Thursday, April 2, 2026

DR. ANTHONY CHAFFEE: a very shriveled, atrophied brain. It looked exactly like an 80-year-old patient with Alzheimer's . . . dementia. Then with daily B12 replacement after 5 months, the brain swelled up significantly

And we know that B12 deficiency even as an adult you can lose a percentage of your brain matter.  The brain on the right is a 40 year old brain and you're losing 0.05% to 2% every year, you're damn right that's what your brain is going to look like at 80.  Of course, it will.  But with proper nutrition, it doesn't have to.  And what I think is also striking here is that this one from an 80-year-old brain, huge improvement.  But it doesn't look like a one-year-old brain.  Why the hell not?  Did they just lose out on their ability to develop normally?  Maybe.  But also they are replacing B12 lost via their vegetarian parents.  What about the vitamin D?  What about the choline, the creatine, the carnitine, the DHA, the EPA, the cholesterol, the saturated fat, I'll bet the LDL is pretty damn low.  --Dr Anthony Chaffee
The average person is sick and malnourished.  

80% of the calories consumed in America, Europe and the rest of the world really are from plants and plants don't contain B12, and so you have a vegetarian population basically.  And you're checking their average B12, and you're saying, "O, everybody's in this average."  Well, it's an average.  Of course, they're in the average.  But all those people are deficient because everyone is deficient, now no one is deficient because it's hidden in that average.  But if you're below 650, 700, you can actually get demyelination. Oxford University published a paper in 2008, that showed that under 500 picomoles per liter, 600 picograms per milliliter, down to like 300 picomoles per milliliter, you know, 450 picograms and lower that people were getting so much demyelination of their white matter that their brains were shrinking by 2.5% to 5.5% every 5 years.  

1:56.  And that's my theory as well.  Why do brains shrink?  We accept that.  We say our brains just shrink as we age even though no other animal on earth sees this.  None.  And so we just accept that our brains rot out of our brains.  Okay but if we are losing half a percent 2% of our brain per year because we are in the normal reference range for B12, after 34 years your brain is going to be shriveled up. And you look at case reports.  There's a case report in 1997 of a baby a 6-month-old baby who was a child of vegetarian parents who had severe atrophy to developed and so it was very very shriveled, atrophy.  It looked exactly like an 80-year-old patient with Alzheimer's . . . dementia. Then with daily B12 replacement after 5 months, the brain swelled up significantly.  It looked like basically a healthy 40 year old brain, but it didn't look like a one-year-old brain like it should have.  And so you know it looks like an 80-year-old brain, a 6-month-old baby with severe B12 deficiency looks like an 80 year old brain.  So why are we calling that 80-year-old brain normal?  And then you give them B12 and all of a sudden it looks like a 40-year-old brain 5 months down the line.  So I don't think that's age related atrophy.  I think that's malnutrition over time.  That is why I think people with MS are seeing a reduction in their lesions because they're just getting the basic nutrition that we need.  And so working in neurosurgery, I have seen dramatic recoveries from a neurological perspective, more than I would have expected.  Because normally we don't expect the brain and the nerves to heal all that well.  It doesn't surprise me now, because we've been malnourished we don't have these nutrients like B12 that are allowing your brain to heal if your B12 is at a level that is so low that you are getting demyelination your nerves from MS.  It's not going to happen; it's not going to happen.  But then people do this and they're eating the fat, they're having some liver, they're getting the their B12 and vitamin D up and their DHEA and their and LDL and all that sort of, or DHA and EPA and LDL.  They're getting all of those things up in proportion.  Now the body can actually start healing which we don't think is possible as doctors and clinicians, because we just don't see it.  And we think that the brain shrinking over time is normal because we just see it.  It is the norm but it doesn't mean that it is normal.  It doesn't mean that that is supposed to happen.  

4:46.  I think it's really dramatic so this is you know this but I'll say this for everybody's benefit this is very typical of a baby's brain.  All the gray stuff is just brain.  These little dark marks here are the ventricles.  They're very small here as well.  There's no space around the outside.  Space in kids, that space is maxed out.  It's pushing against the wall.  That's actually how the skull grows.  The growth of the brain pushes out on the inside of the skull and actually grows the bones of the skull so that's normal baby for a 20-month-old baby.  This is that case report and when you zoom in like this and you didn't know that this was a baby you tell me if I'm wrong here but that looks very typical 4 and 80 year old on the right looks pretty typical for a 40 year old.

