So You Have Cancer. Or Do You?
So You Have Cancer. Or Do You?
Introduction and Topic Overview
(0:00 - 0:54)
Hi, my name is Dr. Daniels, and you are listening to Healing with Dr. Daniels—actually watching—and this is the February 9th, 2020 edition. Well, we got stuff to talk about today. Today's topic is, "So You Have Cancer, or Do You?" Yes, so what we're going to take a look at today is the whole cancer diagnosis thing, the understanding of cancer, and different terms. We're going to get down to brass tacks, things like harmful and harmless. Okay, so if you have a harmless condition or if you have a harmful condition, we're going to talk about what that distinction is in terms of cancer and how that line is being blurred. People are getting chemo for what amounts to a hangnail—actually, not even that. It's for harmless conditions.
Turpentine Time
(0:54 - 3:38)
But first, first, we have to take our turpentine. Yay, turpentine. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We have a spoon. It is a silver spoon. How nice. For you guys in first-world countries, silver spoons are like, oh my god, that person must be rich. This is a third-world country. So what does that mean? It means a lot of people come here planning to live, and they bring all of their wonderful, amazing, expensive things with them, and then they decide, you know what, I am not hanging around here. I'm leaving. The price for shipping their silver is so expensive that they literally give it away. So silver here in this third-world country is actually cheaper than stainless steel flatware. Yeah, so I have silver. All right, so here we are. Oops, sugar. Move that keyboard. And turpentine, yay. This is a pipette—a plastic disposable pipette—but I reuse mine. And you squirt that on top of the sugar. Squirt, squirt, squirt, squirt. I don't know if you can see it, but the sugar gets a little darker. And that's it. For me, filling the pipette up to the neck is 2.5 cc's, which is a half teaspoon. And that's what I like to take. You can find your own dose. And for information on using turpentine to heal and feel better, go to vitalitycapsule.com and get your free report, The Candida Cleaner. This report was written in 2010 when using the word turpentine was, in fact, in certain circles still not allowed. That's another story. Okay, so water. And we're gonna chase that. No, I do not lick my lips after taking turpentine. All right, now that water I was drinking is purified distilled water so that I don't have to challenge my kidneys and other organs of filtration to clean the impurities out of water. We've got our turpentine done.
Shilajit and Trace Minerals
(3:38 - 5:15)
So because I drink distilled water, I want to replace and fortify my trace minerals. Actually, even if I didn't take distilled water, I would still need to fortify my trace minerals because the average diet, even in America, first-world country, is lacking in trace minerals. So this is Shilajit—s-h-i-l-a-j-i-t, Shilajit. And we have a little, um, it's called a spatula, scientific spatula, but it happens to be small enough to get just the right amount of Shilajit. The dose is 200 milligrams. Yep, I'm not using a milligram scale, if you noticed. Pull a piece of tar off and open it right there where you can see it. That's about 200 milligrams. Now, we put this in the water and we stir around. We see nothing happens. Yep, nothing happens. It takes time to dissolve. So we're going to give this some time to dissolve, and come halfway through the show or so, you'll drink this, and it will be dissolved. We're going to let that work.
Coronavirus Update
(5:15 - 10:12)
Now, the next thing we'll do is we're going to do a coronavirus update. It would be like watching paint dry, but the decision has been made by people who did not consult me, and that's okay. The decision has been made to create an incredible drama here. So we need to understand what's really going on. So first of all, let's just say you're sitting in a place called the United States. Let's just say. Did you know that in the United States, your chances of dying this year are 1%? Did you know that? And did you know that you only die once? Just want to get a few facts on the table here, just a few facts on the table. And because you only die once, when you're dead, well, you're dead. So in the United States, your chances of dropping dead this year, you can start counting from January 1st or any date that you like to pick. It's okay. But your chance of dying this year is literally 1%. And again, you only die once. So our question then is how deadly is the coronavirus? Whatever the death rate is from the coronavirus, we have to subtract 1% because that's the background death rate. What we really want to know is what's the incremental death rate from the coronavirus? What deaths can we reasonably attribute to the coronavirus itself? Just on a statistical ignorant basis. Okay. So we know we have to subtract 1%. So it's tough online, but we looked, and I looked under live updates, like minute-to-minute updates on the coronavirus. Okay. I ordinarily don't even watch this kind of stuff, but I'm looking at this because I have received so many inquiries and questions about this. Okay. So 28,000 people have been infected. Well, let's read the sentence, and then we can do the math. Like, you know, everybody has word math problems in school. This is a word math problem. As of Wednesday evening—today's Sunday, so we're a little behind, but Wednesday is close enough—the death toll from the virus was at least 564. All right. So can we use the number 564 since they mentioned it? 564 with more than 28,000 others infected. So what we're talking about then is a numerator of 564. 564 with a denominator of 28,564 equals a death rate of 1.9%. All right. Now remember, we calculated if you're in the United States, a first-world country, your chances of dying each year are 1%. So of this 1.9% who died, one of those percentage points was going to die anyway. This was their year. This was their time. So the death rate from the virus that could be reasonably attributed to the virus is less than 1%, less than one in 100. So the lethality of the virus is about equal to the lethality of just being on planet Earth. Because remember, we're all going to die. So we're not going to escape that. The question is when and how.
