The Shocking Truth About Processed Foods | Dr. Bobby Price DSH #655

44m
Discover the shocking truth about processed foods in this eye-opening episode of the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly and special guest Dr. Bobby Price! πŸš€ Join the conversation as we delve into the hidden dangers lurking in your everyday meals. From the impact of food chemicals and processed ingredients to the surprising effects on your health, this episode is packed with valuable insights. Dr. Price shares his transformative journey from working with the FDA to uncovering the secrets of how processed foods affect our bodies. 🌿 Don't miss out on this enlightening discussionβ€”watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. πŸ“Ί Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! ✨

#FoodQuality #ProcessedFoodEffects #FoodTruth #PlantbasedDiet #MedicationAlternatives

CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro
00:40 - Intention and Purpose in Health
03:15 - Operating Within the System
04:35 - Causes of High Blood Pressure
07:13 - America's Food Banned in 30 Countries
10:28 - Journey to Okinawa
16:40 - Dietary Choices in Okinawa
20:08 - Supplements for Health
21:00 - Offsetting Modern Lifestyle
22:40 - Compromised FDA Regulations
24:15 - OICs Explained
28:40 - Medications as Temporary Solutions
31:30 - Effects of EMF on Health
34:50 - Impact of Microplastics
40:30 - Chemicals and Sexual Health
40:54 - Improving Water Quality
41:38 - Rising Male Depression Rates
43:10 - Achieving Your Highest Potential
44:15 - Thanks for Watching

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Transcript

To operate within the system sometimes

because you have all these things that are saying, all right, this is what I told, I taught you.

This is what I told you to do.

And then when you don't do it, these are the consequences.

Yeah.

And that must have been so frustrating with you because you would want to help these people, but you had to give them a certain prescription.

Trying to figure out how to how to tell them to do something

without incriminating themselves.

All right, guys, we got the Dr.

Bobby Price here today.

Gonna bust some food myths and some health myths.

Thanks for coming on, man.

Man, excited to be here.

I know we've been working on this for a while.

A while, almost a year.

Yeah.

Yeah,

finally here, man.

I'm glad to be here, man.

Absolutely.

Love your content.

Thanks, dude.

And your story from working for the FDA, pharmacy, to now being what you're doing now is crazy.

Yeah, it is.

It's not normal.

It's not normal.

You know why it's not normal?

Why?

The intention and the purpose.

See, what happens is, and this is just my personal opinion, is if your idea is to become a healthcare professional, a doctor, if that's your purpose, then you just become a doctor.

That's it.

And whatever is regurgitated is going to be regurgitated and indoctrinated.

But when your whole purpose was, I really want to help people.

I really want to heal people.

When you get to the end of the road and you become a doctor, but you're not actually healing people.

It's like, what am I here for?

Wow.

So that's what really changed the story so much is because every time I got to another pole, it was like, okay, I'm not serving purpose.

This isn't getting what I'm getting done, what I want to get done, right?

Yeah.

And I think it's hard for many people to make that transition because they spend their whole lives in education becoming a doctor.

Yep.

So now they realize a big part of their life is a lie.

Yep.

Not only is it a lie, but what's difficult about it is you've been indoctrinated 10 years.

So just think about it: four years of undergrad for me, two science degrees,

four years of graduate school, another year or two of residency.

That's 10 years.

Yeah.

10 years of indoctrination.

And those are prime years too.

Prime years, like your most impressionable years in terms of like you going from a child to an adult.

And I think what's also, when I say indoctrination, what I mean by that is when we come out of school and we go through residency and now we have to treat patients.

The difficult thing is that what people don't know is that it's literally a guideline to follow that says if this then this this this if you got hypertension and you're black and then you get this if you got diabetes and you your blood glucose is this level you get this so there's not a lot of thought process in it there's not a lot of creativity in figuring out what's going on specifically with this patient right so as a result of that that's what you do you'll notice that a lot of times when you go into a doctor they ask you a a couple of questions.

They type it into a system.

It regurgitates what they should get.

And the other thing is, there's a lot of good doctors out there, but the other thing is it opens you up to malpractice if you don't follow those guidelines.

Wow.

I know that.

So a lot of people don't understand that.

So it's very difficult to operate within the system sometimes because you have all these things that are saying, all right, this is what I taught you.

This is what I told you to do.

And then when you don't do it, these are the consequences.

