All Posts by Dr. Jeff

Tracking Down the Origin of the Wuhan Coronavirus

I watch CNN, I watch Fox, I watch CBS, and in this case there's a lot of things not being said. It almost certainly is a recombination event that was laboratory driven. This is just the essential nature of Chinese communism. Chinese communism is evil. Every person that harms is directly attributable to the Chinese communist party.

I began looking into the origin of the now widely known Corona virus in early February. That's time in the mid, the Hong Kong protest, the Taiwan elections in the us, China trade. My name is Joshua Phillip. I'm an investigative reporter at the epoch times in New York, writing about the Chinese communist parties, programs of espionage and unconventional warfare for well over a decade. Videos and messages from Chinese citizens leaking through the censorship suggested the situation was much worse than what the Virgin was reporting. As my research progress initial answers turned into more questions. I soon realized there was much more to the story than we were being told. Today the corona virus is impacting over a hundred countries around the world. Billions of lives are ruins and from what is said by the Chinese communist party. This allegedly started spontaneously in the seafood market in Wuhan China.

Wuhan is the capital of Hubei province, the largest city in central China. Wuhan seafood market is located in Jianghan district of Wuhan city. There's a large comprehensive market that includes pork and a variety of frozen seafood flavored spices as well as some game meats. The first thing that received public attention about the epidemic was an internal notice from the Wuhan health commission. There has been a continuous occurrence of pneumonia cases of unknown thoughts. The notice issued on December 30 2019 clearly required all medical units to report similar cases of unknown pneumonia. The notice started spreading online and on December 31st, 2019 the Wuhan health commission issued a public notice for the first time saying that some medical institutions found a link between the pneumonia cases and the Huanhan sea food market. However, the notice pointed out that there was no evidence of obvious human to human and no infection among medical personnel.

On January 1st, 2020 the Huanhan seafood market posted a notice of closure. This was followed by a thorough clean up of the market, which as an investigative reporter seemed rushed. One he, a well known Hong Kong expert echoed my concern that the move was like destroying the crimes. Since then, Wu Han officials have repeatedly said that most cases of pneumonia in Wuhan have a history of exposure to the Huanhan seafood market. On January 26 the Institute of virology of China CDC announced that 33 of the 585 environmental samples from the Huanhan seafood market were found to contain the novel Corona virus, nucleic acid, and the virus was successfully isolated from the positive culture samples suggesting that the virus originated from wild animals sold at the market.

At this point, Huanhan seafood market being the source of the epidemic became an official conclusion. A few days later, however, a report from the journal science published online challenged that story. The report cited a paper in the Lancet, one of the world's top medical journals and questioned whether Wuhan's novel, Coronavirus pneumonia, did not have originated at the market. The paper titled clinical features of patients infected the 2019 novel coronavirus in Wuhan China was published in the Lancet on January 24th the first author of the paper is Long Chow Lin, deputy director of Jing Huanhan hospital. The first designated hospital for treatment of unknown pneumonia in Yuan. Why would this come as a challenge to the official narrative?

I think that this journal article is very important to review a lot of important inflammations or you dump all these. Lets talk about the first patient onset, what's actually on December 1st. These patients not related to Huanhan sea food market. And also no any article association was found between the first patient and subsequent patient. And then also on these paper would talk about on December 10th there was three more onset cases, two are which were not related to Huanhan sea food market wholesale. Major discoveries there are a total of 41 patients were counted in his paper and 14 of them proved to be unrelated to the seafood market. A counting for more than one cert, no one sounds a bet at the seafood market to, and the official from CDCs did a mention they'd find Andy bets in a sea food market too.

Certainly the Lancet paper showing that suppose it patients zero was nowhere near the market. Secondly, that there are no bats in the seafood market or anywhere close. The idea of this spread so fast through a population. Just the way it was said through the seafood market is highly unlikely and improbable.

On January 29th the Lancet republishes an analysis of 99 confirmed cases at Jinyintan hospital of which 50 had no history of exposure to the seafood market. According to the new England journal of the 425 cases, confirm 45 cases onset before January. First had no history of exposure to the seafood market. Notably the authors of the two lands at papers in the new England journal of medicine or doctors and medical experts in mainland China. Daniel Lucey an epidemiologist of the university of Georgetown said in response to the Lancet paper that if the data were accurate, the first case would have been infected by the virus already in November, 2019 because of the incubation period between infection and symptoms, this would mean that the virus was quietly spreading between people in some parts of Wuhan before the cluster of cases with a history of exposure. The Huanhan seafood market began in December 15. The first expert group from the national health commission arrived in Wuhan as early as December 31st, 2019 the expert panel established a set of diagnostic criteria after investigating Jinyintan hospital of Wuhan that stipulated a history of contact with Huanhan seafood market.

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The Truth About The Coronavirus Madness

We live in fear of that person who coughed right next to you or the person down the street that doesn't look that well. "Oh my God, I got to stay away from them!". Every year, about 1% of the population will die from every flu that comes up every year! It's no different than flu; it's just a bad flu! It's dangerous, except for this; it can be treated!

The coronoavirus is a flu virus. And they want to say It's not the flu! And I go, look; a flu has a range of symptomology. You've experienced that range yourself. With some flus you don't even know you already had the flu. The immune system takes it and runs with it so fast that it eliminates the symptoms even before they manifest. You may had flus in the past and didn't even know you had it because the active immune system would eliminate it.

First of all, let's understand something: what is flu and what is cold season all about? There are numbe of different viruses, rhinoviruses and coronaviruses that annually show up every year and bring us all the symptoms of a flu or a cold. The viruses that affect the respiratory system, where the air is coming in and going out. Air's coming in and going out, are viruses that actually replicate at temperatures below body temperature. Whena virus of this cold nature infects a cell, it doesn't replicate it 98.6 at 37 degrees. That's too warm.

So basically, if the temperature drop a couple of degrees, then the virus kicks in so the virus doesn't operate at body temperature; it operates at a colder than body temperature. That's why flu season is associated with winter. The average person is going to have flu symptoms that range from I didn't even know I had the coronavirus. To respiratory distress. That is the threatening problem!

And the respiratory distress means that the symptomology has pushed the system and the respiratory influence of thos viruses down your respiratory tract from your throat all the way down in your lungs is open for infection by this virus. It could get worse! It's dangerous, except for this: it can be treated! So having respirotory distress is not the end problem. If you can get treatment, it will go away. It's a bad flue! The largest portion of the population is not going to die, even though the news media threat is... They didn't come on and say 'Flu season is going to be aggresive this year! Take care of yourself!'

They come on and say 'Aggresive flu is going to kill up to millons of peopel!' And its like 'Geez!' As soon as I hear that it's like ok, it's not a regular year now, it's like I could die; millions of people; that includes me!' And the fear becoming a problem but it some countries they started testing everybody! And gues what they found. About 50% of the population that was tested had previously been exposed to this virus, but has no symptoms. In other words, there's a massive number of people, 50% of the population, that was tested and had already been exposed to the virus and... they had no symptoms!

It means a very important fact: that their immune system is working so good that even though they were exposed to the virus, That virus was not able to overtake the system because of the strengh of their immnue system. The bigger problem you have is the fear of the viurs and a fear response! The biology of the body changes to put eneergy into escaping the fear. That proveribal fear is the saber-toothead tiger that chases us.

When the consciousness of protection is required, then the biology will adapt to a protection response that shuts down the growth and maintenance of the body; That shuts down the immune system. Stress shuts down the immune system to conserve energy. We're all going to manage the coronavirus! Yes, you could get respirory problem and it could be distressing, but gues what? It's not that it can't be treated! It can be treated

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Can Keto Help Protect Your Immune System?

Let's talk about how Keto, the ketogenic diet could potentially help protect your immune system, especially when we're talking about the coronavirus. Now check this out. 99.2% of all deaths from COVID-19 are associated with metabolic syndrome and with this syndrome, your immune system is compromised BIG TIME. Now those who do not have other health conditions but die only have a 0.8% chance of dying versus if you have preexisting health problems like blood pressure, diabetes, heart condition, cancer, raise your chance of dying to 99.2% now let's take a look at what is the common denominator of some of these conditions.

Well, high blood pressure, most cases of hypertension, and I'm talking 90% of all of the hypertensive patients have what's called essential hypertension. Essential meaning they don't know what causes it. I'm going to put a link down below this paper that talks about the interrelationship between insulin resistance and hypertension, insulin resistance in compensatory hyperinsulinemia, that means that you're having high amounts of insulin in the blood as a compensation.

So let me just draw this out. Pancreas right here, it's sending insulin. Okay into the cells, but you have insulin resistance, right, so it's, it's going to be low right here so the signals won't get back to the pancreas, so there's no feedback loop, so if there's no feedback loop to turn it off, the pancreas will make more in more in more and more, and this is why people with insulin resistance have five to seven times more production of insulin. In other words, people with insulin resistance have a tremendous amount of insulin in the body, but it's not working.