Cancer Diagnosis and Definitions
(10:12 - 16:09)
Let's take a little closer look at this. It could be that those who died of coronavirus were those who were on the verge of death anyway. They were very elderly. They already had several afflictions or diseases. And that does seem to be the case. So what's shaking out here or happening is the presence of coronavirus cannot be deemed the causal effect in the death of any of these people. So that means that the coronavirus is turning out to be or appears to be again, just on a straight statistical basis—just taking a look at their numbers, their numbers, not mine, their numbers—their numbers, it's harmless. Which brings us to our topic of today, which is cancer. So you have cancer. So what we want to take a look at is, what is cancer? Now, first of all, I want to tell you what cancer was in the old days. This would be 1979 to 83. That's when I went to medical school. They were very, very clear. Cancer is harmful. Cancer is deadly. It is so deadly that we have to measure survival only in five-year increments because pretty much nobody lives longer than that because it's so deadly. And so when doctors treat cancer, all we're trying to do is get the person to live to that five-year mark. Okay. So it is so deadly. It is so harmful that the death rate can be measured in five-year increments. That can be, has to be, because so many people will die every year of it, of any particular cancer, whether it's lung cancer or whatever the cancer is. It is just that deadly. There's also so deadly that we are able and have special permission from the government to use chemicals, common medicines that are so deadly that they kill a large number of people. But the number they kill is less than the number the cancer kills. Okay. So we've got a couple of facts here. Okay. Fact. In order to be cancer, it has to have a death rate, a measurable death rate in a five-year period that is substantial. Call it at least 20%. Okay. So a five-year death rate, or you have to measure survival in five-year increments because so few people survive. Then treatment for it is deadly, does kill people. We were told in medical school, fact, fact, fact, does kill people. And that's okay. That's okay. Because the disease itself is so harmful that you can use harmful stuff to treat it. Let's, well, one more thing about cancer we're taught in medical school is that it's a DNA-based disease, and the cells are growing out of control, out of control. And it's just getting bigger and bigger and bigger and bigger, and it is deadly. Okay. Harmful, deadly, kills people. Got that. Okay. So now we have this information. This is important information to have.
Defining Benign and Malignant
(16:09 - 23:06)
So we go over to the definition of cancer. And this is the modern-day definition of cancer. Well, first of all, before we do that, let's check out the Webster dictionary. All right. At some point, you have to get the dictionary. You have to nail things down. You have to know what you're talking about. Like, are we talking about left or right, up or down? What are we talking about? And if we're talking about, well, we don't know, then it gets pretty confusing. So today, we're going to try and simplify stuff. So that means we're going to the Webster dictionary, and we're going to get some firm, firm definitions like standing on firm land. Yes. So there's something called benign. You've heard that term, a benign tumor. What does benign mean? Let's check Webster. Not harmful. I even bolded that. Not harmful, kind, good-natured, friendly, warm. Are you with me? Benign. And when I was in medical school, back in 1979 to 83, when something was benign, it was like, hey, we were happy because we understood the definition of benign, kind, good-natured, friendly, warm. So when we heard the word benign, feelings of kindness and warmth and friendliness just kind of went all over us. Benign. Malignant. Let's look at that definition. Malignant. Again, you have to consult Webster. Uncontrollable. Uncontrollable. Out of control. Dangerous. Harmful. Deadly. Fatal. Will kill you. Life-ending. And wait for it. Incurable. So if it's curable, it's not malignant. All right, let's take a look at cancer. We have a whole definition of cancer. And you know, when you look at these things, it can really help you kind of just calm yourself down, bring yourself down to earth. Okay. So this is the VeryWellHealth site. VeryWellHealth.com website. What does malignant and benign mean? Now, the important thing you need to know about this site is it is approved, totally approved by doctors, and they have a medical staff that reviews all their information for accuracy. This is important. So we are getting this straight from the mouth of the medical-industrial complex.