Yeah.

And that must have been frustrating with you because you would want to help these people, but you had to give them a certain prescription.

Trying to figure out how to,

how to tell them to do something

without incriminating themselves.

Because like specifically for me, like I got diagnosed with high blood pressure when I was 16.

Damn, that's early.

Like, and I was an athlete, 7% body fat.

Great in football, great in basketball.

Went on to college to play basketball as well too.

But I got diagnosed when I was 16.

Lived with it for over a decade, finally become a healthcare professional in the hospital.

I'm taking medications in my late 20s.

Wow.

And essentially what happened was at that point is like, okay, I'm trying to give people advice.

I'm trying to tell people how to heal themselves, but I haven't healed myself yet.

And so that's when the journey actually started for me was like, all right, so how do I heal myself?

Because, you know, everybody, pretty much every other person who comes in here has high blood pressure.

Right.

So it's kind of ironic you're giving them advice and medication, right?

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

I felt like a hypocrite.

Yeah.

So did you find out what caused it?

Well, it was a lot of factors.

Like for me, I had a very, and we talked about it earlier, but I had a very troubling childhood.

You know, by the time I was 12 years old, I witnessed a friend kill another friend with a bat.

Damn.

You know, my best friend and cousin, he was killed in a police chase.

You know, I lost all of my grandparents by the time I was.

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I was 15.

Whoa.

And I was very much in love with my grandmother.

Like she was my backbone.

And so a lot of it was trauma.

like unresolved trauma.

But the other part was

this unhealthy sort of culture of food.

Right.

You know, and it's unfortunate, but like, especially, you know,

in the African-American culture, like our food kills us.

And when you look at the food that is in our neighborhoods, in underserved neighborhoods, it's mostly fast food restaurants.

But, you know, when you look at the grocery stores, like what's available?

It's not the same things that are available in good neighborhoods.

And so as a result of it, I was living there.

I was eating that.

And then I tipped those habits, you know, on to college or whatever.

But that was really the baseline and foundation of why I started to get hypertension.

It was a combination of unresolved trauma, but also eating essentially the standard American diet.

Right.

And that's one of the worst diets in the world, right?

Worse.

By far.

Like, and we're going to talk about this in a second, but America's food is banned in over 30 countries.

Jeez.

And I'm talking about some of the major food groups.

Chicken, banned in other countries.

Dairy, banned in other countries.

You know, pork, banned in other countries.

Corn, banned in other countries.

So when you start to go down our food list, our food is banned here.

And it's mostly because of how that food is processed, how those animals are treated.

And when I say treated, I'm not talking about do they get a pet on them or something like that.

I'm talking about what happens when they feed the animal.

Most of these animals are getting genetically modified corn and soy.

That's not what they're designed to eat.

You know, a lot of the animals are treated with a lot of arsenic are put in their feed like chickens rectopamine is put in the feed of uh pigs all to make them bigger and grow the fed antibiotics hormones so you start to see why our food is so you know uh toxic right you know and then you look at you know everything else on the shelf most of it has food chemicals in it you know thickening agents, emulsifiers, preservatives, red number three, red number 40, yellow number five, all of these things.

Nobody knows what they are.

But because I have a chemistry background, all of these things,

I have a definition for them.

As soon as I see them, I know what it's used for on the synthetic side of chemistry.

But it should never be used on the organic side of chemistry, which is us.

Right.

Yeah.

Yeah, those food dyes, man.

As a kid, you just eat those thinking it's just, you know, normal, but those are now proving to cause diseases.

Yeah, and not only diseases, but ADD, ADHD, we'll talk about this as well, but red number three and red number 40 also feminize young boys and men really well, too.

It lowers testosterone levels.

Not only lowers testosterone levels, but elevates estrogen in the body.

Wow.

And that's really important because we look at this stuff and we think to ourselves, well, they put the red number three and red number 40 in there to make it red, you know, to give it this appearance where it looks good.

Yeah.

Because if you take take the food chemicals out, the food not only doesn't look edible, but it doesn't taste that way either.

Oh, wow.

And, you know, and I lived in Japan for like four and a half years, and I would watch TV.

And one of the programs they had on there was that they would have like Japanese kids like taste testing American food and they would be eating like Pop-Tarts and be like, it tastes like cardboard.