That's what they mean by compensatory hyper insulin anemia. That means insulin in the blood commonly occurs in patients with untreated essential hypertension. The coexistence of insulin resistance and hypertension can be viewed as a cause effect relationship. Wow, that's powerful. Now, I would imagine this is probably a lot less if you factor in insulin resistance itself, which I know for a fact, they rarely test that, and especially with these cases, they're not testing if the person has insulin resistance, which could be a prediabetic condition.

In fact, in America it's been estimated that 60 to 70% of the entire population has some level of insulin resistance. So this 0.8% could be, I don't a 0.2% bringing this level up to 99.8% potentially. So in summary, what happens when you go on keto? This is what you do with this is what you improve healthy insulin levels. You basically get insulin to the level where it's no longer high, and guess what? Many times your blood pressure improves, your diabetes type two improves, the cardiovascular system gets improved, and I'm going to put links down below showing those connections as well. Another vital reason why people should do Keto and especially in a minute fasting to support their immune system so we can actually minimize the risk of dying if a person gets infected. If you want information about insulin resistance, check out this video right here.

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Doctor Dissects The Wim Hof Method

The two most common video requests that I get are to turn a medical eye onto the keto diet or the Wim Hof method. And while both of those things interest me, thus far I haven't made a video about either because I didn't feel like it add anything to the already existing very large volume of information that's available on YouTube and the internet. But then two things happened. Number one, I made the acquaintance of Scott Carney bestselling author who knows the Wim Hof method inside and out.  And number two Curiosity Stream allowed me to use some of that footage from a documentary series about humans who pushed themselves to the limit, including amongst others, Wim Hof. They are supporting this video so please go and check out the rest of the series and also stick around for the message at the end of this video. So I figured this was a golden opportunity to make my first video, which is a direct response to something you guys have asked for.

But what could I say that hasn't already been said? I don't have the talent, the budget or the good looks to compete with all the other Wim Hof videos already available on YouTube. But what I do have is a very particular set of skills, skills I've acquired over a long career being a nerd. Yes, less Krav Maga and killing criminals more looking at spreadsheets and reading scientific papers, which if you think about it is actually a lot cooler. There's no shortage of first person accounts online of people meeting the Iceman himself and their experiences with the Wim Hof method. But one of the messages that I tried to get over in this, if it ducks like a quack series, is that anecdotes whilst entertaining and interesting do not constitute scientific evidence. And that's what I'm after in this video. The vice or yes theory videos about the Wim Hof method are fantastically watchable and very entertaining, but they are full of grossly inaccurate scientific statements.

If you want a scientifically accurate and compellingly written account of not only the Wim Hof method but the grand philosophy behind it, then I highly recommend having listened to Scott Carney's what doesn't kill us. And I'm very pleased he'll be speaking to us shortly. There are some YouTube videos out there that purport to look at the science of the Wim Hof method, but they really just regurgitate the press releases from the official organization without turning a critical eye on the data themselves. Websites that talk about hacking the body are invariably for all the pseudoscience, so this video is an in depth, unnecessarily detailed and it most importantly critical look at the science of the Wim Hof method. For those of you that haven't watched the channel before, my name is Rohin and I'm a medical doctor and a university researcher with an interest in the extremes to which humans can push their physiology.

This video is going to be way longer than my usual one, so I'm timestamping the video in the description below so you can skip to particular areas that might interest you more than others. I'm going to structure this video based on the benefits, extolled on the Wim Hof method website and use the official Wim Hof method explained ebook a nicely packaged if somewhat fluffy, 32 page guide to the science behind the technique.

Obviously I wasn't just going to believe everything they said, so I've read pretty much every scientific paper in the area, certainly everyone referenced so that you don't have to, I'll start with an important point that this is an attempt to analyze the Wim Hof method. Not Wim Hof himself. Almost all the scientific literature is about Wim, but you might as well read or watch something about LeBron James or Usain bolt because these are elite athletes doing things that very few of us can do and despite the assertions that we make on a regular basis that anybody can do what he does, the fact that he holds so many worlds records suggest this isn't really true. So obviously I'll take a look at those studies and see what's going on inside women's body, but to then ask the key question that using the science available to us, will this work for you or for me?

I'll begin with Scott Carney explaining the general concept behind the Wim Hof method, which is what drew him in initially. And certainly what drew me in as well as someone with an interest in evolutionary science. If you think of humans as like natural creatures that we come out, we emerge 300,000 years ago in certain types of environmental conditions, uh, and our bodies, uh, in that time, it's sort of like this pre, like technologically advanced time. We were dealing with constantly varying environments and because our brains are sort of wired for comfort and our technological abilities have allowed us to modulate the environments about us so that we can, um, you know, essentially keep a homeostatic or pretty close to a homeostatic state like where, and by, by this, I mean your, your body doesn't have to do any extra work. Um, and you can sort of stay in this median area of, of, of comfort all the time that that has factored out the variations that we evolved with and created, uh, essentially a weaker physiology.

Um, and that if you assume that through evolution that change was constant now, um, that that constant has been taken out in favor of status. And this is making our bodies, uh, less robust. Because what happens is when you narrow that range of area where you can that, where you feel comfortable, um, you narrow your ability to, uh, thrive in extra environments. And then certain systems that are used to, um, to adapt to variations become underused and um, you know, uh, go essentially torment, you know, they're, they're, they're underutilized and that makes your physiology weaker. You know, I don't know why I found this idea so compelling. You'd be forgiven for thinking. I've got a bit of an obsession with hypothermia. I've made two videos about the cold effect on the body and one about breath holding and breathing.

And these form two of the three pillars of the Wim Hof method. The third being meditation, none of these are new ideas. People who have been practicing elements of the Wim Hof method probably for thousands of years. The Wim Hof method draws heavily on yoga, specifically Domo or Chan, Dolly yoga, which, uh, uses breathing to generate heat and pranayama, which is a whole practice of deep breathing in the Wim Hof method. Specifically it is cyclical hyperventilation, so this is breathing heavily and then followed by hyperventilation or breath holding. This causes initially a drop in carbon dioxide when you blow that out, whilst you're hyperventilating, which is called hypo capnia. And then hypoxia, which is low oxygen, which is caused by the breath hold. Or she Mondays or yogis have been meditating at top mountains in the Himalaya wearing nothing but a loincloth for hundreds of years. But I think what sets Wim apart is that he has happily invited scientists in to study him.

And this makes a welcome change from a lot of the other gurus who are out there and unwilling to back up what they see. Because in the absence of scientific study, you have people like Gwyneth Paltrow and the whole multimillion dollar wellness industry conversing what should be rational scientific discussions about the potential benefits of something like yoga meditation or the Wim Hof method into conversations about communing with the cosmos and crystals and all kinds of rubbish. I also asked Scott who spent much of his career debunking false gurus, what set him apart from some of the charlatans he's met in the past.

So when I first met Wim and first heard about him, he was making claims that were way too grand, right? That his breathing method has cold, would cure basically everything under the sun. And this is what happens in the wellness industry in general. They make claims that are often far too big. Um, but, um, he also made these claims that you would, I would be able to like control my body temperature in the snow and do more pushups and things like that. And, uh, I figured that, you know, you're, you're, if you're, if you're wrong about something, you're going to be wrong about everything. Um, go there, try his method. And I was, um, I mean I was really shocked that, uh, not only that it worked, but it worked very quickly. Like I adapted to a cold environment within the matter of a week. You know, I was doing things that were unexpected to me, which was, you know, I was living in Los Angeles before and then I was climbing up this mountain in Poland.

You've probably seen the videos would probably show some of these videos, um, of people like going shirtless with the mountain. And I felt really warm. And that was very counterintuitive. And I think because the Wim Hof method is very quick, um, it, it has the ability to change someone's mind about their expectations for their own body very quickly. And I think that sends very powerful messages, not only to, you know, about your own personal physical limits, but I also think that it creates sort of a, a new perspective on the world in general about robustness, about your ability to interact with things and about, you know, interestingly to control parts of my body that I did not think I had control over or at least influence parts of my body that I couldn't influence. Uh, and that was really remarkable.

So let's get to the science. This is going to be our running order. Number one is how does Wim resist the cold, what's actually happening in his mind and body number two, what's all this business about? Brown fat. Number three, do breathing exercises really have a measurable effect on physiology. Number four, probably the most outlandish claim about the Wim Hof method, can it actually affect your immune system? And number five, can the Wim Hof method prevent altitude sickness, the body regulated temperature via the central nervous system and the endocrine system mediated primarily by the hypothalamus, the anterior hypothalmic nucleus to be exact. However, the sensation of cold can be modulated in the brain. I think we've all experienced this. If the adrenaline's pumping for whatever reason, you don't really feel cold, but once you calm down, you realize it's quite a chilly day. The ancient practice of Domo meditation by Tibetan monks, it said to allow practitioners to generate heat from within.