Benign vs. Malignant Tumors
(23:06 - 30:18)
Now remember, we've already talked about the difference between benign and harmful or benign and malignant. Something cannot be benign and malignant at the same time. All right. It's like being up and down the same. No, it's either up or it's down. It's either left or it's right. Can't be both at the same time. So it cannot be benign and malignant at the same time. So you can figure out what you want to believe. That's okay. But we're talking about just the definitions and just communication here. Communication. So, differences between a malignant and benign tumor. Whoa, they're talking our language. Malignant, benign. We just looked those words up. We're in good shape. We're ready to go. And they have a wonderful picture here. The benign tumor with a nice little circle around it, all the cells inside the circle, and a malignant tumor. The circle is broken open and all this stuff is spilling out. It looks really terrible. All right. That's good. We got it. Okay. So a tumor is an abnormal lump. So it's not normal. That's a lump. Now to determine whether a tumor is benign—remember, harmless—or malignant, oh, they changed the word on us. It's cancerous. They're not using the word malignant. They're using the word cancerous. But for our comprehension, we're going to use the word malignant because most people, when they hear the word cancer, their mind substitutes the word malignant. So we're talking, we're trying to communicate here. So we're going to use words that communicate meaning. So a tumor is benign or malignant. A doctor can take a sample. That's a biopsy. Then the biopsy is analyzed under a microscope by a pathologist and a doctor specializing in laboratory science. Now, you know, and I know, they may do a biopsy, but you've got the x-rays, all kinds of other tests, right? But biopsy is the gold standard. Get a sample, look under the microscope. What is it? We're not even going to question that step. Although if we have time, we might, but right now, so definition of benign tumors. So definition of harmless tumors, that means, and they're using the word non-cancerous. So if it's benign, it is not cancer. So if you have a biopsy that's benign and your doctor uses the word cancer, it is not accurate. It is a misrepresentation. So if what the pathologist sees under the microscope is benign, that means it's harmless, not harmful, kind, good-natured, friendly, warm, a welcome guest, benign. Okay. So benign. Now this is the medical definition of benign. And we're going to look at this very carefully, and we're going to detect a pattern. Okay. If the cells are not cancerous, the tumor is benign. That's it. And they, they're very clear. Black and white. It will not invade nearby tissues or spread to other areas of the body. That would be metastasis. A benign tumor is less worrisome unless it is pressing on nearby tissues, nerves, or blood vessels and causing damage. Fibroids in the uterus or a lipoma are examples of benign tumors. And this is true. There is no such thing as a cancerous fibroid, unless your doctor treats it, then it can become cancerous. But a fibroid is benign. It is harmless. So benign tumors may, okay, now we're getting into the waffle, waffle, waffle, waffle. May or they may not need to be removed by surgery. They can grow very large, sometimes weighing pounds. They can be dangerous. Well, we had the word benign. How can benign be dangerous? Such as when they occur in the brain and crowd the normal structures in the enclosed space of the skull. They can press on vital organs or block channels. Also, some types of benign tumors, such as intestinal polyps, are considered pre-cancerous. Are they pre-cancerous? No, they're considered pre-cancerous. How do we know that? How do we know they're not pre-cancerous? Because the medical-industrial complex spent decades, decades removing every single little polyp, and it had no influence on colon cancer. Yeah. So they waffle. So this is considered, considered pre-cancerous and are removed to prevent them from becoming malignant.