But it's because our taste buds are so immature and so

they're sort of alignment with what processed food is because we grow up on that like that's the foundation of what most as a matter of fact if you look at somebody who's less than 25 years old for the most part if you live in america most people have grown up 70 of their diet has been processed food geez

that's a standard american diet 70 70

So when you were living in the blue zone, it was probably the opposite, right?

You were probably eating 80% natural.

Yeah, so I lived in Okinawa, Japan, and that was a,

how that experience came about was amazing because I had started my journey in the hospital and

finally got to a point where I healed myself of my high blood pressure.

I was 50 pounds overweight, sleep apnea, et cetera.

And then out of the blue, I realized that I wasn't going to be able to function within the system.

You know, I was.

having people who were coming up there, like asking me for like the natural prescription and all this kind of stuff.

And, you know, I just realized I wasn't going to be able to survive in the system.

And so I literally left my job and was trying to figure out what I was going to do.

And out of the blue, I get this opportunity to go to Okinawa, Japan.

And I had been reading a book called Ikigai, which means in Japanese to find your purpose in life.

And so when the opportunity came, I'm like, this is perfect because Okinawa is a blue zone.

And a blue zone is essentially one of the five zones in the world where people live the longest, that have

the highest amount of centenarians.

And so I'm like, this is a perfect opportunity.

I could actually see what it looks like to live a long life.

Now, at this time, I'm plant-based.

I had stopped eating meat, dairy, all animal products.

I didn't go there under the impression that...

the vast majority of their diet would be that because I was under the assumption that most Asian diets included a lot of fish, included a lot of this and that.

But when I get there, I find out that it's a blue zone.

And then not only that, I find out that there's a particular village in Okinawa called Ogami Village that has the highest amount of centenarians.

So it wasn't actually Okinawa itself.

It was this village.

Oh.

Okay.

And a lot of people don't know that.

And I think that's important to mention because...

What most people don't know about Okinawa too is it has a lot of military, American military bases there.

So as a result, a lot of influence in American culture has taken place in Okinawa as well, too.

Got it.

So now you're starting to see some of the fast food restaurants become popular.

But on the northern part of the island, in Ogemi Village, you don't see that.

You have people who are living the way they lived 50, 60 years ago.

And so I take an opportunity to go to one of the military libraries.

And I'm looking at what they were eating 50, 60 years ago after the war happened.

They had the highest amount of centenarians then as well, too.

So it wasn't a new thing.

And so at that point, it was like, all right, so let me go to the village and see what they're doing.

And I go there and I see people who are 90, 92, 105, still walking,

still gardening, you know, walking up hills, riding bikes.

having fluid conversations.

And as you know, here in America, when somebody's 80,

at that point, they probably had dementia.

They're in a wheelchair.

Exactly.

And so to see people who are strong, who are, like, I saw an 86-year-old man climbing a tree.

Wow.

And so, like, to see that for myself, I'm like, okay, so this is how you're supposed to be

when you live a good life.

And so watching their diet and I'm seeing what they're eating.

And I'm realizing that somewhere around 90 to 95% of their diets is plants.

And then a small percentage, 5% to 10%,

is a little bit of fish.

and then sometimes a little bit of pork, but they use the meat for flavoring.

They don't use it primarily for the meat as protein.

Right, right.

Like flavoring their vegetables.

And so, you know, watching their lifestyles, including herbs in their diets, including things like mugwort, turmeric,

including principles and philosophies that are also helpful as well, too, like harahachi bu,

which means eat only to 80%,

which is scientifically proven because when you get to like 80% full, your brain has a 20% lag time.

So it doesn't even know that it's full yet because there's a lag time between the brain and the gut.

Wow.

So when you get to 80%, guess what?

You're already full.

That's interesting.

And then when you eat to full, you're full, full.

Yeah.

So like learning those type of principles, learning things like how they interact in communities, how they'll have somebody who's 80 years old who is considered young in the village paired up with somebody who's 98 years old.

wow and they would be responsible for each other interesting you know so it was just a beautiful opportunity to see what we looked like our ancestors looked like maybe a hundred years ago not only in okinawa and the four other four blue zones but traditionally speaking that's how it looked because you go back maybe 60 years ago you go into a

a store because there were no supermarkets and there's no organic section because everything is organic.

You see what I'm saying?

Farmer's market, right?

Yeah, I mean, farmer's market directly to the farmer.