There's not a great deal of evidence about it out there, but luckily there is one very useful study from a few years ago which showed that the monks generate heat from the physical work of forceful breathing, but this on its own could not be maintained for very long without the associated meditation. So you need both elements to really get the benefit from it. And we'll see this pattern repeated in tests of the Wim Hof method. A team out of Wayne state in Detroit performed a key study on Wim by scanning him whilst he was cooled by a clever suit using an MRI scanner to detect the following. Two changes in Wims. Brain number one W was able to activate primary control centers in an area of the brain called the periaqueductal gray to modulate the sensation of code number to higher cortical area is associated with introspective concentration and focus lit up.

The major potential confounder here is that the sudden changes in carbon dioxide levels that we mentioned earlier caused by hyperventilation can affect blood flow. Carbon dioxide is a potent vasodilator. It opens up blood vessels, so the changes detected on the fr. MRI scan might simply be related to changes in blood flow rather than inherent brain activity. However, these changes are replicated and other studies about meditation, so I would be happy to say that these are likely to be genuine changes. What this means is that women's ability to tolerate cold in a large part comes from his mind telling his brain, if you like to ignore the cold sensation. The authors also went so far as to say that much of the feel good effects of cold exposure comes from placebo, which is not to trivialize it. People often hear the word receiver and think it's a criticism, but it's actually a reflection of the body's immense power to change its own physiology and I'm all in favor of harnessing it as long as nobody is getting conned.

So what's all this about? Brown fat. If you've read anything about the science behind the Wim Hof method at all, you've undoubtedly heard of Brown fat or more correctly Brown adipose tissue, B, a T seven in a nutshell, there are two types of adipose tissue fat in the body, white and Brown fat. Sometimes you'll hear beige mentioned, we'll ignore that for now, white fat is used for energy storage and that's the stuff that when you have too much of it, you become obese. So we're all very familiar with what white fat is. Brown fat is a much more rare species. We all have Brown fat. We have a lot when we're babies and we gradually reduce the amount we have as we get older. We used to think not long ago, just about a decade ago that we lose Brown fat entirely as adults, but studies in the last 10 years or so have shown that adults do have small stores of Brown fat.

Um, and this is used for non shivering thermogenesis. That means generating heat thermogenesis. So there are different ways to generate heat. Obviously one is shivering by working your muscles and non shivering. Thermogenesis is what Brown fat does. For a long time it was believed that Wims repeated cold exposure allowed him to activate his Brown fat in a special way. And despite the studies disproving this taking place about five years ago, you'll still see websites mentioning it, but it's not true. Two studies have looked at Wim Brown fat and they use positron emission tomography coupled with CT pet CT along with the aforementioned MRI to take a detailed look at his anatomy. What they found is that women does not activate Brown fat in a remarkable way at all. It barely lit up. However, he does have more Brown fat than is typical for someone of his age.

Is this caused by repeated exposure to code? Well, in a truly incredible cosmic case controlled coincidence, Wim has an identical twin brother who doesn't follow the Wim Hof method. He's got a sedentary lifestyle without the frequent cold exposure, so it offers an amazing opportunity to actually study some of these changes, and I think I speak on behalf of all medical researchers when I say that life would be so much easier if we all had a clone stuck in a, in a cupboard somewhere that we could take out and study from time to time. I'm joking. Of course. Women's brother also has high levels of Brown fat, in fact, slightly higher. So it does seem that in this regard, at least the Hofs are genetic outliers and it's likely that this contributes to women's ability to withstand the cold. The Wim Hof method hasn't been shown to increase Brown fat levels, but mice do increase their levels in response to repeated cold stimuli.

The jury is still out when it comes to humans. The research show that Wim muscles of breathing, the intercostals that are between your ribs lit up like Christmas trees generating large amounts of heat. Now remember the pattern that we saw with the Tibetan Tomo monks? Exactly the same that uh, both Wim and the monks are generating a lot of heat from the physical work of breathing. And if you think about all the blood coming back into the chest, going through the myriad is in the lungs, this is an effective way to maintain blood temperature by exchanging heat from these muscles into the blood stream. It's exactly the same as what happens when you go for a run on a cold day. Within a few minutes, your body's generating enough heat to make you feel hot even though the temperature's cold. So it's nothing very exotic, but it's effective.

And I think this is a really nice way of explaining in a small part how Wim does what he does. This graph is quite striking. It's skin temperature. The blue circles are normal controls, normal people. And the hollow red circles are when Wim is just relaxed. He follows the same cycle of his skin warming. And cooling as the suit that the participant is wearing is warmed and cooled. However, the filled red circles at the top are Wim when engaging with the Wim Hof method, and as you can see, his skin temperature barely changes irrespective of whether the suit is hot or cold. So the authors concluded that without any outlandish physical findings, the majority of women's ability to tolerate cold actually comes from his mind and activation of the sympathetic nervous system, which we'll come onto in a little bit. Take a deep breath because now we're going to talk about the breathing aspect of the Wim Hof method for healthy people.

It's the level of carbon dioxide in your blood and your lungs that determines your urge to take a breath. Hyperventilation, as we mentioned earlier, blows off carbon dioxide at a much higher rate than normal, which is why you can hold your breath for much longer after hyperventilating because it takes that much longer for carbon dioxide to reach the level at which your body feels the urge to breathe. Come dioxide is also a weak acid, so reducing the amount of carbon dioxide in your blood trans in makes your pH go up, making a blood slightly more alkaline. Rhonda Patrick interviewed Pierre capital as well as Wim actually, and they focused on the fact that blood pH was noted to rise. Are you becoming more alkaline with deep breathing? And confusingly, Dr. Patrick and professor Cappo seemed quite wowed by this observation, which is odd because any doctor who has treated a patient with a mild asthma attacks, severe pain or even a panic attack, some reason that's causing them to hyperventilate, we'll have seen a markedly elevated pH. Making your blood slightly alkaline with deep breathing is nothing noteworthy at all.

It's seen in emergency departments on a daily basis and arterial blood gas is a special type of test. Looking at the partial pressures of different gases as well as the acid base status of somebody's blood and a normal healthy person at rest will have an ABG result that looks something like this. pH is normally 7.35 to 7.45 oxygen is say 14 and carbon dioxide 4.5 this is in kilopascals. I'll put freedom units in later. If that same person hyperventilates for maybe 10 minutes without any special training, the ABG might look something like this. Now the oxygen hasn't changed much as the partial pressure of oxygen in the air is of course fixed unless you inhale concentrated oxygen. But you can see that the CO2 has dropped right down to 1.3 and pH has risen to 7.67 which is exactly the kind of range you see in some of the studies of the Wim Hof method.

Uh, Daniel Beard, a professor of physiology at the university of Michigan gave some responses to a study that demonstrated this transient alkaline blood work of Wim Hof method practitioners explaining that we don't know whether this is short or long term. None of these people have control over their blood pH or their breathing, except when they're actually consciously doing this thing. Their heart rates are the same as other subjects. Their pressures are the same. In other words, the physiological changes that are seen might only last for the period of time when the participant is actually doing the Wim Hof method breathing. What we're lacking is a trial looking at how long these physiological changes last for eight 1224 hours. The things like pH won't last long at all because your body has such effective homeostatic mechanisms taking you back to a normal range, but some of them may be longer term.

The increase in pH is a key component for a particularly interesting reason. It may be related to improved cold tolerance. Nociception is the body's detection of pain, which is mediated by specific sensory neurons or pain detecting nerves. A component of these nociceptors is acid sensing ion channel three which is a key target for pain killing drug research and is quite sensitive to pH. A drop in pH activates them like an acidic burn, but a rise in pH two around the levels achieved by hyperventilation can actually deactivate them effectively improving the pain threshold. So this is actually a pathway that explains why deep breathing can improve tolerance to a noxious stimulus like cold. The Wim Hof method, employers not only hyperventilation but hyperventilation breath holding and this achieves a transient hypoxia or low oxygen level in the blood, which appears to kickstart the sympathetic nervous system, the fight, flight fright response.

Try saying that fast. Um, and this is probably the key step in the whole process. It's believed that a physiological stress after priming the sympathetic nervous system in this way releases endocannabinoids causing a pleasurable sensation. Accounting for the euphoria, uh, achieved, uh, with an ice bath. And it also explains something like the runner's high, that pleasurable sensation after physical stress. A mantra that you'll see repeated in every article about the method and in the official ebook is that medical opinion is that humans cannot exert an effect on the autonomic nervous system making effects observed in Wim, apparently miraculous. However, this is clearly nonsense. The autonomic nervous system includes things like heart rate and blood pressure and these can both be affected with simple relaxation or meditation, making them go down or the opposite. If you work yourself up into an anxious state, they can both go up well.

