HWD The Grim Reaper. Is it real or is it Death By Medicine

HWD The Grim Reaper. Is it real or is it Death By Medicine

Introduction
(0:00) Hi, this is Dr. Daniels, and you're listening to Healing with Dr. Daniels. This is the Sunday, April 19th, 2020 edition. We are using new technology today, so hopefully, the audio will be better. And as you can see, the microphone is gone, so we're going to see how that goes. All right, well, we have some breaking news on COVID, by golly. But first, let's take some turpentine.
Taking Turpentine
(0:35) Oh, here, this is turpentine. Now, a lot of you have questions, "Oh, what kind of turpentine?" Personally, I go to the hardware store; that's what I use, and that's also what the report of the candida cleaner was based on.
(0:49) All right, here we go. I take a half teaspoon which is right up the neck of this dropper. Then, because I'm left-handed, I'm going to put the spoon in my left hand and need a rounded spoonful of sugar.
(1:16) Yeah, there we go. We're going to squirt this turpentine on here. Many of you may not know that in 1899, the Merck Manual, turpentine cured absolutely everything. And then, I know there's something—something happened. All of a sudden, overnight, it became poisonous.
(1:39) All right, and this is water. I drink distilled water. Mmm, a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down.
Shilajit Supplement
(2:01) Okay, next I take shilajit, s-h-i-l-a-j-i-t, shilajit. Many of you have asked me to spell that. The other name is the Russian one: mumio, m-y-m-u-e. They spell it many different ways. Most countries and languages are not as precise about spelling as the United States is, and this is spelled like four or five different ways in Russian, but mumio is one name and shilajit is the other.
(2:27) All right, you can see it is black. This is also known as the real black gold. No, not oil. This is it, and this is mine. They just get right about the ground. The dose is 200 milligrams a day. Mmm, about that much. Actually, that's pretty generous, but we're going to go with it. And the rest of the water that I did not drink, we're going to put it right in there, and by the end of our show, it will be dissolved and down the hatch.
Benefits of Turpentine
(3:10) Okay, oh wait, so why do I take turpentine? I take turpentine because turpentine encourages parasites to leave the body. They do not want to hang around, and it delays aging. As you can see, I am 63 years old. Yay! And I was feeling pretty old and rickety, and turpentine makes a big difference. So, but for the whole story, go to vitalitycapsules.com and download your free report. And as always, remember, turpentine does not diagnose, cure, or treat anything. Anything. Okay, so get that out of the way. Of course, it's not approved by the FDA. It goes without saying.
COVID-19 Developments
(3:55) So sometimes, you know, you just don't really want to be right about stuff, but then sometimes you're just right. So, if you recall our last episode, I established that the deaths, if there are any, from the prison situation were not caused by a virus. That's absolutely sure—not caused by a virus. And the situation, whatever it is, cannot be spread by person-to-person contact or does not spread by person-to-person contact. So, those are all established. So, there have been a few developments. The world has gotten a week older and possibly even a week wiser. I don't know. But three countries—Brazil, Mexico, Sweden—no shutdown, no quarantine. The government did do something. No gatherings of more than 100 people. But most of us don't have families much bigger than that, and so really, 100 people wouldn't really restrict things.
(4:59) So, the question is, these countries have done basically next to nothing, just window dressing to protect diplomatic relations with you-know-who. What are their numbers? You know, what's going on over there? Inquiring minds want to know. And when inquiring minds want to know, they go to, well, the worldometer. Yes, they just sit around all day long and measure stuff. They sit around measuring stuff. And the thing they like to measure lately, they measure world population, births, deaths, government and economics, society and media, environment, food, water, energy, and health.
COVID-19 Statistics and Comparisons
(6:18) Let's see if they have, if we can just get this coronavirus thing up. No, we're not going to do that. They're not going to do that. World. There we go. Okay. So, I've been to this page a few times. My computer should have it memorized. All right. Here we are.
(6:24) So, here's the deal. Oh, wait. Whenever you go someplace online, they always show you ads, right? They always show ads. And the ads, a lot of times, tell you more about the page and the people visiting it than the page itself. So, what's being advertised on this page, worldometers? You're a shocking 2020 horoscope. What does your future have in store? Yes, they are selling predict-the-future stuff. I guess if you're going to come to this page, it must be pretty gullible, but put that aside.
(7:03) So, this is something that's been killing people. So, we're told the death rate is anywhere from 445 deaths per million population (that beat Belgium) all the way down to zero deaths per population. And that would be like Thailand, for example. And the United States is somewhere in the mix there with 109 deaths per million. So, let's take a look at the countries that have done absolutely nothing. I mean, nothing. Well, they did tell our citizens to wash their hands, and that's nice.