You know, like

the way we're eating today is totally different from the way our great-grandmother ate, our great-grandfather ate.

And so a lot of times what happens is people will say, well, my granddaddy smoked a pack of cigarettes.

Well, for about 40 years, he ate nothing but organic food.

No GMO.

GMO didn't come into place until the early 2000s.

You know, didn't have to worry about all these pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides.

Didn't have to worry about EMF coming from computers, TV, cell phones.

A lot of things that have happened in the last 30 years have shifted everything.

Yeah, the lifespan's dropping pretty rapidly, actually.

And not only lifespan, but quality of life.

Right.

Because people can live to 80.

But the last 20 years of their life, they may be in the home.

They got dementia.

They got type 1 diabetes.

They lose an arm, a limb, etc.

So, yeah, people are living to 80, but like the quality of life years are diminishing greatly.

Yeah, that's scary, man.

Yeah.

Are you still primarily vegetarian?

Well, I'm vegan.

Okay.

And so I use air quotes because the unfortunate thing is I think the vegan movement has been hijacked.

And a large percentage of the foods that people who are vegan are eating are vegan junk foods.

They're not eating plants.

And a lot of that

is because of the vegan movement itself was really a movement based on, you know, the protection of animals.

It wasn't necessarily for health.

That wasn't the basis of the movement.

And so as a result of that, there's no emphasis on health.

Does that make sense?

Yeah.

So I don't necessarily, so am I technically vegan?

Yes.

But I eat plants.

Got it.

You know what I'm saying?

So I think that's really important because at the end of the day, what I've learned learned is the most important thing is to eat real food.

It's not a matter of what label you want to put on yourself.

It's are you eating real food that is free of food chemicals, that is free of pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides, that has been picked properly, harvested properly, and grown properly.

Yeah.

So you don't shop at grocery stores?

I wouldn't say I don't shop at grocery stores, but when I do everything...

There's only a few things that I'm very particular about getting.

Got it?

Because I own a farm.

Yeah.

Oh, you do?

Yeah.

Oh, that's cool.

I own a tropical fruit farm.

And of course, I grow my own vegetables on there as well, too.

Nice.

So, you know, like a large percentage of my food and fruit is coming from my farm.

That's how it should be, right?

Everyone should have their own little community and have a farmer in there.

That's how it was.

Like, even

before

the Second World War, most people had

what we'll call gardens or victory gardens.

You know, that was a big thing during World War War II.

And what happened was during World War II was where all of the processed food, this is where processed foods began.

Because they were creating what are called MREs for the soldiers, food that could last a long period of time on the battlefield.

Because in World War I, what they learned was most soldiers died due to famine.

Wow.

A lack of food, a lack of nutrition.

You know,

something like...

a B vitamin deficiency could cause a condition like pellagora, you know, where somebody literally could go crazy.

And so a lot of times what they learned through that process was that, all right, so we got to figure out how to create some food that could be packaged, that could last for a long time.

And that's how processed foods were created.

And what happened was the technology was then given to the public.

And this was where fast food became the fast food that we know today.

You see what I'm saying?

So that's why for me, when I go into the grocery store, if I buy anything, it's going to be organic.

So if I, you know, let's say for instance, I'm short on

ginger root.

So I go get my ginger root, making sure it's organic.

Okay.

Maybe I go there because,

you know, I actually get my water delivered to me.

So I wouldn't go there for water.

Maybe I want to make a green juice or something, but everything I'm getting is going to be organic.

Got it.

You know, if it's not from there, I'm going to the farmer's market.

So I would say

80% of the time I'm at the farmer's market because everything I'm making is from whole ingredients yeah you know I'm saying it's quinoa it's fruits vegetables nuts and seeds that's awesome any supplements or medications you're taking well no medications supplements

my supplements are going to be herbal so I'll give you a for instance

because I travel so much and most people don't understand how much radiation you're getting when you're on the plane right it's really important that you do things to sort of break even on that.

And so for me, I'm making sure I always have some sea moss with me, some sea moss gel.

Okay.

That helps with the radiation?

Well, it's not the radiation that's very important.

It's gut health.

You know, so with radiation, I'm doing things like medicinal mushrooms.

That's the most important thing when it comes to something like that.

So medicinal mushrooms like rishi, like turkey tail, like lions me,

those type of things.