Autonomic nervous system also includes things like sneezing and you can overcome the urge to sneeze with a bit of practice in Scottsburg chemo accurately States that we didn't previously think that a person could voluntarily affect their immune system. Although even that comes with a slight caveat in that that's exactly what the placebo effect is. Marked changes in immune system response can be observed purely based on a person's belief about what the outcome will be. Uh, even with an inert substance, um, whether you want to call that involuntary or conscious or the power of positive thinking is entirely up to you. One of the marquee claims about the Wim Hof method is that it can modulate the immune system and this is backed by the most compelling of all the trials I read as it looks at real normal people, not Wim Hof himself. 12 people were trained for 10 days in the Wim Hof method and tested against 12 people without training.

The study protocol was the same as a study performed on Wim himself. Earlier on, participants were injected with an endotoxin which is a component of e coli, a common bacterial infection, which is used in experiments to produce a transient unpleasant but ultimately harmless syndrome of infection. In comparison to the control group, the people who didn't have any training, the intervention Wim Hof group reported fewer flu like symptoms after the injection. Things like headaches or my legs, but these are subjective so I'm not sure they really tell us very much. However, some objective measurements were taken as well. The intervention group had a similar response to Wim when he was tested, namely in comparison to the control group, they had a transient or spiritually alkalosis as we mentioned before, which is caused by hyperventilation, a markedly elevated adrenaline level, but no difference in cortisol. The stress hormone between the groups, increased levels of anti inflammatory cytokines probably released in response to the adrenaline. Things like interleukin 10 and the levels of proinflammatory cytokines were lower.

Things like TNF alpha and interleukin six and eight Unlike meditation studies which have shown changes in blood pressure and heart rates, which work by the parasympathetic nervous system. The thing I find really interesting about this is it works via the sympathetic nervous system, which as we mentioned earlier, is the kind of fight, flight fright, a system, the elevated levels of adrenaline. A significant adrenaline is a key constituent of the sympathetic nervous system pathway. The use of a control arm hairs to be applauded. It adds a major dimension to previous studies which have just looked at Wim on his own. Those are known as case studies. They're the lowest form of evidence in medicine. However, this doesn't eliminate the possibility of placebo effect at all because both arms are unblinded. Being blinded means you don't know whether you're in the intervention or the control arm. You may have heard of a double blind trial. That's the gold standard.

That's where the clinicians, the doctors and other healthcare professionals involved in trial also don't know whether a participant is in the intervention or the control arm. Obviously none of that's possible here because you can't blind people to whether they're in an intervention arm. If the intervention involves 10 days worth of ice, cold water and meditation and indeed the authors wrote a followup paper about how optimism and the mental expectation of the outcome affected the result, which is the very definition of the placebo effect. Let's take a look at a clip from the Curiosity Stream documentary as well.

We know that longterm stress hormone is very damaging. Chronic stress or conditions like Cushing's disease, which is a pathological elevation in cortisol. That stress hormone that we mentioned earlier can have hugely damaging effects to health, but short term controlled stress appears to have tangible benefits. The concept of good and bad stress is something that Scott goes into in quite a bit of detail in his book. It's the reason that, uh, things like those hardcore salt courses have exploded in popularity in recent years. Our lives have become unrecognizably comfortable in comparison to 99% of our existence on this planet. And whilst we're familiar with testing ourselves physically, we rarely expose ourselves to extremes of temperature. This is a normal daily cortisol pattern. It's highest in the morning and varies over 24 hours. While it isn't a direct correlation to stress, let's just imagine for now that it can represent overall stress in response to a short term stressful situation like a viral illness or climbing a mountain, it will peak chronic stress looks like this elevated across the board, and that's what's harmful.

Stress is a disease. People, perhaps an ideal scenario would look something like this, a low general level of stress facilitated by good physical and mental health through whatever works for you, but a more potent response when needed, which can be modulated by conscious efforts such as the Wim Hof method. What about climbing a mountain? Yeah, it does do it. I won't spend too long on this because it's likely that only a small proportion of your viewers are going to be scaling tall mountains. But for me it was one of the most remarkable things I heard about the whole Wim Hof method. The fact that Wim successfully took groups of essentially novice climbers to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro, which is just shy of 6,000 meters in only two days instead of the suggested four or five with extremely low levels of dropout due to altitude sickness was amazing. You know, as someone who's been to altitude and treated people without state sickness, um, that was, I mean, forgive the pun, but really breathtaking. And do you, do you think it was just a products of the conscious hyperventilation and avoiding that kind of hypoxic hyperventilation, or do you think that there was some additive effect from the other aspects of the, the methods?

Yeah, I think that it was because I had been doing the training consistently for six months to a year beforehand. And not everyone on the program had somebody like, you're supposed to do it that way. But a lot of the people hadn't done it that way. And those, these were the people who didn't make it up with my group, which was just three people. And I remember Wim had this crazy thing at the top of the mountain where he went nuts and we had to, there was a mutiny like there, there were issues going on, but I attribute it to the rapid breathing the entire way up. Right? So essentially what Diamox does, as far as I'm aware, right, is it is, it makes you breathe Ram more rapidly and you pee more. Right? Um, and, and, and what we're doing is we're consciously doing essentially what Diamox does by breathing a lot more consciously from a low level to a high level.

Um, you know, we, we, we kept that, that oxygenation up. And if you actually go to a mountain, you know, next time you're climbing something big, um, you can notice that your OTU, if you use an oximeter, you will notice that your OTU might get low. You know, maybe you're in the 70s, maybe, you know, you know, and it sort of stays chronically low if you're not working on it. But you will notice that if you have that pulse oximeter on your finger and you do the Wim Hof breathing without the retentions, you'll notice that your OTU two goes back up immediately. Um, and it just goes right back. You know, you could just, we could just watch it go from in the 60s for somebody all the way up into the 90s and sort of stay there. And then if you just keep on doing the breathing, you, you're able to compensate.

And so I think this is actually something that every Mountaineer doing high altitude stuff should be trained in as an idea, you know, because it's just something that you can do and can probably save some people's lives. Uh, I think that there is a mindset part to this. Like there is this feeling of fighting the environment versus working with the environment. And that is like this quasi, almost spiritual thing that comes out of my experiences that, you know, I end the book with the cheesiest line in, in literary history where I say, I am not on the mountain. I am the mountain. And I know it's cheesy, but it's, it's the way I feel. And I think that there's a real lesson here that comes out of it, is that, is that I've gotten up this mess up Kilimanjaro, not because I was fighting everything because I just accepted it and I said, okay, we're going to do this.

And there was a calmness to it versus a relationship of adversary adverse adversary and this adversesality. I don't know how to say that word. I know what I mean. Adversity, right. It's not, it was not adversity. Um, and uh, and I think that gives some element of resilience. I don't think it makes it impossible for bad things to happen. Um, I think that the, what we're doing with the Wim Hof method is you're expanding your range of ability to exist in an extreme environment. Um, and, and get right up to that point where you know, your, your nervous system and your body there, there's, there's a, you ring up alarm bells very early before you get to damage or death. It's like, Whoa, wait there you're going to get damaged. And it's usually very conservative. So what the Wim Hof method does is allows you to push closer to that barrier of where the damage happens and maybe pushes that damage thing a little bit further. What Scott's referring to there is hypoxic ventilatory response. It's difficult to predict who will get altitude sickness, but probably the best predictor is someone's hypoxic ventilator response.

This is how their body reacts to low oxygen environments. Some people increase their respiratory rate more than others, and the ones who tend to get more altitude sickness are the ones who don't Mount that increase in respiratory rate. If you are deliberately consciously taking deep breaths, you circumvent any problems with having a poor hypoxic ventilator response and you ensure that you're getting as much oxygen as possible rather than hyperventilating. The drug that Scott mentioned is this acetazolamide or Diamox and it works by creating a mild metabolic acidosis in the body. And so that forces you subconsciously to breathe harder and blow off carbon dioxide to correct the pH back to normal. And as a byproduct, you do extra breathing and you get more oxygen. The first expedition wasn't published as a paper, but as a letter to a journal and concludes by saying that they don't encourage people to ascend mountains very quickly. But if needed, for example, the mountain rescue team, Domo meditation or the Wim Hof method can help.

And I agree. So before I get to my conclusion, why don't we categorize every point made on the Wim Hof method website? Every potential benefit into one of three categories. Number one, probable benefit or probable that has this effect. Number two possible meaning that the evidence is rather weak, but there's a little, and the third category is no evidence. Now this doesn't mean it doesn't achieve this effect. It doesn't mean that it's false. It doesn't mean that anybody's lying. It just means that I can't see any clear evidence that can back up this claim. So first into the probable category, I would put short term effects on the immune system. I think that was a nicely shown. Positive effects on mental health, stress, sleep and willpower. Well these often go hand in hand and um, the Wim Hof method clearly appears to help a lot of people, but more than that, these are benefits that have been shown to be achievable through many different programs of meditation and discipline, sort of routines like this arthritis relief.

