't ready to jump in and buy a whole bag, and I completely understand that don't worry about that. You can go to Amazon and you can buy little pouches that have 30 tablets, and it's only $4 each. So try it out for $4. If you have prime shipping, you get free shipping and then come back to the website and you can buy your bag with the discount code. There's a lot of science on our website about the COVID. I didn't get a chance to talk about that, but it is pretty powerful in terms of building your immune system and even helping you recover from it. And it's all science-based. So we're just trying to help people a be healthy, be do it in an easy way and three have a clean, safe source. And that would be us.

Logan (01:01:22):
That's great. That sums it up. It really, it is one of those foundational things and we all need more nutrients and we need help with detox. Like everyone needs that. So give these a try. I highly recommend it. And I don't say that a lot of companies out there, but the commitment to quality is very important. Thank you, Catherine.

Catharine (01:01:45):
Thanks Logan.