The Earth's magnetic field is undergoing significant and rapid changes, leading to a global magnetic declination event that has profound implications for life, technology, and human health, potentially signaling a new extinction event.
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Hello everyone. Welcome back to
Undoctrinate Yourself. Today I'm sitting
down once again with the incredible Dr.
Jack Cruz. Um, he's been on the podcast
at least three times before. Maybe maybe
more at this point. I don't even I don't
even remember. But I'm excited to chat
with him today because today is
April 11th, 2026. And yesterday, Alex
Jones put out a tweet uh I guess taking
a clip. I actually haven't watched it
yet, but maybe you can enlighten me. But
I think it was a clip of you, Jack,
talking about the poll, the coming pole
flip that Becker had talked about back
in like the 80s and 90s as being a thing
that would be very disruptive to
technology and society and all the
things and and to health and to the next
great extinction event potentially as
well. And so, let's maybe talk about
that. Start by talking about that
because my DMs were like blowing up
yesterday. Um, and so I thought we could
begin there and then maybe get into some
current events and then maybe into some
science as well.
>> Yeah. I mean, the guys came down, they
wanted to,
they're doing a documentary
on MK Ultra and they wanted to talk to
me about the boxes that I found in the
basement of Charity Hospital. But I told
them, I said, "Look, I have a Patreon
blog that covers
that whole event, what I found
um in there and we casually started to
talk about some of the information that
was in that box was tied to, you know, a
magnetic uh declination."
And they got really really interested
um in some of that stuff. And I and they
were like, "Could we talk about that?"
And I'm like, "Yeah, I mean, it's
probably not what you guys want to come
down here and talk about, but we can do
it." So I explained to them that it all
began in 1859
with the Carrington event. And prior to
that, the Earth's base magnetic field
was what it usually is, 15 out of Tesla
pretty much in most places. And um
then we started to talk about what has
happened from 1859 and what happened in
859 which was the Carrington event. I
began to explain to them what the global
heliocentric current is like. How the
sun communicates birectionally with the
planets. The sun is a cathode ray. The
planets are anodess. And when the sun
gets some information about the magnetic dynamo,
dynamo,
um what it's paying attention to is the
wobble, the procession of the planet.
What usually happens
uh as a magnetic shield of a planet
begins to weaken uh it does get a slight
wobble from the stuff that's inside the
planet and the sun usually responds with
a coronal mass ejection directed at that
planet. The goal there is not to destroy
the planet. The goal there is actually
to stop the wobble. In other words, to
get the dynamo, the vortex inside the
planet to become operational.
Um, and then we started to talk about
what happened to Mars 4 billion years
ago. And I explained to them that the
largest volcano in the solar system is
on Mars. But the magnetic dynamo in Mars
has been dead for 4 billion years. And
if you look at the equator
of Mars, uh, Val Marinerys is there.
It's an electric scar that's larger than
the United States, uh, on the equator
where Mars got hit with a very large
CME. And what does large CME versus the
Carrington event really mean? It's
actually tied to the magnetic dynamo in
the planet. So, back four billion years
ago, this was obviously a huge problem
for Mars. It gets popped. And what do we
know about Mars? It's never recovered
from that event. It's a dead red desert.
There's no life on Mars. The only water
that's remaining is at the poles and
it's very small. Um, but the key thing
is there's no magnetic field. There's
also no ionosphere. It's been stripped.
Um, and I then I went to explain to some
of these guys that if you take a look at
our planet, we have places called Mars
on Earth. They're called deserts.
And deserts have a lower magnetic field.
And I explained to them that the dynamo
in the planet, you know, has been moving
for 4.6 billion years. But our dynamo
compared to a place like Mars has been
much more stable. uh that's why it's
actually supported life. And then I
started to point out some very interesting
interesting
things that happened with the dynamo.
Like I've been talking about melanin and heem
heem
um evolution on the Patreon blogs, but
one of the things that was really
important for these guys to hear is that
um back in the GOE when life was
beginning in the first two domains, the
magnetic field on Earth was much weaker
than it is today. We we know that from
magnetic hysteresus from sediments, you
know, around the planet. And
then I pointed out to them probably the
key planetatory
uh study that we've known I' I've known
about this for about 30 years, but there
was never any paper out to prove the
linkage. A lot of people in the EMF
world were talking about how EMF links
with oxygen resonance, but I don't think
what people really understand is that
magnetic flux links directly to
oxygenation on a planet. Okay. So, the
link in physics that's now been made,
um, I put it out in on both my form and
also, uh, gave it to the guys
who interviewed me. Since the Camarine
explosion, the Earth has been
magnetically locked to oxygen. And this
should make sense to people who follow
my work. Why? Because magnetic is, I
should say, oxygen is paramagnetic. It's
the only paramagnetic gas on the
periodic table.
So the fact that the magnetic dynamo is
coupled to oxygen should be no surprise.
The big surprise on earth is that it was
not magically magnetically coupled in
the go. Why? Because there was no oxygen
on earth then. That's what the goe
stands for.
>> And he created the oxygen because of
these little cyanobacteria that made
DHA. And this is fundamentally why DHA
is also a liquid magnetic fat and it's
one that mammals really are linked to.