I think more research needs to be done here but um, called exposure. This is out to with the Wim Hof method. Looking at other research involving cold exposure does appear to have some beneficial effects on inflammatory types of arthritis. Although again, I don't know how long term some of this is. Next in the probable category I'm putting asthma and COPD management, not a cure but management and the reason I'm confident of putting these here is because we know that one of the best treatments for people taking control of the asthma and COPD, COPD, is chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic lung disease like emphysema is respiratory physiotherapy and these are specialists, physiotherapists who work with patients with these conditions to teach them coping mechanisms and ways to regulate their breathing to prevent getting into those episodes where they become very short of breath. So it's no surprise that a program which has breathing controllers central to it will be beneficial.

Also in the probable category I'd put improved cold tolerance and finally having an effect on reducing the likelihood of altitude sickness, which for me is quite astonishing in the possible category. I'd put improved energy because this is just a bit vague and I don't really think it's well defined, improved workout recovery. Well this is a difficult one. There's been a lot of work to do with ice baths off to training. I mean this is something that was routine when I used to do athletics years ago. It's kind of fallen out of fashion a little bit. Um, evidence is a little conflicting. And then I'd put arthritis relief in the no evidence column. I'm putting longterm effects on the immune system. Sporting performance. Again, this is a bit wishy washy. It could have gone in the possible column really in terms of just overall improved physical fitness.

Why not? Um, but I don't know if we've seen any hard evidence that the Wim Hof method has caused longterm improved sporting performance. Then I'm putting fibromyalgia and chronic Lyme. These are two conditions which are very hard to define, very hard to treat. Uh, and um, a lot of people self-diagnose. So we're treating a very heterogeneous patient population and I've seen classes, about the Wim Hof method specifically advertised for both fibromyalgia and chronic Lyme, which makes me a little bit uncomfortable because I can't really see what that's based on. And finally Parkinson's. Again, this is something that I feel a little uncomfortable saying that the Wim Hof method will be beneficial for all because we really don't have any evidence to see that. So in conclusion, I know this has been my longest video ever and probably will remain my longest video. So if you skipped directly here from the introduction, then shame on you, but I probably would have done exactly the same thing. All I ask is that if you have found this video useful or any of my other videos, I don't have a Patrion account or anything like that, so please just stay watching till the end of the video for the sponsoree. That's all I ask

The Wim Hof method does definitely appear to offer significant health benefits. The effects appear to be mediated by a good stress activating the sympathetic fight, flight or fright response in a controlled way through breath holding and again through cold exposure. It's difficult to tease out which elements do what, although perhaps that's not important if you're going to do them all anyway, but cold exposure probably has the least evidence with a committed program of meditation and breathing exercises actually having a body of hard science behind them. Cold exposure with proceeding, sympathetic nervous system priming with the breathing is what is likely to help. Cold exposure alone is of questionable use, but of course that's not what they Wim Hof Method advisers, a major unanswered question is how transient some of the effects are like the immune system modulation. We don't know if there is any residual benefit outside the period immediately after performing deep breathing exercises.

Common sense dictates that things like improved mental health in general, physical fitness are of course longer lasting. So I'm not at all saying there are no longterm benefits from the method only that we don't have the evidence one way or the other. But for the reasons I explained earlier, we can never do a randomized double blind controlled trial. So I feel that there is convincing evidence that a lot of people get longterm benefits from the technique. Is the Wim Hof method the only way you can access these benefits? Definitely not, but it's never claimed to be. And I think the reason it's been so successful is a, the charisma and feats of its creator. B, it's very simple, essentially free. See it cuts through a lot of the mystical mumbo jumbo that sometimes comes packaged with other courses about meditation and breathing, which can't be said for a lot of the websites and videos based on the Wim Hof method, uh, who had a generous helping of exaggeration.

So overall I would have no concerns recommending it. What I might say to someone asking about it is give it a try. It has helped lots of people and it's unlikely to cause harm. If you follow some simple advice. Are you going to be able to accomplish the same feats as Wim Hof? No. But just because you're not going to become Michael Phelps, it doesn't mean you shouldn't take up swimming. Can a lot of the benefits be explained by the placebo effect? Yes, probably at least some. So you might wonder why I'm supportive of this versus other topics I've covered on this channel. Well, for the simple reason that as long as you follow the basic advice, the Wim Hof method has little potential for harm, unlike say a very restrictive diet, uh, and it's not trying to replace conventional medical treatment unlike something like say homeopathy and naturalpathy.

And I think if either of those things are suggested, which I have seen on personal blogs about the Wim Hof method, then I would run a mile. I think that's an important message to send sometimes us doctors can be regarded as unwilling to try new things, which I don't think is true. It's just that we require sufficient evidence that the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks and I feel that the Wim Hof method fulfills that. To reiterate my earlier point about the placebo effect, if a particular ritual or regime helps you tap into the placebo effects potential, why not take advantage of it? I would much rather you went for a walk in the cold every morning and reap the benefits contained there in like getting out into nature exercise and the good stress of a bracing cold morning rather than hand over your hard earned to a crack for some magic beans.

I get uncomfortable when people exaggerate the potential benefits of the Wim Hof method and you don't have to Google for very long to find these kinds of comments and claims, so don't regard it as a miracle cure for any specific condition, but more a potential pathway to better overall physical and mental health. You'll notice in much of the literature and videos, a disclaimer that Wim Hof breathing and submersion in water should not be mixed. They should be done at different times. This was brought home to me very starkly when I posted on Instagram after I'd interviewed Scott and I got a message from a guy whose best mate had died at only 19 years old, drowned whilst attempting Wim Hof breathing in water. Also, I would exercise caution regarding cold exposure for anybody with heart disease. A buddy of mine did his PhD in cold air inhalation precipitating heart attacks.

The reason that so many older people die shoveling snow every winter, so if you're over the age of 50 or you have a background of heart disease, please consult your doctor before starting. The cold shock response is a phenomenon that kills people who fall overboard in cold waters. It effectively paralyzes you and causes a sharp intake of breath. So sensible advice for everyone, irrespective of your initial health is don't leap into Arctic waters on your first date. Take things slowly and you should be fine. I'll do my best to answer any questions in the comments below, so please fire away. Um, feel free to share your experiences of the Wim Hof method. If you disagree with anything I have said, I'd be keen to hear from you. So please do leave a comment. Thank you for watching this fast. Sincerely, this video wouldn't have been possible without the support of curiosity stream.

If you want to support this channel as well as get access to two and a half thousand high quality documentaries like the one featuring Wim Hof. Then if you sign up or the link below using the code Medlife, you will get one month absolutely free. You can watch the documentaries offline. And as a parent, I was also very excited to see that they have now got a kid section two, which is brilliant as your guaranteed safe educational material rather than on YouTube where there are all kinds of weirdos. I know people have come to expect jokes from this channel and this video was pretty serious. So to make up for it, I filmed the entire thing, not wearing any pants.


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Look Up – 2020 Chemtrail Documentary

All of you can start looking up and seeing this. The United States government. NASA, the US Air Force is sending up canisters into the atmosphere filled with chemicals.

Another example is the array of technologies often referred to collectively as geo engineering. One that has gained my personal attention is stratospheric aerosol injection or SAI. A method of seeding the stratosphere with particles that have fully deployed SAI program would cost about $10 billion yearly as promising as it may be moving forward on. SAI would also raise a number of challenges for our government and for the international community and other geo engineering initiatives.

Another example is the array of technologies often referred to collectively as geo engineering. One that has gained my personal attention is stratospheric aerosol injection or SAI. A method of seeding the stratosphere with particles that have fully deployed SAI program would cost about $10 billion yearly as promising as it may be moving forward on. SAI would also raise a number of challenges for our government and for the international community and other geo engineering initiatives.

We shall propose further cooperative effort between all the nation in weather prediction and eventually in weather control. What we're seeing now, and I first could not believe it and I started looking at the skies and these are not normal, they're not natural. There's something going on. I don't know who it is or why they're doing it. All I can testify is it's not natural and it's not normal. It's gotta be some outside influence doing that. I'm here to give you testimony that chem trails, they're not contrary. Owls are indeed real.

They're spraying almost every day. I watched the clouds and watched the spraying program going on. I want to tell you that we're in very great danger from the pollution that's coming down over us and we've been led astray by the military industrial complex and they're responsible for the clouds creation and weather manipulation programs. They're dark operations. When you look up at the sun and you see a white haze that is aluminum floating in the air right now and it's coming from the aircraft. You want some fingers? Okay. Latest water test tested the rain, 13,100 micrograms per liter of aluminum in the rain in 2013 normally it should be zero. If people are finding contamination, wouldn't they come here to address it? but nothing's being done.