Yeah, I heard even the machines you walk through and put your arms like this is terrible for you.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So, you know, I'm just trying to, I'm always doing things to make sure like I'm offsetting things that because I live in the modern world, they're just unavoidable.

Yeah.

You know,

I use a cell phone.

You know, I get on the plane.

You know, I got to breathe the same air that you breathe.

Yeah.

You know, like I have a filter that filters my whole house in terms of the water, but again, it's filter water.

It doesn't get everything.

It gets maybe 95% of things.

It gets a large percentage of the chloride, a large percentage of the chloramine, some of the heavy metals out, but it doesn't get everything.

You know, so for me, when I'm supplementing, I'm supplementing based upon what my needs are.

But most of those supplements are going to be in the form of some type of herb or some type of superfood.

That water filter was a game changer for me, man.

I just got one last week, and my showers feel way better.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

And that dry skin goes away.

You know, I was telling people:

we don't understand how polluted our water is here today either.

There's chlorine in there.

There's chloramine in there.

There's heavy metals in there.

We know that because of what happened in Flint, Michigan.

You know,

there's pharmaceuticals in there as well too.

They find a large percentage of birth control in the municipal water as well too.

So I think a lot of people are just unaware of how poison our food system is here in the U.S.

Like it's it's poison from the top down.

Yeah, people will be drinking top water at restaurants.

I'm like, you're crazy.

Yeah, yeah.

And again, it's just about what's public knowledge.

And I think it's also about

people under the impression that there are agencies that are designed to protect us.

And people are under the impression that they're actually doing their best job to protect us.

I definitely was.

I thought the FDA was here to help and you were working there, right?

So you got first-hand view of what that was like.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And

again, I go to the FDA thinking to myself,

man, one day I'll probably be able to create the miracle drug that helps with cancer.

You know, I'll be a product part of that process.

That's the intention.

But then you go there, you find out, okay, you're sitting in the drug meetings, you're listening to the approvals, and you're realizing that

this isn't what I thought it was.

And then you find out, I found out, actually, while I was there, that 70% of the funding for the FDA comes from pharmaceutical companies.

And you find out things like if somebody has a drug application, they can pay $350,000 and rush that drug application.

So there's a lot of things you start to find out and you're starting to witness and you're seeing them pass laws to say, okay, it's okay to have genetically modified foods.

And then you're seeing other countries say, no, they're banned.

And you're seeing them say, okay, it's okay to have this type of stuff in the water, like for instance, atrazine.

but other countries have banned it and you realize that our system is loose and the people who are supposed to be protecting us are not doing that they're compromised they're compromised yeah money yeah ozempic's everywhere right now and i don't know the long-term effects of that we'll see yeah you know what's crazy is so i get a lot of questions about that because

on one side of the equation it helps a lot of people lose weight yeah you know you've seen all the movie stars and personalities like elon musk who swear by it oh he does yeah there was a report that he used those Zimpic or Rogovi which whichever one holy that's surprising to me yeah wow yeah and but what people people never read the fine print there is no drug that does not have side effects right it just doesn't exist and so that's why every time you're in the in the middle of a commercial or

middle of programming what you'll notice is is that

probably 50% of the commercials are pharmaceutical drug commercials.

And what you'll see is this very brief period where people are smiling and excited and happy about getting the drug.

And then the rest of the commercial is rifling off all of these side effects.

And people just don't believe.

I don't know if it's the people don't believe the side effects.

Because when you go and pick it up at the pharmacy, the pharmacist is supposed to tell you about them.

But I just think people are so enamored with the idea there's a pill for every ill.

And so I think it's the same thing with

these drugs like Ozempic.

Most people think that they can get something for nothing.

It just doesn't work like that.

And I think that people

believe that I lost weight.

This is going to make me healthier.

And losing weight is probably one of the greatest things you can do for your health.

But there are factors that come with losing weight.

Most people, when they lose weight, it's because they change how they eat and they change how they move with exercise.

So the true benefits comes from the change in the lifestyle, but you're getting weight loss without having to do any of those things.

When you eat healthy foods, you're getting a huge amount of nutrients.

When you're doing exercising, you're getting an increase of blood flow.

You're getting an increase of endorphins.

The list goes on and on, all of the benefits from those things.

The weight loss is just a good side effect of the good behavior.

But with this drug, you're not getting that.

So what you're seeing is a lot of people are taking the drug,

which was initially used for diabetic patients.