(7:44) So, let's take a look at Brazil. Brazil has 10 deaths per million population attributed to coronavirus. 10 deaths. So, we have something that's killing anywhere from 445 people per million, and this is in countries taking total precautions, Belgium. And Brazil, 10 per million. Well, what about Mexico? So, Mexico is pretty laid back, which is nice. Somebody's got to take it easy. So, Mexico death rate, four per million. Four per million. No quarantine. They did shut down the tourist industry, but everything else pretty much is chugging along.
Ventilators and COVID-19 Treatment Concerns
(8:33) So, we can deduce from this pretty much that whether you shut down or don't shut down, whether you quarantine or don't quarantine, whether you wear a mask or gloves or not, has absolutely nothing to do with dying or living in this particular situation. So, this is important. So, it's important to take a look at our living real-time controls. But I said there's more news, right? I swear one day I'm going to get good at all these clicking.
(9:16) So, you will also recall from a prior show that mysteriously doctors were warned by the medical establishment that they would be morally challenged and asked to do things that violated their moral code. I was puzzled by this. How could a member of a profession that kills more than 800,000 Americans every year be morally challenged by anything? I'm like, that's odd. And then to have the medical-industrial complex warn them upfront that they're going to be morally challenged, even pushed further than their presently very broad comfort zone.
(9:51) Well, you know those deaths in New York? Yeah, the deaths in New York that talk about coming unraveled. So, there was a doctor, a young doctor. Young for a doctor, by the way, is under 40 because doctors generally spend the first 30 years of their life training. So, they don't really get introduced to a reality of how effective or ineffective or even worse how harmful their actions are.
Shocking Patient Declines in New York
(10:24) And now, with the shift to shift work, the doctor literally is not on call for 24 hours to the patients that he's taking care of. What this means is the doctor can prescribe a drug at 10 a.m, patient dies maybe at 10 p.m, the doctor will probably never hear about it. Maybe he's going on vacation the next week or something. Never hear about it. So, it's difficult for doctors to get real-time feedback as to what's going on and the effectiveness or lack of effectiveness of what they're doing. So, now it's obvious what the moral challenge is, and it's pretty overwhelming, and many doctors are over a barrel looking at this situation.
(11:15) So, well, you know those deaths in New York. Pretty high, aren't they? It is now established that they, many of them, a large chunk, were caused by medical therapy. Yep, not by the virus. Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope. Not by the virus. So, this is the basic thing, and this is, you know, tattoo this in your brain because it is a game plan like football, a game plan that has been run again and again and again and again and again, and it will be continued to be run until the public understands the game plan.
The Game Plan: Testing and Therapy
(11:59) So, here you go. Here it is. You test for a non-existent something or something that has no health consequences. Get people to accept therapy for it and harm them, kill them with therapy. So, you have to test for something that has no impact on health. So, the positive test is totally meaningless except for the meaning that through miseducation, propaganda, conditioning, or even intimidation, people have gotten to believe this negative prognosis even though it does not prognosticate anything. And then they accept therapy based on this test for the non-existent thing, and the test kills them. Therapy kills them. Instant epidemic, right? Because you got dead bodies. Where'd they come from? Yeah, the therapy.
(13:12) This would be preposterous, but there are two excellent examples of this. One is HIV-AIDS. You can do the research on that. It's pretty straightforward. In fact, they're using the same type of testing, which is PCR testing and antibody testing, and they're using even the same experts for this particular epidemic. That should be a red flag right there. And the other disease which is more mainstream is hypertension.
(13:43) I, of course, was trained in medical school to treat hypertension. I mean, the list of hypertensive drugs is amazing, and the amount of time spent on it in medical school is impressive. And then as a practicing doctor, if you're in family practice or internal medicine, literally a third of your day is spent prescribing hypertensive drugs.
The Realization About Hypertension Treatment
(14:00) But what tipped me off to this blood pressure situation was they told us doctors that treating hypertension did not help anyone live a minute longer. I'm like, what? You mean, I'm not saving lives? Which, of course, I thought I was helping. I'm not helping. And so, if the treatment is of no benefit, then all you have left is the harm, the side effects. And so, it's very, very sad. But you can, I have prior shows on the hypertension topic and the AIDS topic.
(14:32) So, today, we're looking at the COVID topic. So, how do we know it's the same thing for COVID? Wait for it. The medical-industrial complex itself says so. Holy cow. Oh, my God.