I die. You know, I don't know where, no, we're investigating this in. There's a, there's a huge concern and that people are getting sick. Well, I mean we've interviewed several people. We've been here for a week. Yeah. So there you're saying there was no concern. I mean there is a concern. Many people in the County have have told us that they've addressed specifically with you this very issue and they're saying nothing's being done. Barium aluminum is being dumped out of airplanes because they can see it in the concrete rails. Okay. Here, here's my question. If there's aluminum contamination, which is very toxic, is that something that you're supposed to deal with?

It's in the air. It appears that there is contamination. Does that concern you? I mean personally get those either. Does it concern you? If there is. Your flat out tonight doesn't appear to me that there's contaminated. Okay. If somebody could prove that there was, would you be willing to look into this? NO. So even if they did air quality tests, I mean who would have to do the test for you to recognize that it would be a problem. The federal government's doing the testing they have? That wasn't his question. They would have. The reason, no way that we could do to test. The reason we asked for you is because many people told us that this information has been presented to you. Many people also believe that you're involved with the cover up and that concerns a lot of people. I'm here with Kristen Megan, who's actually a us military whistleblower. She has an amazing, fascinating story that we will share with you here today. Now, Kristen, she tells us what branch of the military you are in and what you uncovered.

Sure. Um, I wa was in the air force on active duty for nine years and I worked in bio environmental engineering. Uh, one part of that process was to approve chemicals, has this materials, you know, what are you using, why do you need it, where's it being used? And tracking that disposal. Um, after it'd been brought to my attention about chem trails or Jew engineering, I ice think it was crazy. It actually was disrespectful to my line of work because here we are trying to prevent environmental aspects and impacts, um, and not have anybody get sick from our operations. But in an attempt to debunk, I had changed my life. I started noticing things. I started noticing large quantities on the system where I would approve chemicals that did not have a manufacturer name. Wasn't tied to a building. And when I started asking questions, um, I slowly became demonized.

Um, couple of years pass after that when I asked again and people realized I was kind of being more vocal about it on social media, I was starting to be thrown into a mental institution and have my daughter taken away. That changed my life. I no longer view the military the same way. And I feel like after nine years of trying to uphold an oath, I'm able to do that now. I feel they're getting ready to admit it and they're trying to sell it to us. You know, it's kinda like they sell vaccines to us. They sell fluoride to us. You know, fluoride isn't is a mining waste product. How can we make that good, you know, put it in your water. So I think that they're trying to now kind of admit it and act like they're going to start doing it in, they've already been doing it.

Okay. She's got the snow land. Let's see what it does. It's not dripping at all. Okay. So I seen these things on YouTube about these snow not melting and just turning black.when you put fire to it. Someone go outside here, get some snow. This snow I just picked up outside. I'm just packing it in. Here's the snow I just picked up. You guys saw me pick it up outside off my porch. Check this out. Dude, that is weird. It doesn't melt. There's no drops of water. That is weird. That is weird man. Look it. Just like turns black. Yes. I haven't seen one drip

In the snow on Mount Shasta. Pristine Mount Shasta 61,000 micrograms per liter four times the amount that is found in the soil up there. Where the hell is this stuff coming from?

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A Shot In The Dark Documentary (2020)

"Vaccines are completely safe and more of Colorado's children need them."

"Get your children vaccinated."

It wasn't until 1998, then a mother came up to me and said, Dr. Larry, did you know that there's mercury in vaccines? And I said, no, I did not. And as a medical student, I was trained to critically think. If you see an observation, you go after it and try and figure out if there's a question to ask. So instead of just ignoring it, I looked further into the vaccine ingredients and I didn't understand why these same ingredients were actually in vaccines. I was starting to hear stories from parents, not dozens, not hundreds, but thousands of stories from parents who took a very healthy child into their doctor's office and then found that their child lost much of their health. Whether it was their speech, whether it was seizures, whether it was death, whether it was asthma, allergies, eczema, whether it was autism, whether it was learning disabilities, whether it was inflammatory bowel disease, autoimmune diseases. And every one of those parents were told it had nothing to do with the vaccine.

EVERY SINGLE ONE!

There is no study to prove that unvaccinated children have ever been proven to start an epidemic. I have been seeing families in my practice for over 20 years that have opted out of vaccination. They are the healthiest children I have ever seen. And more and more parents are understanding the dangers of vaccines. And that's why we're seeing such pressure to mandate vaccines because more of the science is coming out. We assume that if we vaccinate, we're getting protection, we assume that if we vaccinate, we're stopping spread of disease. Those are assumptions that have never been solidified in science.

I asked the dad what happened and the dad tells me, yeah, the shot went in. He was sitting in the chair. I basically instantly see as his whole face goes white, has had like lawls back. You know, he's like staring straight up. His eyes go to the back of his head. He goes limp and he and his whole body convulses like three or four times, maybe 30 seconds or so after you've been given a shot roughly. And that's what's kind of interesting is this is a family who had not vaccinated. Um, they were not planning to vaccinate and then they decided they had to because of the new school law.

A seemingly completely healthy little girl playing freeze tag in the front yard. Mom wakes her up the next morning. She is paralyzed from the neck down this after just getting the flu shot vaccine. With me, her mother, Carla. Carla, why do you believe this was because of the flu shot?

Because there was nothing else. And then no other life changing events or no other medications out of the ordinary given it had been the only thing that had been given to her or happened to her during the time period and extensive testing was done at the hospital to try to find another cause and non was able to be found.

Well, I mean I have to come from the perspective of a parent who has a vaccine injured child. I took my bright healthy precocious little two and a half year old boy in for a fourth DPT shot. And within hours of that shot, I witnessed him suffer a convulsion, a collapsed shock, a state of unconsciousness, and he was eventually diagnosed with minimal brain damage, including multiple learning disabilities and attention deficit disorder. We have seen children become disabled and chronically ill. One in six child in America is now learning disabled. Why are so many highly vaccinated children? So sick.

A five pound pre-mi gets the same vaccination as a 10 pound full termer. They need to be individualized and explain why you and why you decided not to vaccinate your youngest children. I have three. I have three children. My oldest site is kind of the sacrificial lamb. He was vaccinated and had a huge amount of thin Marisol, huge amount of mercury. And after he had the MMR and the chickenpox vaccination on the same day, we never saw him again for three years. Never saw him again. He developed autism. He lost language, he lost social skills, he lost bowel control. He became very sick within hours of vaccination. So I, you know, I held his hand there over the proverbial fire. He got burned. Don't ask me to line up my other two children to get burned again. What kind of parent would I be? 

Like if I was a doctor, I would want you to get sick because the more times you get sick, the more money I make. I don't get sick. I'm just being honest. I don't get sick. My children have never been sick. Okay. Vaccine, they've never been vaccinated, none of that. And they don't get sick. Okay. Because the mother's milk in the breast is a, the vaccination that they need. That's it.

Do any vaccines contain egg protein? Oh yes. Influenza. Do any vaccines contain gelatin from pigs? Uh, yes. Do any vaccines in the childhood vaccine schedule continue an albumin? Oh yes. What is human albumin? Human albumin is part of the human serum part of the blood that is liquid. That can be problematic, right? Well, it could be, I mean, if, uh, if the individual is not not healthy. Or if maybe some of the human blood components bind to some of the aluminum and develop antibodies, self antibodies. Correct. If they develop antibodies against a certain component that would not be good. Do I need vaccines on the childhood vaccine schedule contain MRC5 human diploid cells. Yes, of rubella, varicella, hepatitis A. What are MRC5 cells? They are human fiber blast, a cell strain. They were created by taking fetal tissue from a particular fetus that was aborted by maternal choice. And the cells, so-called fiberblast cells were cultivated.

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How To Slow Down Time And No Longer Worry That It Passes Quickly

Slow Down Time

And another year has passed... The more mature we become, the more we think the days, weeks, months flash faster. If only you could slow down time! - we often think. But, as Claudia Hammond, the author of The Curved Time, explains, our problems with running minutes are due to the fact that we do not understand the essence of time. What can be done about this?

For most of us, time is something linear, absolute and flowing all the time - but is it true? And how can we change our ideas about time so that we are no longer bothered by the fact that it passes quickly?

“Time” is the most commonly used noun in English. We all know this feeling - “time is running out.” Our present immediately turns into the past, “today” quickly becomes “yesterday”.

If you live in an area with a changing climate, then every year before you change season after season. When we grow up and become adults, the years accelerate and begin to flicker one after another.

Although neuroscientists have not yet been able to find a built-in clock in the human brain that is responsible for tracking the passing time, people surprisingly feel it well.

If someone told us that he would come in five minutes, we have some idea when to wait for him. We have the feeling of a week or a month. As a result, most of us can say that the functions of time are quite obvious: it constantly leaves at a measurable pace, and the direction is also clear - from the future to the past.