That's the label use for it.

And what they noticed was people was actually losing weight.

And so when it first came out, a lot of diabetics couldn't even get the drug because so many other people were taking it for weight loss.

Wow.

But

the thing is, when you take the drug, you lose weight, but you have to take it indefinitely.

As soon as you stop taking it, you start to gain weight back.

And you can't take a drug like that indefinitely.

You just can't do it.

First of all, it's not

economically feasible for you to do it.

I think it costs about $1,000 a month.

Holy crap.

Yeah.

In Canada, it's $155.

And in Germany, it's $59 per month.

So ask yourself why an American drug costs more in America, costs less in other countries.

That's a whole nother

podcast.

That whole topic.

But people forget about the side effects.

The side effects range from everything from gastroparesis, which is a paralysis of the stomach.

So your stomach doesn't function well,

which is a very important thing.

This is why so many people have digestive issues.

It affects your gallbladder, it can cause gallstones.

It could also cause your gallbladder to be inflamed.

And this is probably why one of the contributing reasons why gallbladder removal surgery is the number one elective surgery.

Wow.

People will remove their gallbladders and don't even think about it, but they don't think about what the consequences of removing something that is actually necessary.

You know, so that's another side effect.

A lot of people have a lot of diarrhea as well too.

So there's a whole list of side effects that people quite often don't think about, increasing certain cancers as well too that people aren't thinking about but they're thinking about the weight loss

and they're getting the weight loss with no work put in and I and it's my position that

if you manipulate your biochemistry you do nothing for your health if you correct your biochemistry that's when you actually achieve health.

And unfortunately, most drugs are designed to manipulate your biochemistry.

The example that I give people is you can, it could be time for an oil change, right?

And then that light comes on that says time for oil change.

And let's say it's time to get your, you know, vehicle registration and you got to get that fixed first, but you don't have time.

You can go under the hood and take the battery cable off.

It'll reset the car.

You can go get your tag now, right?

It doesn't mean that you don't still need an oil change.

And for me, that's what drugs do.

It can help you in terms of like manipulating your biochemistry, but it doesn't correct it.

And what's dangerous about that is most people who have a heart attack or a stroke are on their meds when they have a heart attack or stroke.

It's not people who are not taking their medications.

So what that's telling us is that despite the fact that your numbers may be quote unquote normal, It means that the cause is still there.

You're just addressing the symptoms.

The hypertension, the high number is just a symptom.

The obesity is just a symptom.

It's not the actual cause or the root issue that is happening.

So you got to address the root issue.

Yeah, people are just putting a band-aid on it, right?

They're putting a band-aid on it.

It's a deeper wound.

And a big part of fixing that is diet, like you mentioned earlier with your story.

Lifestyle.

Diet is just one component of lifestyle.

And what I mean by that is you can correct your diet, but if you're sedentary, you don't move.

We're designed to move.

And up until maybe the 1950s, most jobs were manual labor, and many of them were outside.

So, we were moving constantly throughout the day.

And not only that, most people were outside, so they were getting exposure to the sun as well today.

But when you look today,

people wake up, get in their cars, travel to their work, go into a covered parking garage,

walk across a covered

platform into their job, sit there for eight hours, and then repeat the process back home.

And so when you look at most people's lifestyle, that's how it looks.

And that's not what we're designed to do.

I mean, when you look at human history, that just occurred in the last few seconds of human history.

Processed foods, sedentary lifestyle.

pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, chemicals in our foods, EMF coming from our cell phones, computers, radiation.

That literally just happened in the last second of human existence.

So you got to understand, we don't even know what the impact of all this is going to happen, not only to us right now, but to the following generations as well, too.

For real.

They're saying that EMF from phones can potentially cause cancer down the road.

Yeah, it does.

And they've noticed that.

People who, what they'll notice is if somebody constantly uses their phone to their left,

and they start to get some sort of cancer, it'll be on that left side right now.

Wow.

So it tells you that, I mean,

it tells you that there's an impact there but nothing has been changed I mean they didn't have any problems with rolling out 5g but this it's like that in every aspect of American culture like

you know they just send the guard home you know nobody's there to protect nobody's there to answer to why is it that we're subsidizing foods that are killing us and then all the foods that are good for us, like green leafy vegetables, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds, you don't see a subsidy for it.

You don't see a commercial for it.