Patient Deaths Due to Ventilators
(14:54) So, let's take a look and see if we can't retrace these steps. From fine to failing. This is Medscape. They use a lot of euphemisms. But let's just be blunt. From fine to dead. Rapid declines in COVID-19 patients jar doctors and nurses. Notice, these patients are dying so quickly that it is shocking the doctors and nurses. They're going from, "Oh, just fine, came here with a car," to dead so quickly that the doctors and nurses are getting really shook up over this. Yeah, about time something shook them up.
(15:36) So, this is Reuters, which is a, they record news. And one medical worker called it insane. Another said it induces paranoia. The speed with which patients are declining and dying from the coronavirus is shocking. Even veteran doctors and nurses as they scramble to determine how to stop such sudden deterioration. I mean, can you feel it? Can you feel the drama? Now, this is all editorializing. And so, what we have to pull out of here is some kind of fact. Like, what exactly happened? Did someone walk in, say hello, and hit the ground dead? Is that what happened?
(16:20) Here we are. Patients look fine, feel fine, then you turn around and they are unresponsive, said Diana Torres, a nurse at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, the epicenter of the epidemic in the United States, where the virus has infected more than 415,000 people. I'm paranoid, scared to walk out of their room. Well, if she really believed coronavirus is killing them, she should be scared to stay in the room, right? Because wouldn't the virus jump over to her and cause her to cough and die? But wait, we've got more.
(17:08) A young woman died unexpectedly while nurse Douglas was on duty at a hospital in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. After 34 years on the job, Douglas said she normally has an intuition of who is going to fade and who may improve. And that's true, by the way. Usually, your doctor or nurse, they have a sense that you're going to die because they've seen this before. She said, but these people are throwing that out the window. Last week, she was planning her wedding, and this week, the patient's family is planning her funeral, she said, referring to the deceased patient. So, patients might enter the hospital with strong oxygen levels and be engaged in happy conversation, said the emergency room doctor in New York, only to be gasping for breath, here it is, and intubated a few hours later. So, in other words, this person received substantial therapy prior to dying.
(18:01) Okay, scary thing is, there's no rules to it, said the resident who spoke on condition of anonymity. So, this person is just like, "I'm a resident, I'm training, I don't want to lose everything before I got it good." So, these scenes are playing out everywhere, everywhere, as the COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus, has infected more than 1.4 million worldwide and killed more than 83,000 as of Wednesday. Now, notice, the person who dropped dead did receive therapy prior to dropping dead. They're going to get to this.
Concerns About Ventilator Use
(18:32) Quick turns for the worse are likely a product of an overly exuberant reaction by the immune system as it fights the virus. So, that's theory, that's not fact. Fact is, patient comes in, treatment, gasp for air, dead, got it. The infectious disease specialist has a new theory, which we have yet to treat, and he's calling it a cytokine storm. It occurs when the body overproduces immune cells and their activating compounds. Cytokines cause dangerously high blood pressure, lung damage, and organ failure. Okay, thank you, doctor. Meltdown.
(19:11) So, Emily, a 25-year-old nurse in a New York suburb, says she reached her breaking point last week when a relatively healthy 44-year-old woman needed sudden intubation. "I had a meltdown that night. I cried." Associated Press journalist so-and-so, who was in good health, had run 83 marathons, died last week, according to a post on Facebook by his cousin. Now, this is a journalist, and so, you know, this is his cousin posting, so he has to be a little bit of a suspect. We don't really know. This person, who was 51 at first, did not need hospitalization. He began to recover, showed clear lungs, strong vital signs during a doctor's visit in late March, but a sudden setback sent him to the emergency room, and 13 hours later, we lost him.
(20:12) A nurse at Mount Sinai's intensive care unit recalled watching patients' kidneys quickly shut down, adding that many require intravenous drips of the blood thinner heparin. Now, heparin, just for those of you who don't know it, is a big killer. So, a large percentage of people on heparin, it's their cause of death. It's insane how sick they get, how quickly. We're really trying hard to figure out how to treat them.
(20:45) Okay, here's the key word. Here's key. Doctors say they are having limited success. That's the term for dismal failure, saving patients that require intubation. So, remember the other patient who died suddenly, intubated, boom, died. Doctors are saying, "You know, we intubate these people, they seem to die pretty quickly." So, Columbia University intubated patients are spending two weeks on ventilators. The resident emergency doctor at New York Presbyterian said more patients than usual are dying while on the machines. Really? The exact numbers are still not known while the epidemic rages, with hospitals sometimes working in chaotic conditions. Some of these hospitals are experimenting with unproven drugs in hopes of helping patients.