Examining Medical Definitions of Benign and Malignant
(30:18 - 39:55)
Okay. So now we're in another area where we have something as benign. It is harmless, but somehow medical intervention, surgery, which always carries a death rate with it, is the okay thing to do. Benign tumors usually, what does usually mean? It means 51% of the time do not recur once removed, which means 49% of the time they do. So it's a 50-50. In my experience, most benign growths once removed do recur or even worse, a cancerous growth will show up someplace else two to three years after the benign growth is removed. So I personally don't recommend the removal of benign growths, but if they do, it is usually in the same place. Again, usually there's a qualifier, which is pretty big. But again, again, my observation as someone practicing medicine for 10 to 20 years is yes, it usually comes back in the same place, or it comes back as a malignant cancer in another place. So I personally don't recommend removing anything harmless, leave it alone. Okay. Now malignant tumors are cancerous. So malignant tumors are cancerous. So we can flip it around. If it's harmless, it cannot be cancerous. And we can figure it out from before. So the definition of malignant is, it means, and they're very firm on this, tumors made of cancer cells. All right. And it can invade nearby tissues. Oh, we got vagueness here, right? It can, or maybe it cannot, we don't know. Some cancer cells. So in other words, this cancer cell that can invade, and sometimes it cannot, has properties of benign. So, so far, this cancerous thing has a benign property of not invading. Some cancer cells can move into the bloodstream or lymph nodes where they can spread to other tissues within the body. Some cancer cells. You mean there are other cancer cells that don't? Okay. And some means less than half. So now we're down to less than 50%. So less than half. This is called metastasis. Cancer can occur anywhere in the body, including the breast, intestines, lungs, reproductive organs, blood, and skin. Ah, anywhere, anywhere. For example, breast cancer begins in the breast tissue and may spread to lymph nodes in the armpit if it's not caught early enough and treated. Now, it can also spread there even if it is treated. Once breast cancer is spread to the lymph nodes, the cancer cells can travel to other parts of the body like the liver or bones. But all this is just fear-mongering. Let's cut to the chase. What's the difference between benign and malignant tumors? So here we have a clear definition of benign or harmless. Very clear. Cut and dry. Black and white. We can understand that. The definition of malignant or harmful gets a little fuzzy, a little fuzzy, a little fuzzy. So let's see the comparison between the two. Benign tumors. Cells tend not to spread. Wait a minute. You mean it could spread? A benign tumor could spread? But up there we said it couldn't. Okay. So tend to spread. And malignant tumors can spread. Tend to spread and can spread are pretty much the same thing. That means they spread. So what we've got here is no difference. Either one can spread. Benign tumors, most grow slowly. But wait, some can grow quickly, right? Most grow slowly means that some grow quickly. Most is more than 50%, that means 51%. So 49% of benign tumors grow quickly. Malignant tumors usually grow fairly rapidly. Usually means 51%. So 49% of harmful tumors don't grow rapidly. So what we have here is we're getting to where there's a 50% overlap between our harmless tumors and our harmful tumors. All right. Benign tumors do not metastasize to other parts of the body. Harmful ones often can invade nearby healthy tissue. Often. Again, often is frequently like more than 60% maybe. So 40% don't. Benign tumors tend to have clear boundaries. Malignant tumors can send fingers into nearby tissues. They can have unclear boundaries. So both can have clear boundaries or unclear boundaries. So that is not even a difference, right? Both can have these same characteristics. We cross that off. Under a pathologist's microscope, the shape, chromosomes, and DNA of cells appear normal. The pathologist cannot see DNA. I'm telling you. I'm here to tell you. DNA is not visible under your doctor's microscope. No. No. There are certain clumps of DNA, but the actual DNA sequence, he can't see it. So under a pathologist's microscope, the shape, chromosomes, and DNA of cells appear normal. This is a clear statement. Cancer cells or malignant dangerous cells have abnormal chromosomes and DNA characterized by large dark nuclei may have abnormal shapes. Now these dark nuclei are not characteristics of chromosomes. Chromosomes don't have nuclei. Cells have nuclei. So what they're saying here precisely is that the cells are large and have dark nuclei. It may have abnormal shape. May have abnormal shape, but then again they may have normal shape. The harmless tumors are unlikely to recur if removed. The cancerous cells can secrete substances that cause tiredness and weight loss and may recur after removal. So malignant cells may recur after removal and harmless cells are unlikely to recur after removal. So unlikely to recur and may recur, same thing. So we have a list of differences between benign and malignant that basically make the two indistinguishable. So this means when your doctor tells you your tumor is benign, it's a meaningless designation. So if he tells you your tumor is benign and it turns out to spread to your body, the rest of your body, and kill you, then it fits this benign definition and you can't sue or claim he was wrong because here it just says that benign tumors tend to have clearer boundaries. May not require treatment. Unlikely to recur. So if he takes out a benign tumor and it recurs, it's like, oh well, it was just unlikely to recur. And if it spreads to the rest of your body, even if it's harmless, well, they tend not to spread. So we've got all this vagueness where we're using the word benign when actually what's being described here is not benign at all. It's malignant. So what you have is two columns of characteristics that are identical, that match the malignant definition, but do not match the dictionary definition. So we have benign in the dictionary, which is not harmful. We have benign according to the medical terminology, which is maybe harmful. And so what this means is a lot of times you and your doctor are using the same word and you're not speaking the same language. So way back when, 1979 to 83, the medical definition of benign was exactly equal to the dictionary definition of benign in the English dictionary. But now the definition has changed. So the medical definition of benign is identical to the dictionary definition of malignant. And it's even identical to the malignant tumor definition in the medical category. So each characteristic can be had by either benign tumor or malignant tumor. And so there is no longer a clear definition.
