Saturday, October 4, 2025

DR. RONALD ADLER: BP medications cause adverse effects such as kidney & electrolyte abnormalities, not to mention the increased risks of complications such as dizziness & falls that inevitably result when BP is lowered too much

1970, 160/95.

1985, 140/90.

2017, 120/80.

The American Heart Assn. Has Changed 'Normal' Blood Pressure To 110/70.

The American Heart Assn. Has Changed 'Normal' Blood Pressure To 110/70...Every Time They Lower The Numbers, Millions Of People Need Drugs.

In 1970, Normal BP Was 160/95. In 1985 It Was 140/90. And Now 120/80 Is Considered 'Elevated.'

That's Not Medicine. That's $40B Marketing.

The bar has been lowered once again & under new guidelines, more Americans meet the criteria for high blood pressure & are pressured to start taking antihypertensive medications.

The AHA & ACC (American Heart Association & American College of Cardiology) in August 2025 just released hypertension 'updated' guidelines shifting 10 points lower across all categories in order to make more people diagnosed as hypertensive to prescribe more drugs.

'Normal' is now 110/70 or less.

'Elevated' is now 120/80 & qualifies for blood pressure medications.

'Stage 1 Hypertension' is now 130/80 & qualifies for even greater aggressive medication.

Here's why this is not medicine but marketing...

The new guidelines are based on results of a large, federally funded study called SPRINT, backed by pharmaceutical giants & stockholders...which found a 25% 'relative risk' reduction in cardiovascular events using a lower blood pressure target.

25% reduction was the 'relative risk reduction' not the 'absolute risk reduction.' Relative risk reduction is useless & misleading, whereas absolute risk reduction is the actual percent helped by an intervention.

The absolute reduction in cardiovascular events was only 2% – SPRINT also used an especially high-risk population, so patients with low or average risk for cardiovascular events had 0% benefit or absolute reduction.

Is lower blood pressure always better? definitely not...

The AHA & ACC assume that a lower blood pressure is always better, but some primary care doctors challenge that doctrine. “Once you get to a certain point, if you lower blood pressure further, your rate of stroke & heart attack increases,” says Dr. Andy Lazris, primary care doctor & Right Care Alliance council chair.

Doctors are graded on how well they get patients to the new hypertension target. These grades affect doctors’ pay.

Dr. Andy Lazris admits, “If I lower my patient’s blood pressure & they fall and break their hip due to the medication causing dizziness & fainting...I still get paid.”

“Treating blood pressure with medicine is a risky intervention,” says  Dr. Ronald Adler, associate professor of family medicine & community health at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

“BP medications cause adverse effects such as kidney & electrolyte abnormalities, not to mention the increased risks of complications such as dizziness & falls that inevitably result when BP is lowered too much,” says Adler, “Because the new guidelines suggest that people be treated initially with 2 drugs, such experiences will be even more common.”

Side Effects of Blood Pressure Medications:

Heart palpitations

Fainting

Kidney dysfunction

Angioedema (swelling of face/tongue)

Joint pain

Chronic cough

Low sodium & potassium

Dizziness

Headache

Dehydration

Muscle cramps

Gout

Insomnia

Constipation

Tiredness

Depression

Slow heartbeat

Symptoms of asthma

Sexual dysfunction

America, 1989


The population count of 100 million is wrong. It was 246 million in 1989.  

To one comment by Damian

Hot take: Back then not everyone looked like a model and was acting like in a movie.

I wrote, 

Maybe not but a culture needs standards. The target audience is young men of course but organized young men who were part of something, who played a role in military, Sports, business. Not just about looks. Having an organized appearance is part of success.

Friday, October 3, 2025

Tim Dillon on what Tech Oligarchs want for you


SAMA HOOLE: Patient: "Doctor, I broke my arm falling off a ladder." Doctor: "Have you considered cutting seed oils?"

Patient: "Doctor, I broke my arm falling off a ladder." Doctor: "Have you considered cutting seed oils?" Patient: "My arm is literally bent the wrong way." Doctor: "Yes, inflammation from linoleic acid weakens bone density. Stop eating rapeseed oil and that won't happen again." Patient: "I fell from 15 feet."
Doctor: "Exactly. Oxidised PUFAs affect spatial awareness."

Among other things. So if linoleic acid stays in your tissue for 2-5 years, because it seeks out fatty tissue that means that it stays in your brain tissue for a very long time, and that brain fog that you complain about will be chronic. It also lowers cholesterol, which again affects your brain, nervous system, and reproductive health.

Your Smart TV is taking constant snapshots of everything you watch.  Wait, what?

Isn't watching TV meant to be a private activity from the comfort of your own home? Not anymore.

Do you think the things that we are watching on our Smart TVs are private just between us and our television?

Definitely not. 

In this video, we're going to take a look at what Smart TVs are actually doing behind the glass.  We'll break down how they collect your most sensitive data.  We'll explore how that data is used to profile and manipulate you, and finally, we'll go over ways to protect yourself.  Basically, in Internet age, Smart TV watches you.  

WHAT SMART TVs ARE & HOW THEY OPERATE

Basically just modern TVs it's almost impossible not to get a non-Smart TV these days.

Most new TVs connect to the internet to stream shows and movies on demand they come preloaded with apps for watching content things like Amazon Prime video, YouTube, Hulu, cable provider apps, and fast channels.

They are also quietly sending out reports about everything you watch.

"Quietly" being the keyword.  

If you ask a random user, "do you know that Smart TV is doing this?" they will likely not know about it.  --Yash Vekaria, PhD Researcher, UC Davis.  Who work on a paper about how bad smart TVs really are for privacy, "Watching TV with the Second Party: A First Look at Automatic Content Recognition Tracking in Smart TVs," Gianluca Anselmi, Yash Vekaria, et al., Proceedings of the 2024 ACM on Internet Measurement Conference, Nov. 4, 2024. 

Our study focuses on two major players in the marketplace: one being LG, and the other Samsung.  "We perform a series of experiments on two major Smart TV platforms Samsung and LG well we were investigating this we struck upon something which is known as automatic content recognition it's a technology built into the OS of modern TVs how it works is basically the smart TVs continuously capture snapshots of what the user is choosing.  Now these snapshots could be audio snapshots or videos or they could be both and by doing this the TV manufacturer is able to recognize whatever is playing VCR data is allows them to know which household is watching a particular program so that they can Target ads to an impressionable audiences you will be astonished by