Doctor Concerns and Intubation Risks
(21:30) "We are essentially throwing the kitchen sink at these patients." Okay, have you ever had anyone throw a kitchen sink at you? Was it helpful? Okay. So, we have a pattern here that we can see, which is intubation. And then we have, COVID-19 is making moral injury to physicians much worse. Yes. Risk factors for death from COVID-19 identified in Wuhan patients. What was it? Being on a ventilator, intubation.
(22:15) Now, all this for a disease that Fauci said, this is a long time ago, March 2nd, was just a little severe flu. Case fatality rate about 0.1%. About 0.1%. It goes from that to as high as 10% in some cases.
(22:48) So, now here is the clincher. April 6th, 2020. Is protocol-driven COVID-19 ventilation doing more harm than good? So, in medicine, doing more harm than good means killing patients. Okay. So, it's like, this is straightforward. Straightforward. Protocol-driven COVID-19 ventilation. This is so bad that a panicked emergency room physician, actually an intensive care unit physician, did a video and released it on the internet. He was in the intensive care unit. He saw several COVID patients die, die, die, die, die. And he says, "Whoa, wait a minute. I think we're killing them with these ventilator settings." So, he tried tweaking the settings, basically delaying putting them on the ventilator, number one. And when they put them on a ventilator, changing the settings to reduce the amount of force. So, when the air goes into the lungs of a person on a ventilator, they use what's called positive pressure to push the air in. Doesn't stop there. They use PEEP, which is peak end expiratory pressure. What's that? That means they use pressure to push the air in, and to let the air out. They just decrease the pressure. At no point do they release the pressure and allow the lungs to fully deflate.
(24:08) What's the problem with that? If you have a lung that stretches easily, in other words, the disease is not severe, then when you put that air in at a high pressure, what might be okay for someone with emphysema, then it goes like this, pop, like a balloon. Yeah. Shame on you. You just killed somebody. Yeah, that's bad. So, this physician put out this viral video. He explained it medically, so you might miss it, but he did say clearly, "We're killing patients." Then, he and another doctor in the intensive care unit got into an argument. The other doctor wanted to maintain the deadly ventilator settings. So, what did they do? They sent this complaining doctor down to the emergency room. "Excuse me, you go down and work in the basement." Yeah, we're not going to let you see the light of day. So, that's what happened, but let's see what they are saying on this April 6th note.
(25:07) Physicians in the COVID-19 trenches are beginning to question whether standard respiratory therapy protocols, that would be the standard of care, for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), are the best approach for treating patients with COVID-19 pneumonia. Now, if you're a doctor and you have a license, which I don't—I'm a doctor, but I don't have a license—and you want to keep that license, this is the kind of careful talk you have to use. You can't say, "We're killing people. We got to stop. This is crazy." No, no, no, no, no. You have to talk like a battered woman who knows her husband can beat her with impunity. That is the mentality of the doctor. So, doctors are beginning to question if what they're doing might not be the best.
The Harm from Ventilator Protocols
(25:57) At issue is the standard use of ventilators for a virus whose presentation has not followed the standard ARDS, but is looking more like high-altitude pulmonary edema in some patients. Now, this is all a bunch of minutiae detail that's actually irrelevant. How do I mean irrelevant? Because you as a patient, an individual, is considering, is there a virus? Is it killing people? What's killing people? It's irrelevant what it looks like on presentation. The point is, person shows up, standard of care is a ventilator, put them on a ventilator, and they die. Everything else is window dressing. Like, was the lady wearing a skirt? You can describe the skirt, blah, blah, blah, but was it a skirt? Answer, well, yeah.
(27:01) A lot of people say, "Well, Dr. Daniels, if they're not dying from the virus, what are they dying from?" That's like accusing somebody of murder. And you exonerate that person. They say, "Well, we can't let you off the hook until we find out who did commit the murder. You know, we got a dead body, and we're going to lock you up because we got you right here." It's the same type of reasoning. Just because a virus—we don't need to know what caused it in order to establish that a virus did not cause it. That's important. More precisely, the virus that's being tested for with the available tests is not what's causing people's death. That is very clear. Very clear. Overwhelming evidence to that effect.
Doctors Question Protocols
(27:55) So now, what they're saying is, "Well, you know, the ventilator settings might not be right for these people." At the medical school, I raise my hand. Maybe the ventilator's not right for these people. But, it's a letter published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Medicine on March 30th. And in an editorial accepted for publication in Intensive Care Medicine, a doctor in Gottingen, Germany, and his colleagues make the case that protocol-driven, that means standard of care, forced the doctor to do it, ventilator use for patients with COVID could be doing more harm than good. Again, that's as strong as you can talk and still keep a license.