Cancer and the Fortune Teller Comparison
(39:55 - 46:21)
So let's say we're talking about a pimple. Is it acne? Not all over your face, just one, one, one pimple. That pimple we all know just from a lifetime experience is not harmful. And let's just understand what harmful is. Harmful means it'll shorten your life. It'll interfere with your daily activities and cause you serious discomfort. Notice the loss of function. So maybe you can't walk or you can't talk or there's some function you cannot perform because of that condition. So if it doesn't shorten your life or interfere with your functioning, it's benign. This is from the patient point of view. Now you may choose for cosmetic reasons to do something about it. That's fine. That's your decision. I'm not saying you shouldn't do anything about it. I'm just saying it's harmless. Okay. So what this means then is you can have a condition like we talked about last week, which is prostate cancer that has a 0% death rate over a 10-year period. That's impressive. Yet you can call it malignant, and you can call it a cancer. We have another cancer, papillary cancer of the thyroid gland. This is called cancer. However, it doesn't shorten anyone's life expectancy and does not interfere with the person's function. A person can even have normal thyroid tests. So I just had someone contact me for an appointment, and they had been diagnosed as having slow-growing lymphoma. What the F is that? Right? The answer is it's benign. And what was the treatment? The doctor tried to talk them into whatever. They said no, and the doctor finally had to retreat to the position of watchful waiting. What's watchful waiting? That means you pay the doctor to watch while you wait. But how often did they have to see the doctor? Every six months. In other words, this cancer was so slow-growing that in six months it was expected to make no progress at all. And you can tell if you have a harmless condition by looking at the five-year life expectancy. If the five-year life expectancy for your condition is anything over 95% because remember the annual death rate for healthy people is 1% per year. So in five years, 5% of people who are alive today in the United States will be dead. What they're going to die of, we can quibble or discuss that, but 5% of them are going to be dead. Now, so you don't want to treat any condition with a five-year death rate of less or more than 95%. So if your chance of dying in five years is 5% or less, that's another way to look at it. You're better off without treatment because you're healthy. And that would be a question to ask the doctor: what percent of people with my condition will be dead in five years without treatment? Now, a lot of times they don't even give the doctor those statistics. And so you have to go look those up. But that is the operative number. Hepatitis C death rate in five years, less than 2%. So should you treat it? No. So there are a lot of conditions like this for which chemotherapy and very expensive regimens amounting to really more than the price of a luxury car are being recommended. So nothing of the inconvenience and torture. So benign and malignant, that's the distinction. If what you have is benign, that means it's not harmful. It's kind, it's good-natured, and it's friendly and warm. If what you have is malignant, that means it's uncontrollable, out of control, dangerous, harmful, deadly, fatal, life-ending. And you can also ask the doctor, will I die of this? If he says no, you're back in the benign. What you have is benign. Even if the label, the label contains the word cancer. So I asked myself, why do people go to doctors to see if they have cancer? What's going on here? I honestly, I could not figure it out until I talked to someone who was diagnosed with one of these benign conditions that would not ever lead to death. And he was agonizing over whether or not to take chemo. I could understand it. And he kept going back to the doctor for more tests, more tests, more tests. Of course, the doctors did more tests. So I said to him, I said, well, look, we know already that what you have is what all the other healthy people have. And therefore, it's not going to kill you. It's not going to cause premature death. And what he said was what really turned the light on. I want to know the future. I want to know what's going to happen. And then I realized the doctor is the modern-day, 21st-century fortune teller. People go to learn the future. And then it all made sense to me. Now, let's take a look at a fortune teller. And what would a fortune teller say? Well, your condition has clear boundaries. Unless of course it doesn't. Your condition will not spread to other parts of the body. Unless it does. This is what these definitions say. So this is the classic fortune teller's script, which is what they've given the doctor. And the fortune teller's script is what? You will be rich. Unless of course something happens and you are poor. You will be healthy. Unless something happens and you become sick. So not to say being a fortune teller is good or bad. I go to fortune tellers from time to time. But I know, I know that I'm insecure about the future. I know that I'm fearful. I know that my fear makes no sense at all. And I indulge myself by going to a fortune teller, paying them 20 bucks and hearing what they had to say. And I walk away laughing, realizing it's all a bunch of nonsense and I don't need to worry about anything. Anyway, because life goes on. What we have going on here with the doctor, with the medical industry complex, and with cancer, is people are spending a fortune selling their homes, liquidating everything for what amounts to having someone tell their fortune. A fortune teller. The doctor's crystal ball is no more clear, even with the biopsy, the x-ray, the blah, blah, then the fortune teller down the street. Or however far you have to go to your nearest fortune teller.