5:44.  The big ventricles you look at the edge and you can see that would be called atrophy of the brain you can see this in and I don't read CAT scans of the head, but you can see it right away.  That's not a healthy brain.

6:01.  No, it's not, but if you put that in front of a radiologist and so that's an 80-year-old man, is that supposed to look like that he'd say yeah that's just a normal age-related atrophy the brain on the right would be a very normal for a 40 year old brain 35, 40 year old brain.  Brain on the right of the child, there's no gap around outside the outside the ventricles are very small you can't even see the temporal horns. This one now you can start seeing that.  It's already getting atrophied there is space around the outside the ventricles are a bit more pronounced around the brain stem pons and things like that.  Now in the brain on the left it's much more pronounced much more atrophy huge ventricles big open wide temporal horns that's very typical for an elderly brain.  But again this is a 6 month old girl of vegetarian parents with severe brain shrinkage atrophy due to B12 deficiency.  This is a published case report from 1997.  Retardation of myelination due to dietary vitamin B12 deficiency: Cranial MRI findings. Pediatric Radiology 27(2), 155-158.  And so this is at 6 months old brain and it looks like an 80 year old brain on the right is 5 months later about a year old after daily B12 replacement so massive Improvement on that and if you flip those around and say okay that's a 40-year-old brain right and you would say yeah that's normal normal at age-related atrophy but we know this is B12 deficiency.  And we know that B12 deficiency even as an adult you can lose a percentage of your brain matter the brain on the right is a 40 year old brain and you're losing half a percent, 2% every year you're damn right that's what your brain is going to look like at 80 of course it will but with proper nutrition, it doesn't have to and what I think is also striking here is that this one from an 80 year old brain, huge improvement.  But it doesn't look like a one-year-old brain.  Why the hell not?  Did they just lose out on their ability to develop normally?  Maybe.  But also they are replacing B12 lost via their vegetarian parents.  What about the vitamin D?  What about the choline, the creatine, the carnitine, the DHA, the EPA, the cholesterol, the saturated fat, I'll bet the LDL is pretty damn low.  It's not what you want.  When you're trying to grow a brain that is predominantly made out of cholesterol.  It's largely made out of it anyway.  So I think that's why it looks like a 40-year-old brain instead of a 1-year-old brain like it should because . . . because it's not just B12 that she's missing.  She's missing all these other things.  So when we have MS patients, I have an MS protocol and we optimize B12 we get into reference ranges that are the studies have shown are optimal.  We certainly get them to hell out of that "normal range" that can actually still cause demyelination.  Because you're never going to regrow your myelin without [B12 and the other nutrients found in beef] if you're in vitamin B12, and things like that are so low that you'll get demyelination.  It's never going to happen. 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

NICK SORTOR GRILLING RASKIN

Commie Quisling, Jamie Raskin

DR. ANTHONY CHAFFEE: Stevia . . . can lower fertility rate by 55% compared to the control with just one serving of Stevia.

 
Dr. Anthony Chaffee.

1:03.  Also people think that artificial sweeteners just because they don't have sugar or calories in them means that it's okay to eat but really these are just chemicals we are not combustion engines we don't we don't burn our food for energy we are chemical factories and we use chemicals and they make chemical reactions.

1:18.  When you put Stevia in your body this can lower fertility rate as shown in animal studies lowering the fertility rate by 55% compared to the control with just one serving of Stevia.  This shouldn't surprise anyone because Stevia comes from the Stevia plant in South America that has been used in South America, in places like Paraguay, for over a thousand years as birth control.  So why are we thinking that this is safe to put in the drinking Supply things like monk fruit sugar, also called Erythritol, has been shown in recent studies to have an increased risk of blood clots also even though they're artificial sweeteners and they don't contain carbohydrates they have been shown in studies to still trigger and insulin response and insulin is the fat storage hormone.