(28:41) I took my turpentine, and I'm burping up my turpentine, which is normal but inconvenient. So, the doctor noted that COVID-19 patients in intensive care units in Northern Italy had an atypical presentation, which is not usual, with severe lack of oxygen and well-preserved lung gas volume. He and his colleagues suggested that instead of high positive and expiratory pressure, which is the PEEP, physicians should consider the lowest possible pressure and gentle ventilation, practicing patients to buy time with minimum additional damage. Similar observations were made by Cameron Kyle Siddell.
(29:27) This is important. Cameron Kyle Siddell is the critical care doctor who released the video. So, Cameron, C-A-M-E-R-O-N space, K-Y-L-E dash S-I-D-E-L-L-M-D. It is worth looking for his video and watching it. It is horrifying. You see this person, he is so sincere, and he tells you what his observations were, and, you know, nothing changed. They just basically said, "You, out of here." And so, a lot of people say, "Well, doctors should stand up." They will simply move you aside and go find a doctor who will follow the protocols.
Intubation Concerns and Recommendations
(30:03) So, similar observations. Okay, he's been speaking out about this issue on Twitter, and he shared his own experience in a video interview with WebMD Chief. Now, he's substantially toned down. His tone and everything is very tentative and respectful, you know, talking to WebMD, but when you see his original video that he did from his—it looked like his kitchen—he was just totally distraught. And I know when I was practicing medicine and two years into my medical practice, I said, "Let me look back over every single patient who died." And every single patient who died without fail was taking medications, totally compliant, had even been to a specialist to make sure they were on the right therapy. And I said, "Oh my God."
(31:08) So, for me, that was my huge aha moment. And I was spending many sleepless nights as I formulated a plan to stop harming people or stop participating in the harm. But this guy just, you could see he was going through a similar situation. But as you can see by his video done in his kitchen, he has a pretty modest standard of living and is probably digging out under a lot of educational loans and just financial pressures there that or they're not paying him very much at all.
Ventilator Death Rates
(31:49) Okay, bottom line, as these two doctors agree, is that protocol-driven ventilator use may be causing lung injury in COVID-19 patients. So, now we've dropped, we've taken off the gloves. We're not talking about more harm than good. We're talking about harm, harm and no good.
(32:12) So, we have a doctor in Germany who actually published a paper. And we have this doctor in the United States who is risking absolutely everything. He doesn't know how much everything, everything he might be risking, but that's another story. In the editorial, the German doctor explained further that ventilator settings should be based on physiological findings with different respiratory treatment based on disease rather than using standard protocols.
(32:49) Now, there's a few things—there's some problems here, right? One problem is the incredible intense financial incentive to put these people on ventilators. And so, once you get them on the ventilator, then that's it, off to the morgue. But let's see, you know, how bad it is. We've got some estimates here.
(33:29) So, it's a definite disease. Okay. So, the combination is severe lack of oxygen associated with near-normal respiratory system compliance. So, they don't have stiff lungs, and so they can't handle the high pressure. So, when they get high pressure in their lungs, the lungs overexpand, and then you have damage, and the person dies. So, the German doctor and his colleagues hypothesized that COVID-19 patterns at patient presentation depend on interaction between three sets of factors: how bad is the disease, host response, and other associated illnesses. So, how healthy is the person in general? How severe is the COVID? And what kind of immune system response? So, ventilatory responsiveness of the patient and time elapsed between disease onset and hospitalization.
(35:03) So, they go through a lot of, you know, disease here, but this is the kind of disease in which you do not have to follow the protocol. You have to follow the physiologies that unfortunately many, many doctors around the world cannot think outside the protocol. They get fired if they do, like poor Dr. Kyle Sedell was kicked out of the ICU because he didn't want to follow the protocol. And so, he says doctors must begin to consider other approaches. We're desperate now in the sense that everything we're doing is not working. Knowing the first step towards improving outcomes is admitting that this is something new. Again, euphemism for we don't know what the heck we're doing. I think it all starts from there, and I think we have the kind of scientific technology and the human capital in this country to solve this or at least have a very good school shot at it.
New Treatment Protocols
(36:18) So, they're proposing a different treatment protocol, other details of which are not really important. But, well, actually there is one little thing. If they're not short of breath, use a nasal cannula. Don't put a tube down their throat. So, in other words, don't intubate these patients. Use continuous positive airway pressure, non-invasive. Use a mask, and then intubate for esophageal pressure swings that increase above 15 centimeters.