Of course, a person’s sense of time can depend not only on biology, but also on cultural traditions and the century in which we live.

For example, in the language of the Amazonian tribe Amondava there is no word “time” at all. According to some scholars, they do not have the concept of time within which any events take place.

Meanwhile, it is difficult for us to say exactly how time was perceived in the distant past, since research on this began only 150 years ago.

We know that Aristotle saw the present as something constantly changing. Around 160 A.D. the Roman emperor and philosopher Marcus Aurelius described time as a river of passing events. And today, at least in the West, many still use these ideas.

However, physicists tell us a different story. Despite the fact that time is what seems to us to flow in one direction, some scientists do not agree with this.

In the last century, the discoveries of Albert Einstein blew up humanity’s notions of time. He demonstrated that time is created by things, it does not wait somewhere there until things begin to happen inside it.

Einstein showed that time is relative, it flows more slowly for fast-moving objects. Events do not occur routinely. There is no single universal, common to all “now” - in the sense in which it was understood in Newtonian physics.

Yes, this is true - many events taking place in the Universe can be arranged in a certain sequential order, but time is not always laid out on the shelves of the past, present and future. Some equations of physics work in any of the directions.

To convince a person that something happened to him in the past that he does not remember now is much easier than we think

Several physicists, including Carlo Rovelli, author of popular books, go even further, suggesting that time does not go anywhere. It simply does not exist; it is an illusion.

Of course, scientists can assume that time does not exist, but we know from our own experience: a sense of time, perception of time is characteristic of every person. The evidence of physicists contradicts the way we perceive life, its course.

Yes, our concept of the future or the past may not be applicable to everything that happens everywhere in the Universe, but it reflects the realities of our life on planet Earth.

However, like Newton’s idea of absolute time, our human idea of time may be erroneous. There is a more appropriate approach to it.

The deceiving past

One aspect of the perception of time that is common to most of us is how we think about our past, presenting it as a gigantic video archive, where we can go to recall certain events in our lives.

But psychologists have already shown that autobiographical memory does not work at all like that. Most of us forget much more than we remember, sometimes completely forgetting what happened, despite the fact that our friends or relatives insist that it was with us. Sometimes even reminders of specific episodes of the past do not help.

We preserve memories so that a meaning is created for what happened. And every time we turn to them, we reconstruct the events so that they do not contradict the new information that we possess.

To convince a person that something happened to him in the past that he does not remember now is much easier than it seems to us.

Psychologist Elizabeth Loftus has been researching this phenomenon for decades, convincing people that they remember how they once kissed a giant green frog. Or one day they met a rabbit Bugs Bunny (a cartoon character in Warner Bros. Studios) at Disneyland.

And here is another mistake of ours: it seems to us that imagining the future is a process that is different from thinking about the past. In fact, both processes are interconnected.

We call for help the same areas of the brain for both memories and imagination of what may happen to us in the future.

It is the possession of memories that allows us to construct the future, mixing scenes of what has already happened to us on the screen of our mind. This skill allows us to make plans and test different possibilities and hypotheses before we start putting plans into practice.

All this is the result of how our brain perceives time. A baby with almost no autobiographical memories lives exclusively in the present. He is pleased. He is crying. He is hungry. He feels bad. The baby experiences all this, but does not think about how cold he was a month ago and does not worry that the temperature in the room will drop again.

Gradually, the baby begins to develop a sense of himself. Along with this comes the understanding of time, the ability to distinguish yesterday from tomorrow.

Time is at the heart of not only how we organize our life, but also how we feel it

Even at that age, however, imagining yourself in the future is a very difficult task. Psychologist Janie Bazby Grant found that if you ask three-year-old kids what they will do tomorrow, only a third of them will give an answer that can be regarded as acceptable, plausible.

When psychologist Christina Ethans gave small children salty bagels, and then left them to choose what else they want - the same bagels or water. It is not surprising that after salt they were thirsty and most chose water.

However, when she asked what they would like tomorrow, the majority chose water again. (Adults chose bagels because they understood that tomorrow they would like to eat.)

Young children are not able to imagine themselves in the future, where they will feel differently than at the present moment.

Past experience is actively being created in our brains. For the construction of the perception of time, various factors are important - memory, concentration, emotions, the feeling of one place or another.

Our idea of time is rooted in our mental reality. Time is the basis not only of how we organize our life, but also of how we feel it.

Of course, you can say that it doesn’t matter at all whether we perceive time correctly according to the laws of physics. We don’t have to remember all the time that the Earth is a ball when we walk on a flat surface.

We can say that the sun rises in the morning and sets in the evening, although we know perfectly well that this Earth revolves around the Sun, and not vice versa.

Our ideas about the world do not try to correspond to scientific ones - we are able to feel the world around us, using only the feelings we possess.


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Fitness Gadgets Let You Keep Track Of Your Owners

Fitness Gadgets

Any device transmitting data can be used to track users. A joint study by the Canadian nonprofit project Open Effect and the University of Toronto, published in early February, showed that this is especially true for wearable devices, such as smart watches and fitness bracelets.

These fashionable gadgets make information about our well-being and movements almost public.

The efforts of the IT industry are mainly aimed at protecting data, the damage from unauthorized access to which is obvious: bank card passwords, personal correspondence, state secrets. Who may need diet schedules or running routes in the park?

Apparently, the manufacturers of wearable devices were guided by this logic. Most gadgets transmit data over Bluetooth channels that are easily detected by other devices. The data is almost not encrypted, stored on manufacturers’ servers. How long they are stored, and whether they can be removed from there, is unknown.

Big fitness brother

It’s no secret that shopping centers analyze the behavior of customers: with the growth of the popularity of wearable devices, this can be done in the “god mode”. How many steps did a 43-year-old man take in a drive store before his heartbeat increased and he went to a restaurant? Already, such information can be removed from a distance by their devices that are not even connected to smartphones.

Wearable devices in only one of the eight brands investigated are not subject to surveillance - we are talking about Apple. Manufacturers of smart watches use Bluetooth Low Energy Privacy technology, the name of which speaks for itself.

The same technology is used in Microsoft Band 2 watches, but they have not been analyzed by researchers. In Russia, they are practically not on sale. Other manufacturers - Basis, Fitbit, Garmin, Jawbone, Mio, Withings, and Xiaomi - use spy-friendly technology.

One and a half months before the publication of the report, researchers invited these seven companies to familiarize themselves with the vulnerabilities discovered. Interest showed Basis, Fitbit and Mio.

Fitbit, a California-based fitness bracelet market leader, praised the work of Open Effect and the University of Toronto. At the same time, according to businessmen, it is unlikely that a hacker who stumbles upon a device will know who it belongs to.

Gadget like evidence

Another problem: data on wearable devices is easily falsified, which makes their use as evidence in court and in insurance cases pointless. However, there have already been such precedents: for example, in Canada, a woman proved to the court that a four-year-old traffic incident still affects her health using Fitbit fitness bracelet data.

In Australia, the court trusted a bracelet of the same brand, which showed that its owner was sleeping, and not running in the snow around the house from an alleged rapist hunting her. Regardless of the specific cases, the price of such evidence is low.

Not all findings of the study are presented to the public. In the near future, the authors promise to talk about how accurate measurements of wearable devices.

The wearable device market is one of the fastest growing in the IT industry. Unlike fitness bracelets, the functionality of a smart watch is determined by the applications that are installed on them and which can be updated and changed.

 According to the calculations of the British research company Juniper Research, by the end of 2019, there will be 110 million users of fitness bracelets and 130 million owners of smart watches worldwide.

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Do Not Be Afraid Of Artificial Intelligence, It Will Save Us

artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence is often portrayed as a threat to humanity - it steals jobs and spies on us, and in general will soon become smarter than all people put together, and then ... But wait. Many of the key problems of the 21st century can be solved precisely by smart machines.

Artificial intelligent systems are learning to perform more and more everyday tasks. Nevertheless, many of us believe that robots and artificial intelligence, AI, threaten the inviolability of our privacy, jobs and our security.

But even the most ardent critics of AI recognize that it can potentially bring great benefits to humanity.

Intelligent machines are already helping people cope with the most complex and dangerous problems - from disease to crime.

"We should not consider artificial intelligence as something that competes with us, but as something that increases our capabilities and capabilities," said Takeo Kanade, professor of robotics at Carnegie Mellon University (USA).

And all because AI does not know what boredom is and, like none of us, is able to identify trends and relationships.

Perhaps this is what will help humanity survive in the 21st century.

Here are at least five areas where artificial intelligence is already giving us its shoulder.

1. Against armed violence

Last year, 15,000 people died in the United States due to the use of firearms - among developed countries, the United States holds an unenviable primacy in the number of cases of violence with small arms.

To cope with a seemingly uncontrolled outbreak of this type of crime, in some large cities of the country turned to the help of technology.