But when I told them that now physics
has this paper out that shows for 540
million years on Earth uh the magnetic
dynamo is completely coupled with
oxygenation. Now why is this important?
because all five extinction events are
also show a big- time coupling to this
issue. So anytime the magnetic dynamo
loses its flux, life wobbles. Just like
the planet wobbles, so does life. And it
turns out the things on the planet that
tend to survive uh these extinction
events all different uh are different uh
mechanisms that are tied into it. So,
for example, I spent a lot of time with
those guys, four and a half hours
actually, discussing the Perian
extinction, which was the biggest one on
the planet,
um, where 96%
of things died. And I explained to them
that that extinction is exactly the
opposite of the one that we're currently
in now. That
um, up in Siberia, where the magnetic
field today is really strong, it was
extremely weak. And these volcanoes
eventually opened up, egressed all of
their magma, uh, and that led to the
permy extinction. What happened there?
Oxygen levels in the oceans plummeted.
Meaning anything that was in the ocean
was wiped out. Only 4% of creatures made
it through. But as I told those guys and
I told Marty Ben yesterday,
uh, we're here talking today on the
podcast is proof that, you know, life
still found a way because without that,
we wouldn't get through it. So, the
thing that is kind of interesting now is that
that
the latest USGS service just came out
and a lot of the data was tied to the
swarm data, which are three um,
satellites that are up in space. that
have showed something that no one
expected. Um, when I wrote my quilt
document in 2005,
uh, I was using the USGS data back then,
uh, of where the Earth's magnetic field was,
was, and
and
I compared it to the 2026 data that just
came out. And when I tell you that the
change is substantial,
it's it's even worse than I thought was
possible. Why? Because Siberia
has now 335 nanotesla magnetic field.
Remember what I said earlier base all
over the earth is 50 nanot tesla. So
this is a radical increase. So when I
looked at the papers looked at some of
the space data from swarm
I started to do some calculations based
on this link in the physics data between
the magnetic dynamo and oxygen. And this
goes all the way back to 320 million
years ago. And the planet hasn't been
had that strong a magnetic field in a
long time. But you know what's
interesting? Guess what evolved 320
million years ago? You I should say
mammals. That was the first time they
evolved on the planet. Uh and the
magnetic field at that time became
extremely strong. We know that from
magnetic hysteresus.
>> Mhm. So now we're in a situation
where there's parts of the earth that
have extremely low magnetic declination.
So for example,
for the last 50 years, everybody has
finally realized that the Carrington
event is tied to this whole thing. Why?
If you look at pictures like that I've
put out that NASA's put out, they show
uh the magnetic north pole from like
1590 all the way to today. And one of
the things that you notice is that the
magnetic north pole has left Canada and
is now in Siberia.
>> Yes. And the crazy part is just in the
last year it moved 20 kilometers
which when you look at the long history
of the earth this doesn't make any
sense. We don't have any data that says
the magnetic field can move that much.
Uh now remember we only go back about
125 years being able to measure this
stuff. So it's not like we have you know
a library of Alexandria to say hey this
is really anomalous but there this is
the data we do have. So you know people
have famously asked me and you are
actually one of them you know why have I
taken two world cruises in the last two
to three years. Well
something happened in May of 2024
that got my antenna up. And what was
that thing that happened? I was sitting
here in El Salvador and noticing that
there was a lot more earthquakes. So, I
started to look at some of the swarm
data and the swarm data showed something
that I didn't expect that the South
Atlantic anomaly uh was almost doubled
in size and it was being to fracture
into another piece and that piece was
headed towards the tip of Africa. And
when I thought about it, I said that
means the magnetic field in the southern
ocean is extremely weak. It means that
it's so weak that the vanation van Allen
radiation belts are coming closer to
Earth and that means more dutyium and
tridium are getting into the southern
ocean. And if you know anything about
biology, this is a really bad problem.
Why? Because the base chain of all life
is called DNA and RNA. And what controls
epigenetics is something called a methyl
group. Methyl group has three hydrogens.
If you get dutyium and tridium on methyl
groups, you basically change the
phenotype of all species of animals.
That's actually what all maja diseases
are. They're actually changes in the
duteration rate or tridium rate. Tridium
is really bad news and that's the one I
was worried about because on a lot of
podcasts I always tell people we don't
have to worry about tridium because our
magnetic shield gets rid of it. Well, it
turns out we got to worry about it now
because in the southern hemisphere it's
getting through
So why did I take the cruises? Pretty
simple. I was looking for evidence that
this problem was there. And what gave me
the impetus uh in May of 24 while I was
looking at the earthquakes happening
here in Guatemala and the volcanoes
blowing up. You can go back and look at
my tweets about this because they're
there. Um I said something must be going
on in the Southern Ocean. And um
literally the day after our biggest uh
eruption here in Guatemala, which is
about 120 mi from me, we had a 5.5 earthquake.
earthquake.
And uh then there was reports that the
northern aurora had come down to 18
north latitude and covered Puerto Rico.