(37:11) So, intubated and deeply sedated patients who don't breathe often with volumes greater than six mils per kilogram result in ventilator-associated lung injury. And when you rescue them, you should turn them over on their stomach. Now, that's pretty dicey. You can think of it, right? Person's laying on your back. You have a tube in. Gravity is keeping the tube in. Now, you're going to flip them over and put them on their stomach. The tube is going to pull against their vocal cords and cause vocal cord damage, but hey, maybe they won't die.
(38:00) So, but wait, you say, and I said, how bad is it? How bad is it? That's what I had asked. Well, how bad is it? Oh, man, this is how bad it is. It turns out that if you have someone who has pneumonia, garden-variety pneumonia, you put them on a ventilator, what are the chances of dying from ventilator complications? Answer, 16.5%. But wait, if you put a regular person on a ventilator—when I say regular, I mean they have this garden-variety pneumonia—what's the overall death rate? The overall death rate is about 32, 33%. Half of that is just from the ventilator itself. That's a pretty high death rate, that half of all people on these ventilators are killed by the ventilator.
(38:57) More precisely, if you want to put this, like really bring this home, if you take a healthy person and put them on a ventilator and follow the standard of care, you're going to get a death rate somewhere around 16%, at least. Right.
(39:29) Now, in the context of this, we have a governor who wants more ventilators, so every COVID patient can have a ventilator. We have a health care funding mechanism, government budget, whatever, that's going to pay for this intensive COVID treatment. So, this is really, that's really shocking.
(40:05) So, but wait, let's see if, just how high is the death rate? Now, if you listen to this guy who's just totally alarmed and hysterical, the death rate for COVID people placed on ventilators is 80%, 80%. The death rate for COVID people not placed on ventilators and given instead a nasal cannula or a mask to give them oxygen, if you think they need oxygen, is pretty close to 0%. Yes.
(40:52) So, the people who are intubated basically are dying from the intubation. And the 80% death rate for COVID people who are intubated very much explains the high death rate in New York. It's simply the availability of the ventilators and the liberal use of the ventilators.
(41:24) So, what do we know? What have we learned? Well, what I've been saying for about eight years now, medicine kills. It's deadly. And the best thing you can do for yourself in this COVID epidemic is not a glove, not a mask, not even hand washing, but just don't get tested and don't accept any therapy. And not even don't accept any therapy, don't give yourself any therapy.
Risks of Over-the-Counter Medication
(41:46) So, in Italy, what they found was the people who died 100% were using drugs. Now, whether it was ibuprofen or Motrin or Advil or Nuprint, they were all using drugs. And so, what was the recommendation? Oh, use Tylenol for your flu-like aches and pains and fever. Tylenol? Really? The number one cause of liver transplant. That does not sound like a safe switch.
COVID and Private Toilets
(42:23) So, COVID, whether you believe the virus is there or not, the best way to not die of it is to not get intubated. Best way to not get intubated? Don't go to the hospital. And of course, don't get tested. All right, but it gets lightened up a little bit here. Toilets may pose risk for spreading COVID-19. They have a whole bunch of stuff in there, but basically, all viruses are spread by the oral-fecal route. Basically, you touch something that has someone else's feces on it. Toilet seat. The feces get into your body because you touch your body, and then you touch your mouth, nose, or eyes. Well, if you have your own private toilet, guess what? No one's pooping there but you. You cannot catch anything, no matter how poor a hand washer you are.
(43:11) So the best investment, your own private toilet. You might say, well, Jennifer, now I should know how everyone's rich or wealthy. Got you covered. $10 five-gallon bucket, $15 press-on plastic toilet attachment. Everybody in the house has their own private toilet for a whopping, if you really like, you know, spend a lot of money on it, for a whopping $30, $40. Can be done. Now, you're gonna say, what will we do with this stuff that we put in the toilet? It's called composting.
(43:56) So in other words, you just put some leaves in the bottom, use it to do your business, put some more leaves over it, it doesn't even smell. I know. I did this. I tried it out for about three years. Drove my kids crazy. "Mom, please." But it's amazing. So, and if you have a house with three bathrooms and three people, just assign each person to a different bathroom. Done. No social distancing. You don't need to wash your hands. No mask, no glove, no social distancing. And so what they're trying to gently suggest here is what's really making people sick is sharing toilets. And again, in the United States, there are so many toilets in the average house that it's easy to not share a toilet. And even if you don't have enough toilets to go around, you can use the method that I just outlined.