Medical Profession and Cultural Expectations
(46:21 - 50:18)
Yeah. Let's talk about a fortune teller. What a fortune teller is and see if we can draw a few parallels. And so we go here to Wikipedia and they talk about the future and what that is. So a future fortune teller tells the future, tells you what would happen in the future. And this is properly the province of a fortune teller. Literally, you would be better off going to a fortune teller. Now you can pay 20 bucks, this is what I pay. Or you can get a higher-end fortune teller. You can use the same fortune teller that the Queen of England uses, right? You can pay thousands of dollars, whatever. And so this is why people go to fortune tellers. They've looked this up. They've investigated this. So I'm going to take their word for it. Sounds good to me. We desire to resolve our own conflicts regarding decisions to be made. And so people want to know, should I get my affairs in order? Do I have a little more time here on earth? And so people want to resolve and make those decisions. Fortune telling has emerged from knowing the inevitability of death. So people are going to the doctor, doc, doc, is it cancer? Is it cancer? They know they're going to die of something, but they want to know. And so the idea is clear. People want to know. They know that their time is limited, and they want to know and they want things in their lives to happen in accord with their wishes. And that's really all this whole big cancer thing is playing on people's desire to know the future. We have sought technologies, double bold red technologies, and that's what your doctor is giving you, technology for gaining knowledge of the future and to gain power over our own lives. So people literally see the doctor and that cancer diagnosis or that clean bill of health. I don't have cancer as giving them knowledge about the future and power over their lives. And ultimately, the reasons a person consults a fortune teller are mediated by cultural expectation and personal desires. So literally going to a doctor to see if you have cancer is controlled by your cultural expectation and your personal desire. That's it. Nothing to do with your health at all. And once you can get that, that has nothing to do with your health, it is very liberating. Now, you're still left with this uncertainty about your future, right? I strongly recommend just paying a fortune teller 20 bucks. All right, you can pay more if you want to and get your fortune told.
Dr. Daniels' Experience with Fortune Tellers
(50:18 - 54:12)
So I was in New York City, I was walking down the street, and as many years ago, things were not going well at all. I just needed some sort of sign here. So it says, you know, Madam blah, blah, blah, reads tarot cards, blah, blah, blah. Okay, fine. So I went in and I said, okay, madam, what can you do for me for, I don't know, however much you charge. She says, for 10 bucks, I'll tell you. Okay, here's 10 bucks. And she told me whatever it was. And then she wanted to start asking me questions like, no, no, no, no, no, no. All you get is my birthday, where I was born, whatever, no other details. Just read my fortune, read the future the best you can. And so she says, okay, that'll take another $10. Okay, here's another $10. And she told me some more. She said, but to know more, you need to, I said, you know, I'm not going to be in New York that long. I am going back to Syracuse, which is where I lived at the time. She says, oh, no problem. I have a long-distance program for a thousand dollars. I can do whatever. She can give me fortunes, you know, however. I said, no, no, I'm good. 20 bucks. I'm good. I've got some information here. We're going to go with it. Now what she told me, a fair amount of it, I would say one-third could not possibly have been true because she made the mistake of telling me stuff about the past in my life. And the past already happened, right? So I have a certain amount of knowledge about that. And so I could say either A) she was not correct, or B) it didn't matter because I'm still here breathing. So I'll give you an example of what she told me: "Your father had a dispute or disagreement with a neighbor down the street where you lived, and that neighbor put the evil eye on you, and I'm going to remove the evil eye. That's gonna cost you a few thousand dollars." The doctor says, "Your parents gave you some genes that were bad, and they put the evil eye on you and caused this thing, and we're gonna do more tests. It'll run you $5,000 to get more information." It's the same conversation. It's the same. There's no difference. And of course, when he gets the test, I tell you right now, he's gonna tell you we need another test. It's the same thing the fortune teller would tell me had I given her $1,000. "Oh, thank you. Yes, I can tell you a little bit more, but, and for me to dig deeper into the recesses of the universe and get that information, which is out there in the all-knowing, I'll need a few more thousand." It's exactly what your doctor is telling you. There's no difference. Word for word.