You don't see the USDA having a commercial for, you know, a salad,

avocado.

You never see those kind of commercials.

But you see them for beef.

You see them for dairy.

Because those are the industries that are literally propping up the government and paying all the money for lobbying.

Right, because big food and big pharma, they're in bed together.

They're in bed.

And just think about that.

I tell people the most radical thing that you could do is become healthy

because it breaks down the entire SIM system that is pitted against us.

When you become healthy, just think about it like this, less doctor visits, okay?

That means that now 800-bed hospital probably goes to 100-bed hospital.

When you become healthy, that insurance that you're paying $400 a month for for your family, now it's like, why would I pay that amount of money when everybody is healthy?

So now you're paying maybe $50 for it.

You know, when you become healthy, now the pharmaceutical industry

goes down.

You don't need their drugs.

You know, when you become healthy, all of a sudden, the food industry that is making the food that is actually killing you, now that food industry becomes obsolete.

So that's why I tell people, all of these industries that are literally taking away seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months of our lives, all of these systems go void as soon as you start voting with your dollars and buying food and living a lifestyle that is actually conducive to you actually being healthy.

Absolutely.

Yeah, instead of fighting them with money, we should just not fight it at all and just go out on our own.

Yeah, yeah.

Start literally, start purchasing food from a farmer who actually has philosophies and practices that are in line with you being healthy, with the food, the kind of food that they grow and the way that they grow it.

Yeah.

You know, like instead of you saying, when I get a headache, I'm going to go get Tylenol or et cetera, you just simply drink more water because you're probably dehydrated.

Like these, when we start to vote with our dollars like that, they can't help but make a different decision as a company.

Yeah.

Because now they're not getting the money.

What's your take on microplastics?

Man, it's unfortunate, but again, it's another new invention.

This is something

you go back 50, 60, 60 years ago, very little use.

But now it's everywhere.

It's wrapped on our foods.

You know, microplastics are also

being used in every aspect of everything we buy.

When we buy something, it's wrapped in plastic.

When we drink water, it's in plastic.

Plastic is literally everywhere.

And now it's been filled up in the ocean.

So a lot of the fish are filled with microplastics as well, too.

And what people don't know about these plastics that are being used is

they're not only

an issue in terms of like an environmental issue, but a lot of these plastics are carcinogenic and disrupt our hormone system and our bodies as well too.

Scary, man.

Super scary because

most

people

They they store their food in plastic.

Yeah.

You know, so like think about that for a second

When you buy a bottle of water, and in this case, you don't, you got glass, so you don't have to worry about that.

But the reason why a bottle of water has a date on it, because water doesn't go bad, the plastic goes bad.

And as it starts to go bad, it leaches into the water.

So this is why you see a lot of water bottles that say BPA-free.

Right.

Because BPA or bisphenol A is one of those microplastics that disrupt your hormones,

particularly in men, but also women as well too.

So now you're seeing a lot of hormonal issues as well too.

And when you think about men, and I think we'll talk about it in a second, but like this new feminization of men,

this isn't a new term.

This is something that has been put out there for quite some time.

And it's been put out there quite some time because what we've noticed is that there's been this trend of men's not only sperm count, but testosterone levels dipping.

Right.

Dipping.

If you go back to 1990, the average testosterone was around about 500.

You go to the

2000s, average testosterone is probably about 400.

And today, it's around about 300.

Holy crap.

Now, here's the comparison I want to give you.

We can go back and look at our paleoancestors and look at the bone structures and things of that nature.

And most of them are walking around with a testosterone level between 1,000 and 1,500.

Dang.

And what people don't don't understand about testosterone, especially as a man,

it makes up who you are.

And what I mean by that is when your testosterone levels are low, your motivation and your ambition are low.

Okay, and what do we see today?

A lot of men who are low in ambition, low in get up and go, right?

Yeah.

When you think about

one of the biggest complaints that I get from men is erectile dysfunction.

Yep.

Low testosterone.

Low sexual desire.

Low testosterone.

Man boobs.

Low testosterone.

And guess what?

Estrogen lowers testosterone.

And the unfortunate thing about these microplastics, they are fake estrogens, xenoestrogens, synthetic estrogens.

And they're everywhere in the environment.

They're not just in plastics, but they're in our soaps.

