Saturday, October 4, 2025

SAMA HOOLE: Mushrooms have significant issues: Contain chitin (humans can't digest) High in purines (gout trigger) Accumulate heavy metals from soil

I have recommended Lion's Mane and other mushrooms before.  And I sure have enjoyed sauteed mushrooms before I learned of their questionable nutritional value. 

SAMA HOOLE: Day 5 of carnivore: "This isn't working, I feel awful." You spent 30 years running on glucose. Your mitochondria need at least 4-6 weeks to upregulate fat oxidation enzymes. You're quitting during the adaptation phase.

WARNER MENDENHALL: So it's very difficult to get to court in the first place, and then to find Justice.


And tell me the reason that we also have courts well I think I know what you're getting at I mean and actually it's a really good point what Brooke is getting ready to have me sing and what the court system does that I don't think most people realize is it's a way to mediate violence in society.  And the problem is if people can't get Justice, they're going to take justice into their own hands, and I think that's forgotten.  When we have laws like the prep Act that just strip us of our ability to go to court, you are actually creating a pathway that's going to cause more violence in society.  As people can't find Justice for their dead loved ones and they're dead children, they're going to take into their own hands.  You know, why does Fauci have security?  Because there are thousands and thousands of people very angry at him who cannot get Justice in the courts.  And we see that everywhere in our society.  I see hospital security really getting beefed up.  Why?  Because you can't find Justice against these hospitals.  We just tried a case in June that had a bad outcome in my view.  So it's very difficult to get to court in the first place, and then to find Justice.  So you have very very frustrated parents and family members that they need to see a pathway to get Justice for the deaths and injuries of their loved ones.

1:40.  It is a festering wound and wounds of this magnitude do not heal with time they only get bigger and we saw what happened at the CDC where the very frustrated man took a gun to the CDC because like you said we're not seeing any justice where everything is being swept under the rug . . . .

Pfizer whistleblower's lawyer: "If people can't get justice [in court] they're going to take justice into their own hands &...the PREP Act strip[s] us of our ability to go to court...creating a pathway...[for] violence...as people can't find justice for their...dead children" This clip of Warner Mendenhall (@MendenhallFirm), an activist, citizen, and lawyer representing Pfizer whistleblower Brook Jackson (@IamBrookJackson), is taken from an interview with Dr. Mary Talley Bowden (@MdBreathe) posted to Rumble on October 1, 2025.

For reference, Jackson is a whistleblower suing Pfizer and her former employer, Ventavia Research Group, in Federal court under the False Claims Act for fraud she witnessed during the Pfizer COVID-19 mRNA clinical trials in September 2020. PARTIAL TRANSCRIPT OF CLIP "You know, what the court system does that I don't think most people realize is it's a way to mediate violence in society. And the problem is, if people can't get justice, they're going to take justice into their own hands. And I think that's forgotten when we have laws like the PREP Act that just strip of. Strip us of our ability to go to court. You are actually creating, a pathway that's going to cause more violence in society. "As people can't find justice for their dead loved ones and their dead children, they're going to take. They're going to take it into their own hands. You know, why does Fauci have security? Because there are thousands and thousands of people very angry at him who cannot get justice in the courts. "And we see that everywhere in our society. I mean, I see hospital security really getting beefed up. Why? Because, you can't find justice against these hospitals. We just tried a case, you know, in June. It had a bad outcome, in my view. And it's very difficult to get to court in the first place, then to find justice. And you have very, very frustrated parents and family members, that they need to see a pathway to, get justice for the deaths and injuries of their loved ones."

Complete interview here.

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.