(44:52) Now, what do you do with this stuff once you fill the bucket? Good question. You find a tree in your yard and you dig a hole about, I'd say eight inches deep. You can go deeper, but eight inches deep. Pour the stuff in there, get a hose, rinse out the bucket, put the dirt back in the hole, and you're starting all over again. Now, why do you find a tree? Why a tree? So it turns out that the human waste actually will fertilize the roots of the tree. You don't want to use it on your garden. In order to use it in your garden, you have to compost it for at least a year. I tried that too. If you're in a city, oh my God, I attracted about 200 rats. It was very embarrassing. The health department came out. I had to make excuses and promise to cease and desist. That was the end of my human waste composting experiment. But no one got sick. I didn't get sick. There was no sickness spread through the neighborhood. My kids were all healthy. So where there's a will, there's a way. But what I'm trying to say is that's the situation.
Summary and Conclusion
(46:18) All of these diseases, even the vaccine-preventable diseases for children, are spread through the fecal-oral route. The reason kids under five tend to get these things is because their habits using the toilet are not great, especially if you have several kids using the same toilet. That's a very bad idea, not a good idea. They're mentioning, oh by the way, it might be the toilets. If it is the toilets, then the mask and the gloves, it's all just for naught.
(46:54) Should you wear a mask? Should you wear gloves? My opinion, it's a fashion statement. If you're wearing a mask, it's like wearing a mini skirt or like wearing a cable knit sweater as opposed to smooth cashmere. It is simply a personal choice. And if you feel comfortable wearing a mask, then fine, go ahead and wear a mask. Is it going to protect your health? No. There are lots of reasons why it's not going to protect your health. Even if you did believe there's a virus, the problem with cross-contamination, the problem with lack of sterile procedure, there's so many reasons why the mask, even the gloves, are not going to help.
Closing Thoughts
(47:39) So let's see if we got everything, covered everything. So what is a person to do? Yeah, so here's someone who says in COVID-19, we don't want to apply protocols blindly and assume that a failure to respond is a result of the patient. And by the way, in medicine, we are trained to assume all failures are failures of the patient. In fact, many of the failures are actually a doctor failure. Instead, our protocol method has failed. We need to step back and ask if we're using the wrong strategy. So it's unfortunate. What we have is a manufactured epidemic, starting with the test and ending with deadly therapy. And it's just nothing new here. It's the same old, same old. You know, same playground, different swing set. So the best thing to do, really, is to get your own private toilet. Don't get tested. And for God's sake, don't accept therapy. And don't even medicate yourself. And really, not even over-the-counter stuff.
Questions and Answers
(49:01) So that brings us to questions. Questions, questions, questions. Where are the questions? I think this is it. Yeah, here it is. Yay.
(49:32) Hi, Dr. Daniels. So far, the three days during this madness, I experienced a loss of taste and smell. I realized that I was not alone in this, and many people were experiencing this. What do you suspect? So if you lose taste and smell, that's generally something you inhaled. Your smell is controlled or mediated or communicated to your brain by nerves that dangle in the top of your nose, up here, right here. And your smell, I also want to realize, your taste is actually mostly your smell. So just inhaling something that irritates your nose will cause that. And what do I suspect this is? It could be anything.
(50:11) Trace Browns, you can spell the name, S-H-I-L-A-J-I-T, online, eBay, they're out of stock. So at Walmart, they sell purified and distilled water. Which is the best to use? Distilled is the best. So purified, distilled water is purified. If it's just saying plain purified, you don't know how it was purified. It could be just a charcoal filter or nothing else. It could be they poured it through a strainer. You don't know what the purification process was. So distilled, you know what it is.
(50:59) And this person says, hello Dr. Daniels, thank you for gifting us with your knowledge and insight. My husband and I take your Vitality Capsules, and they make all the difference. Yay! Thank you! Vitality Capsules, you can order at vitalitycapsules.com. If you order now the regular capsules, you'll receive an extra bottle because they're out of stock. However, they are going into production next week. And so you'll get them in about two weeks. So now is a really good time to order them because the wait time is only going to be about two weeks, maybe three, but two, I think two weeks. So that's really awesome. Awesome.
(51:45) Okay, so what's the question? My husband still has the issue with hives daily that flare up only in the evening or at times of rest. Okay, so if he's still having hives, there's something going on with his diet. So honestly, an appointment would be the best way to get at that.
(52:05) The kinesiologist says it's most likely emotional. Nah. So I do believe that emotional things can cause illnesses, but usually, it's pretty obvious. Like maybe he wants to divorce you, and he's just doesn't feel like he can leave right now because it's a quarantine, and he can't stand you. In other words, if there is an emotional issue causing illness, you would not need a kinesiologist to tell you about it because it would be like upfront, central, huge. No, I think the thing to do is check his diet. There's two things that can be wrong with the diet. One, you're not eating something or two, you are eating something. So that would be it.