Closing Thoughts
(54:12 - 56:49)
So, and um, some fortune-telling I had to look up some fortunes. Now would be a good time to take up a new sport. Of course, it would be for anybody unless you're in a...unless you're bedridden, which most people are not. And if you're healthy enough to get up and go walk to the fortune teller, right? Now's a good time to take up a new sport. Oh my god. So traditional fortune tellers vary in methodology, generally using techniques long established in their cultures. So your doctor will use the physical exam. The doctor will use an x-ray, the CAT scan. So these are methodologies, technologies long established in their culture and thus meeting the cultural expectations of their clientele. And so this, so when I was in medical practice, so come in and I would say to them, you know, we don't need to do any tests. I can just tell you right now. And they're like, we have to do tests because they had a cultural expectation of me using a certain technology. I can say, dude, I've been at this for, you know, a decade now, and I can just tell you this is the deal. So I literally had to bow to their cultural expectations and do all of these tasks, which of course ends up showing nothing. And then the person ended up complaining about the high cost. I'm like, oh well. So in the United States, so this is exactly what the medical office visit is. And doctors will tell you at least 90%, 99% if they're honest, but 90% of all tests don't give them any information at all. No information that they can use to guide therapy.
Conclusion and Final Question
(56:49 - 1:03:27)
So in the United States and Canada among clients of European ancestry, palmistry is popular. And they should say x-rays and CAT scans are popular as with astrology and tarot card reading advice is generally given about specific problems besetting the client. So how do fortune-tellers know your future? Well, fortune-telling consists of three things. A fortune-teller can read a person's future by asking questions until they see or sense or are told that one or more of the things is correct. So doctor does the same thing. He asks you serious questions. So he's not telling you anything. He's getting the information from you. Then they try to make various pronouncements about their correct guesses and the client takes those as their fortune having been told. That's it. So what isn't what is a an oracle or fortune-teller well it's a mystic it's a foreseer fortune-teller futurist prophet prognosticator prophesier soothsayer visionary civil wise woman and we can just add doctor to that process is the same what do fortune-tellers wear they were a full skirt that comes down to at least mid-calf is ideal and you see your doctor wears a white coat that comes down to mid-calf especially if it hasn't many layers and colors so the doctors this white is the new it's new uniform and then around the way she's to wear a long scarf or sash that ties on the side and hangs long that would be the stethoscope if you're male wear loose trousers in a dark color and you'll see your doctor wears trousers not shorts and so they have a wardrobe for the fortune-teller she sees is this is from Quora but here's here's a quencher can you trust a fortune-teller can you trust a fortune-teller hey this is not for me I had to go to Google try this out cuz hey I was ready to go with it you should never trust fortune-tellers because if they really had the abilities they claim it would work even when others don't believe and even when the psychic is tired angry or upset fortune-tellers cannot predict the future any better than you can yeah that's right that's right so I say spend the 20 bucks every now and then we have times in our life where we are stressed out and you're just like I can't take the suspense anymore I've got to go to a fortune-teller to find out what the future holds so you go to a fortune-teller and you're totally relieved at least I am when I go to the fortune-teller I'm relieved but I realize that what they presented to me is an alternate future and then that actually sparks my imagination to think of many more alternate futures and then I find an alternate future that appeals to me and work towards that particular alternate future so remember this doctor is only a fortune-teller and his ability to tell a fortune is not any better than yours now Quora online says you should never trust a fortune-teller I don't know what they mean by that I think what they mean by that is you should never believe the fortune they give you I say you should never believe that the fortune-teller's vision of the future is the only possible future for you you can look at the vision the fortune-teller gives you and then say I like this this and this but I don't like that part of it and you can it can help you stimulate your creativity to constructing a future and working towards the future that you want so I I think fortune-tellers are actually pretty useful and I personally consult one myself it's about every depending on time in my life every one year things are bad at one year things are good maybe every 15 years I haven't been to a fortune-teller in the past past 12 years I've not been to a fortune-teller so but whenever you're stuck in terms of your imagination and ideas for which direction you want to take your future hey go to a fortune-teller it kind of jogs you into saying whoa I don't want that fortune I want you know and you construct the fortune you want future you want and just do what you have to do to move towards that future and similarly I wouldn't I would not go to a doctor to get my fortune just because it's too expensive too time-consuming uncomfortable and it's not pleasant I would go to a regular fortune-teller yeah that's what I would do I would not go to a doctor this is too much hassle then you got the electronic medical records where all your business is public and in the streets all right so you have cancer the answer is probably