The automated system listens to the areas of the city with the help of many sensors for firing, which helps the police quickly determine where something is wrong - literally 45 seconds after someone pulled the trigger.

Already 90 cities - mainly American, but also from South Africa and South America - use this system. Its smaller versions are located on the territory of nine university campuses. The US Secret Service has installed ShotSpotter in the White House.

However, according to Ralph Clark, head of ShotSpotter, in the future the system will not be used simply to respond to incidents.

“We would like to understand how our data can be used for forecasting,” he says. “The system can add to the overall picture of the weather, the situation on the roads, crime data - all this will help police patrols to more consciously and accurately respond to the situation.”

2. Against hunger

For 800 million people on the planet, cassava roots are the main source of carbohydrates.

This plant, similar to sweet potato, is often used in the same way as we use potatoes, plus they make flour for baking bread.

The ability of cassava to grow where other agricultural plants do not take root has made it the sixth most popular food crop in the world.

Cassava, however, is very vulnerable to diseases and pests that can destroy entire fields of this plant.

Researchers at Makerere University (Uganda), along with plant disease specialists, have created an automated system - the Mcrops project .

Local farmers take pictures (using cheap models of smartphones) of their cassava fields, and artificial intelligence analyzes the photo for signs of four major diseases.

“The symptoms of some of these diseases are not so easy to notice,” explains Ernest Mwebase, who heads the project. “Farmers get from us a handheld expert who will tell you if you need to pollinate the fields or whether it is better to mow and plant everything elsewhere.”

MCrops now diagnoses with an accuracy of 88%, saving farmers time and money.

In addition, with the help of MCrops, local authorities are informed about a possible epidemic that threatens hunger.

Mwebase and his colleagues hope to create a similar system for combating diseases of banana trees. In addition, artificial intelligence is able to automate pest tracking.

3. Against cancer and blindness

Every year, more than 8.8 million people die of cancer in the world and another 14 million find it.

The patient’s chances of survival are greatly enhanced by early diagnosis, one of the main methods of which is a rather laborious examination with many diagnostic procedures.

Artificial intelligence is ready to provide its services here. Both Alphabet (a company that owns Google) with its DeepMind project , and IBM are striving to make the survey process faster.

DeepMind teamed up with doctors from the British Health System (NHS) to teach AI how to distinguish healthy tissue from diseased tissue when scanning the head and cervical spine.

In addition, together with the doctors at the renowned Morphilds Ophthalmology Clinic, the computer system is taught the early recognition of eye diseases leading to vision loss.

According to Dominic King, head of the DeepMind Health program, it is too early to talk about concrete successes, but what artificial intelligence has learned now is very optimistic.

King says AI technology will help doctors recognize cancer cases much faster, which in turn will allow treatment to begin earlier.

IBM said its Watson AI artificial intelligence system can analyze scans and detect signs of a tumor with an accuracy of 96%.

Watson AI is being tested by doctors in 55 hospitals around the world to diagnose cancer of the breast, lung, colon, cervix, ovary, stomach and prostate.

Rob tells that artificial intelligence can work effectively even with simple things like your refrigerator - for example, remotely control its operation and turn on freezing and cooling cycles when the power supply is not loaded.

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Professions Of The Future: What To Learn To Succeed In Competition With Robots

competition with robots

By 2050, a new class of people will appear, whose experience, skills and education will be completely unsuitable in society. For such “useless people” there simply will not be a suitable job.

Their appearance was predicted in his latest book by Homo Deus, one of the most famous futurologists, historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari. Such a prospect threatens those who “are deprived of any value in the economic, political or even artistic terms, those who are not conducive to the prosperity of society,” says the scientist.

Growing inequality, the extinction of professions due to the automation of work processes and other problems of a rapidly changing labor market today make us nervous and think about finding our place in the world of the future.

According to a study published this year, “Work of the future. What forces will shape reality in 2030” conducted by PwC, 74% of respondents in China, Germany, India, Britain and the United States are ready to acquire new skills and even completely change their specialization, if only stay professionally in demand.

Passion and flexibility

“The generation of my parents changed about five jobs on average during their life. My generation doubled this number to 10. And we should expect the same dynamics in subsequent generations. Now it’s impossible to spend all our life developing one skill and making a career out of it. This era is a thing of the past, “said Zach Klein, creator of educational services DIY and JAM, as well as the founder and designer of the video service Vimeo.

Harari is confident that most of the skills that children now acquire in schools will become irrelevant by the time they are 40.

When asked how to prepare children for professions of the future that do not yet exist, Klein says that we need to start with reforming the education system. In the USA, for example, he said, very little attention is paid to the interaction of students in the educational process, instead, emphasis is placed on competition.

In his projects, he tries to create an environment where a student of any age can teach something to another child or surprise older children with his results, as well as receive feedback on his work.

DIY service and its paid analogue of JAM allow children anywhere in the world to develop skills that interest them, share experiences with online friends, discuss projects and teach each other.

“In a regular school, the teacher gives homework and gets a lot of the same work in response. And in general, the school has a system where someone looks down at children,” Klein complains. “[At school] we are trying to get the children to distract from really curious things and concentrate on developing a particular skill. But they already have it! We just need to stop making them focus on one thing. “

Already now we see how people who have chosen a certain profession in their youth grow up and understand that society no longer needs them. According to Klein, to avoid this, it is necessary to teach people to be flexible from childhood and to easily give up classes that do not spark them.

Klein emphasizes that schools remain the main environment where children gain knowledge: “There, the child has social connections. The school is the best we have, but in situations where it does not provide the opportunity to learn what is interesting to you, the Internet gives you a new chance. “

Neural networks are not an enemy, but a friend

The company Sana Labs, which is developing a new training system based on artificial intelligence, unlike DIY, does not focus on the interactivity of learning and involvement in the student community, but on the personalization of the educational process.

The creator and head of Sana, Joel Hellermark, considers it important to combine three factors: personalized learning, the use of neural networks and online education. The main goal of his project is to learn to keep the student’s attention and interest in the learning process as long as possible.

No matter what the child is interested in. This business is a vehicle through which he can find his passion. If he once finds her, he will not be able to live without this feeling

Lost Einstein’s

But even innovative educational systems do not provide the opportunity to determine which of the children will be able to make a breakthrough in a particular scientific field.

“We are very good at determining which of the children is good at playing the trumpet and which is good at football. But we are not very good at recognizing among children those who have the potential to create a phenomenal, new product,” said the New York Times businessman and investor Steve Case, commenting on the Equality of Opportunity project.

According to a study in the United States, whether a child becomes an inventor or not is influenced by factors such as access to new technologies, as well as skin color, social status and gender.

“The cult of creativity is widespread. Opportunity is not,” Case concludes.

“There are a lot of them - these” lost Einstein’s “- those who could create something significant, if he had the opportunity to develop in the field of innovation since childhood”

Report “Who in America Becomes an Inventor?” Project “Equal Opportunities”

What to teach children?

“What do we tell our children? First of all, to stay afloat, they need to constantly adapt to the changing environment, be in touch with others and most importantly - to maintain their sense of identity and their value system,” says Blair Sheppard, head of global development strategies and leadership at PwC.

37% of PwC survey respondents said they see the future of the labor market full of opportunities for implementation. However, as many people answered positively to the question of whether they are concerned about the threat of labor automation.

“The main problem is not to create jobs. It is to set tasks that people would do better than the algorithm,” said Harari.

According to scientists from Oxford University, nearly half of the jobs in the States will be replaced by computers in the next 10-20 years.

They will free a person from routine work and leave him analytic tasks, leadership, work with emotional intelligence - those areas where empathy and creativity are needed, the PwC report says.

How not to waste human potential?

In a report entitled “Technologies, Jobs and the Future of Labor” (released in December 2016 and updated in February 2017), McKinsey analysts conclude that with large-scale automation of jobs, one of the solutions could be to introduce basic income.

Jana objects: “Basic income is perceived as a panacea. But this is a path that does not even include attempts to create jobs! This is a waste of human potential. Think about how many hidden geniuses we can miss in this way. Just give people money for nothing - it’s too bad a decision. “

However, Jana supports charity and social benefits, but only as a temporary measure, saving in an acute situation. She is confident that in the next few decades, humanity will be able to get rid of at least extreme poverty.

In their report, McKinsey experts recommend stimulating the perception of human capital as any other type of human capital in society. It is also necessary to concentrate on the question of how a person can work productively with machines and how to rethink his tasks in this regard. And of course, invest in the development of creative skills and critical thinking.

“We talk a lot about creativity. This is an incredibly important skill for innovation and entrepreneurship. However, you should not focus on developing traditional creative abilities in our understanding. We offer a slightly different solution: we study what skills students want to learn and try to make them creative “says Klein.

“We don’t know what to expect in the future, and I think we should put up with this,” he admits.

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