2:05.  We've been told our entire lives that if you eat fat you'll get fat but that simply is not true.  Your body has a limited capacity to absorb fat and after you run out of bile you will not absorb 90% or more of the fat that you eat.  Your body has 5 organs working in concert just to absorb fat.  Your stomach starts breaking food down. Your liver makes bile.  Your gallbladder stores it.  Your pancreas starts making enzymes, like lipase, to break down the fat, and the bile emulsifies it and it's absorbed by your small intestine.  So why would we have 5 organs all working together to absorb fat if it were bad for us or harmful in some way?  Our body knows what it's doing. Nature knows what it's doing.  Biology knows what it's doing.  And if our body didn't want that fat or didn't find it beneficial, it would not go to such lengths to absorb it in the first place.  So if you under eat fat, you can actually slow down your progress.  There are essential nutrients in fat that you cannot find anywhere else it's not just a calorie Source there's vitamin D3, K2, Retinol, vitamin E, DHA, EPA, choline, so many more things that you have to have in order to live and thrive.  So reducing your fat not only reduces your energy intake, it also reduces your nutrient intake and you become malnourished.  This in itself can slow down your metabolism because your body feels malnourished and it says, "Hey we are in a famine.  We need to slow down our metabolism and ramp down our biological processes so that we don't run out of nutrients and energy."  If you go really lean, like some people are advocating, you can actually get something called protein poisoning where you're getting the majority of your energy from protein when this breaks down it releases ammonia which then has to get turned in to urea in your liver and excreted in your kidneys if you overwhelm your liver's ability to turn ammonia into urea you'll get a buildup of ammonia and you can actually get quite sick this can cause hair loss low energy extreme illness and even yes rapid weight loss because you're very sick and in some cases it can even cause death so when some people are saying that the carnivore diet or a ketogenic guys making them sick or making their hair fall out maybe think how much fat are you eating also because your body has a limited capacity to absorb fat you need to know how much you're getting so you need to eat as much fat as you can that your body can absorb and then a little bit left over so that your stools are soft. 

JOHN A KONRAD V: The think tanks didn’t offer an alternative. They offered learned helplessness. And that helplessness is the context in which Hormuz is now playing out.

And there was an even bigger loss that didn't make headlines but I'm told hit Trump personally and it reveals how the military academia and think tank establishment, which gets significant funding and support from Europe, fights back. In December, Trump announced the Golden Fleet initiative at Mar-a-Lago: a new class of Trump-class battleships, 30,000-40,000 tons, armed with hypersonic missiles, railguns, lasers, and nuclear cruise missiles. The USS Defiant. A ship he designed with to hold chokepoints like Hormuz. Twenty to twenty-five hulls. The most ambitious surface combatant program since World War II. Within 72 hours, the national security think tank world lined up to kill it. CSIS published a piece titled “The Golden Fleet’s Battleship Will Never Sail,” estimating $9 billion per hull, predicting cancellation before the first ship hits water. The Foundation for Defense of Democracies called it a waste. Retired admirals said the Navy should buy small distributed platforms instead. Every defense analyst in Washington competed to be quoted saying it was impossible. The military industrial establishment, with the help from allied think tanks and colleges, lined up to piss on the plans. The same establishment that can’t build a frigate on time, that delivered the Constellation class years late before canceling it, that produced three Zumwalts instead of thirty, that has presided over the smallest Navy since World War I, lined up overnight to explain why America can’t build big ships anymore. The same people who have no plan to close the destroyer gap that is right now undermining convoy escort operations in the Gulf. The think tanks didn’t offer an alternative. They offered learned helplessness. And that helplessness is the context in which Hormuz is now playing out.

And the tariff decision took away a huge source of revenue to fund it without congress... which won't even vote on the bipartisan SHIPs Act. 

HITLER to WOKESTER: You want to force your ideas into the population, right? Me too!

WOKESTER:  I'm a time traveler from the year 2026 and I'm here to end you, Hitler.  Soon we will be able to take back the White House and we will be able to use the government to force people to follow our great ideas.

HITLER:  You want to force your ideas into the population, right?  Me too!  

WOKESTER:  You and I have nothing in common what I'm saying is that there people in our time with dangerous ideas and we need to silence them.

HITLER: Silence those who disagree with you?  I do that too!  Ha ha ha!

WOKESTER:  What I'm saying is that we are very close to creating Utopia as long as we can get rid of some undesirable people grouping.

HITLER:  Yes, the Jews.  

WOKESTER:  Yes, yes, the Jews!  Ahhh!