(52:46) What do you think of using colloidal silver as a possible spray or mist for a slight morning cough? No. So if you have a slight morning cough, then again, the most prevalent cause of a cough is dehydration. So if you have a slight morning cough, then you need to maybe take a glass of water before bed and as soon as you wake up in the morning. So you do not want dehydration to go untreated. Dehydration is at the base of, I would say, 80% of all the stuff that ambulances bring people to the hospital for.
(53:43) Hello, Dr. Nance. I'd like to know if you know of a cure for Parkinson's disease. My husband is 65 years old, and a noticeable condition started five years ago. Um, yeah. So Parkinson's disease, again, we can't talk about cure, right, because the FDA, CDC, they handle cures, okay, so we can't talk about cures. But if I had Parkinson's disease, what I might do, I would definitely check out the, um, go to vitalitycouncils.com, check out the Candida Cleanup Report, do that, and then, um, follow the instructions there. So what that does is that's going to knock out the parasite dimension of Parkinson's disease.
(54:24) The next thing is many people with this situation have really got a lot of benefit from Vitality Councils. The Vitality Councils they prefer is the extra strength. And, um, I think the reason that they, uh, it helps them so much is because the Vitality Councils promote circulation so that the toxins that are causing illness, um, can be picked up from all the different organs and brought to the liver for disposal. Then the Vitality Councils helps the liver accept them and then puts them out into the toilet. So, um, yeah. And then, of course, it definitely increases poops at three times a day. But go to vitalitycouncils.com and download the Candida Cleanup Report.
(55:10) I've learned that my adrenals are not functioning very well. The saliva test reveals an 11 for functionality. I'm sleepy and tired all the day, but up all night making it difficult to work efficiently. I'm moody and grouchy because my sleep is poor. It's gotten so bad that my hair doesn't grow, and I have a few small bald spots. I have spent a long time working on the vegan raw diet. I've been told to eat meat based on the blood type diet. By the way, I would love to hear your analysis of that.
(55:49) So, I have gone through the blood type diet, but the, um, long and short of it is the blood type diet was invented as a way to sell supplements. So, depending on your blood type, it'll put you on a diet deficient in certain nutrients and then sell you a bottle of supplements for those nutrients. That's basically the short story. So, the blood type diet is pretty much, again, my opinion. Others might disagree. Irrelevant.
(56:22) Okay, but the point here is you're tired. You don't need a test about tiredness. You just need to eat, and you don't need to eat meat. Don't do that. It's not going to help. You need to eat some chicken liver, salt, pepper, liver, and onions. There it is. And with some rice and cooked vegetables on the side. And you will see that your tiredness will go away. So will your moodiness and grouchiness.
(56:59) My question is, how much meat and how often? Ha, ha, ha, ha. Good question. Yeah, so the meat is not going to solve your problem. So, if you, in the salmon, haddock, cod, sea bass that you're adding to your diet is actually making things even worse. Worse. Because the nutrients you are lacking are not contained in those fish, in those things. So, how much and how often? So, liver, anywhere from 4 to 12 ounces a day. Every single day. Until, until your benefits plateau. So, you'll eat the first day, and you'll say, whew, I feel a little more energetic here. Yeah, yeah. The second day you'll eat it, and you'll feel even more energy. It's like, whoa, it's amazing. Third day you'll feel even more energy. And the fourth day maybe you'll eat it, and you're like, I feel good, but I don't feel any better than I felt yesterday. Then that lets you know you've had enough. That's enough liver. So, that's how you sort out the liver. And the liver is very, very nutritious. It's about 78 times more nutritious than an apple. Imagine eating 78 apples. Oh, correct. So, your body's going to need a lot of time to digest it. So, you've got to eat it in the morning.
(57:59) Okay, can a nursing mother take turpentine? You can always do whatever you want, but I do not recommend it.
(58:31) We are at the end of our hour. So, I'm excited to say Vitality Capsules will soon be back in stock. We just got to go ahead and talk to our manufacturer. He's going to start manufacturing first thing next week. And we will be in the Vitality Capsules pretty soon here. So, thank you very much for everyone who was so patient and who waited. You will definitely be getting an extra bottle with your order.
(59:02) People are asking about sale. We're having so much trouble keeping Vitality Capsules in stock that we don't have any plans for a sale. But if you look on the website, you will see that there are rather substantial volume discounts. When you go from one bottle to 20 bottles, the price per bottle reduces by more than 70%. So, we do give really substantial discounts that you can get by ordering in volumes. You may want to order, say, 20 bottles and split with your friends or something like that.
(59:34) Well, and remember, think happens. All right, we'll see you again next week. Bye.