not really and the fact that 80% of people who have cancer do not die of it that alone lets you know that your doctor's fortune-telling abilities are not great not great yeah so let's check out the questions I do have questions I can send them email them to J D a a a n i e l s adobe that means at gmail.com so J D a a a n i e l s at gmail.com check out those questions now I'm not able to get to all the questions so if you have a question I don't get to and you would personally like an answer you can make an appointment at vitality capsules.com forward slash appointment oh our sponsor is vitality capsules and if you'd like to purchase vitality capsules you can purchase them at vitality capsules.com we are presently having issues we're out of stock we have a key ingredient cape a low which is difficult to find so I've been making vitality capsules now for 30 years oh my gosh time flies for over 30 years and in the beginning I could order cape a low and wow it worked and so what has happened since then is due to various regulations in the United States cape a low is no longer the cape a low it was 20 years ago so it's not as effective and so I have narrowed this down to cape a low gel which is totally not effective in terms of benefiting people in the vitality capsules recipe that's cape that's the gel then there's the leaf which is effective and then there's the extract which is uber effective so what is going on now is in the United States what they've said is the gel you can you can use the gel but the gel is not what's going to work in vitality capsules so now what we are doing is we are actually in communication with suppliers in South Africa that's what the word cape is the cape of South Africa to obtain the proper cape a low that will produce the cleansing effects you have all known to rely on and love now the so for ordering vitality capsules when they are not in stock and paying now you receive additional bottles of vitality capsules and as well bonuses we're working on bonuses and treats for you so that is the vitality capsule situation oh wait okay this is our she legit stir stir stir okay you can see it has dissolved so we're gonna drink some actually we're gonna drink all this mmm wonderful not the flavor but the feeling
Final Q&A
(1:03:27 - 1:02:08)
All right we have a question from Jenna I am wondering if you have heard of more gallons disease yeah I certainly have have you already maybe discussed this yes I can't find it on your page it would be in the replays and she says it is definitely a real disease affecting many people worldwide please look into it if you haven't yet we need someone that isn't afraid of digging into the truth to help us okay so more gallons those of you not familiar I'll give you the short story on more gallons so more gallons is a co-infection slash variant of Lyme disease and people who have more gallons often have fiber sticking out of their skin it's like really spooky and scary and all their friends and family tell them that they're crazy and stupid because they have this thing and it irritates your skin it's unsightly and it's drives them friggin crazy vitality capsules actually cures this why vitality capsules cleanse the more gallons from your body so it's not a matter of fighting the more gallons killing the more gallon cleanses it from your body but we are out of stock at the moment so you'll have to visit vitalitycapsules.com get the can do the cleaning report and to your email address get on the mailing list and we will notify you when we're back in stock so the truth is it needs a little bit of cleansing now those of you are conspiracy theorists there's a lot of conspiracy theorists that it's in the chemtrails blah blah blah blah all that's irrelevant the vitality capsules and hydration handles it okay we have time for one more question and I'm a research that you dance could you please provide me with the brand of turpentine you use thank you I'm in a third world country we have no agency certifying authorizing anything I get my turpentine from the hardware store literally they go in the back dig into a vat VAT that 50 gallon drum fat and then they hand me this jug I'll show it to you they hand me this jug I tell you it takes guts sometimes just to be healthy so that is the turpentine that I use ah do you have a simple recipe to create flaxseed for emphasis oil type solution I'm searching YouTube but their methods are suspect thank you all right so you don't want flaxseed oil it goes rancid way too quickly and it's deficient or missing in many nutrients that you need to heal so I do not recommend flaxseed oil what you recommend is taking a quarter cup of flaxseed putting it in a cup of water leaving it I'll stir it up leave it overnight on the counter and the next morning stir it down the hatch that is the way to take flaxseed that's very healing when you look at it in the morning you will notice that the seeds are swollen and many of them are split open and that the solution is very thick so the thickness of the solution means that your omega three fats your aster have left the seeds and gone into the water now when you drink it it's immediately absorbed and you get the benefits in your poo you're gonna see what appears to be whole flaxseed don't you worry because you've already got the nutrients because you soaked it overnight and this is why not soaking your flaxseeds overnight just sprinkling them on your salad is just useless and always useless is harmful because all that water I told you to put in the flaxseed that it swells up and gets thick that flaxseed as it travels through your intestine is sucking out water sucking out water dehydrating you and if you take enough flaxseed all at once into your intestines you can actually get a blockage I get constipation because they'll suck up just enough water to become glue don't do that all right as always think happens and don't you get chemo for a hangnail and I will see you again next week.