So when you look on your soap and you see alkylphenol or phenol anything that's a micro that's a microplastic slash endocrine disruptor wow that increases estrogen in the body crazy sampoos and soaps pyrabins and phthalates both of these increase estrogen in the body when you think about some of the herbicides the second leading herbicide used in the US is atrazine

Now the interesting thing about atrazine is that they've done studies on it and they've done the studies in frogs.

And what they noticed is that when they put a frog in a bat of water that had about 200 nanograms per liter of the atrazine, the herbicide that is sprayed on all grains, they were able to convert, that frog was converted to a, that male frog converted into a female frog.

What?

Now that's 200 nanograms.

per liter.

Yeah.

You know what's allowed in tap water?

How much?

The EPA allows 3,000 nanograms per deciliter.

I mean, per liter.

So you can see what I'm saying.

Like that's increasing estrogen in the body as well too.

And people are showering in it.

People bathing in it.

Bathing in it.

So just think about that.

When you take a bath, you're literally soaking up all of that.

Like you're soaking up the chlorine.

You're soaking up the chloramine, the lead.

the potential mercury.

Like I mentioned before,

EE2, which is an estrogen that comes from birth control, also in there as well, too.

Wow.

The atrazine that is running off in the water, I think they found atrazine in about 40% of all tap water.

So you can see what happens is the long-term exposure to this over the course of time

to males is starting to shift the population in terms of like what we look like.

how we respond in our personality

and in many cases our sexuality too.

Wow, no wonder that movement's so powerful right now then.

Yeah, yeah.

It definitely has a contributing factor.

And what people just don't know is not just males that it's affecting, it's also affecting females as well too.

Because as their estrogen levels rise, you're also seeing an increase in breast cancer as well too and all the reproductive cancers.

Wow.

So it's not just on one side of the equation that it's affecting people.

It's affecting the entire population.

I wonder if there's a fix for the water issue because atrazine's in it.

Is there a way to remove it at all?

Well,

one of the fixes is you definitely got to get a water filter for the whole house.

Now, if you live in an apartment, you won't be able to do that.

But you can do a filter at the point.

So you can do a filter for your kitchen.

You can do a filter for your shower.

You can do a filter for the bathtub.

You can filter at the point.

And reverse osmosis filters are some of the best ones to get.

But when you get your filter, you need to figure out what is it filtering out.

And you also can test the water before you get the filter and then after you get the filter test the water again so you can kind of know where you're at yeah but this is a big issue and the reason why it's a big issue and

it's so personal for me is because i see a lot of young men who are depressed

and in 2022 we saw the largest increase of suicide in males ever damn the record high in 2022.

And one of the things that happens when your testosterone is low is depression.

And men commit suicide at a rate four times that of women.

So it's a real huge issue for us.

And I say it's an us issue, not a male or a female issue.

It's an us issue because these are fathers, sons, you know, uncles, etc.

And at the end of the day,

I think the largest population of men who are committing suicide were those who are under 50, the the age of 50.

Wow.

So it's important for us to know and understand,

especially in a culture where I believe that our culture doesn't make room for men to express themselves emotionally.

Because we're taught from like a little boy, when we fall down, we start crying, stop crying, be a big boy.

We're taught, even as men, when there's a problem, we start talking about it, you're being emotional.

So we don't even have a culture to support us in that way, let alone the food culture, the environmental toxin culture that we're having as well today.

100%.

So many guys are scared to open up.

Yeah.

Yeah, it's a major issue.

Doctor, it's been really enlightening.

Anything you want to close off with or promote?

Man, I just think

I hope and I wish for people to really take their health serious.

I believe that the highest version of you is the heal version of you.

And we have to heal ourselves not only from a lifestyle standpoint, but from a trauma standpoint as well too, from a mental and a spiritual standpoint as well too and I hope that people understand that in the culture that we live in here in the US which is now spreading to other cultures as well too

that the greatest advocate you have for yourself will only be yourself you are your first doctor your doctor can't even help you until they ask you questions about you tell me what's going on what are the symptoms so you should be doing that checkup for yourself every day

and so if people need natural options

you know, that's pretty much what I provide.

And, you know, give them different ways to look at how they can heal themselves through food, through herbal medicine, through being in nature, etc.

Amazing.

We'll link all your stuff below.

Thanks so much for coming on, man.

I appreciate you, brother.

Yeah, thanks for watching, guys.

We'll link everything below if you want to reach out.

Otherwise, see you tomorrow.