>> I heard about And at the same time,
uh, the southern aurora came all the way
up to northern Brazil, which [ __ ]
blew my mind. >> Wow.
>> Wow.
>> And I'm going, wait a minute, that puts
it around 121
south. I mean, that's above Lima, Peru.
I mean, that's that's equatorial tropic
areas. Like, that shouldn't happen. And
that is when I put my sleuth hat on. So,
what did I do? I went all over the world
looking for evidence of significant
magnetic declination. Why? Because our
government doesn't allow us to have this
data too frequently. We get it very infrequently.
infrequently.
Uh the European Space Authorities, they
do a better job because they have these
swarm satellites. But during that time,
I was blocked from getting the
information. Uh I subsequently fixed
that problem because I have a couple of
friends in the know uh tied to both
DARPA and NASA and I said look I really
need to get this data and what did I do?
I went and looked at birds, bees
bees
um and one one other animal specifically
um a certain type of fish that were
magnetically sensitive. And my question was,
was,
were these animals dropping dead? Were
they having problems? Um, were there
evidence of fish dyes? Were any of the
fish dyes linked to baited decay in the
fish? And then I started to talk to the
people in the fishing community in
Australia. And that's when I found out
that over the last 10 years, their
fishing industry is no longer wild. It's
almost all farmed. Um, and they very
rarely see any wild fish because the
oceans are dead. And I was like, "Okay,
now now we're getting somewhere."
>> And like the mainstream narrative on
bees is that it's like pesticides and
EMF that we're creating that is causing
the issue. But would you say that it's mostly
mostly
>> But guess what? that I mean that is all
true but here's what you don't
understand the base case like the 90%
reason it's happening is because the
magnetic field is collapsing >> right
>> right
>> uh and when you understand that birds
you know navigate using cryptochrome in
their eye through the pectin occuli you
have to remember there's a couple of
really unique birds one is called the
godwit the other one is an albatross and
the godwit is the one that I just wrote
a blog about and I think people now are
beginning to understand why I did
because this is a bird that goes from
north to south and the godwit has a very
special pectin oculi uh tied to how it
handles some of the vortexes using
melanin and it leaves the Illutian
Islands and flies all the way across the
equator and goes down uh to New Zealand
and that's 11,000 kilometer flight. It
does it in 12 days and it never rests.
It never sleeps.
>> So, the reason I went to look for this
bird is because I wanted to see if there
was evidence that the Godwood bird
wasn't making it to New Zealand now that
this has been a problem because we know
the path of this bird and there is
record reports of Godwits dying in the ocean.
ocean. >> Wow.
>> Wow.
That is what I found when I left Peru
and went all the way to New Zealand and
then to Australia. Then my question was
uh about the fish. And the last question
was about the bees. I wanted to know
specifically what the effect in Peru uh
the South Pacific uh New Zealand and uh
Australia was about uh the bees and the
honey. And you know down in uh New
Zealand and Australia, it was very very
interesting. There was uh they're very
famous in New Zealand for using mucuna
honey and it's got a lot of healing properties
properties
and royal jelly and things like that.
One of the things that I found is the
South Pacific and the people on the
western coast of um Australia noticed
beehive collapse. um Australia it was
completely gone just like the fish but
New Zealand still had a spike and the
thing that I found was that the spike
most of the bees were doing really well
but on the southern island of New
Zealand. So I started to put this all
together and I started to realize in 24
that the data was substantially changed
changed way more than what I thought and
I was using things on the top of the
planet. So when I got home, I took
another trip and that trip, you know, I
told people on Twitter was to go uh see
Amaya Paribu on Surinam, but it really
wasn't. I wanted to go to the top of
South America to find out what was
happening on the top of the South
Atlantic anomaly. So, I left from Panama
and went all the way to Brazil on that
trip and I asked the same questions that
I asked in the southern Pacific Ocean
because now I was on top of the SAA
and I found that the information was
that birds were falling out of the sky
>> and dying
>> in Surinam, uh, British Guyana, uh,
parts of the Amazon rainforest. Um the
big one was in Aruba, Bonire and Curisowl.
Curisowl.
There was also issues there as well. And
I thought to myself, this is really
bizarre because the SAA is really really
low down on South America. I just
couldn't make it didn't make sense to me
kind of what I was finding. And then
about two weeks ago, the data came in
from USGS and the swarm data and it
shows that the South Atlantic anomaly is
now uh not only doubled in size, it's
almost three times the size of
continental Europe and it's beginning to
split. And the split has another wave
that's now hitting the southern coast of
Africa. Soon as I saw that, I started to
put my epidemiologic hat on and started
to look for evidence in us, the the
penultimate mammal. So, what did I know
would be the big effect in the human
system? Since mammals
all innovated in high magnetic
environments, that means that they're
very oxygen sensitive. We're the most
oxygen sensitive because we have this
thing called the brain that's only 2% of
our weight that takes 20% of our cardiac
output to generate vortexes. And the
magnetic vortex is a big deal. So in the
human GPS system, which we can talk
about, the X-axis is the sppheninoid
bone, the yaxis is the noticord, and the
z-axis that comes out is your heart.
It's out in space. And your heart acts
as a gravity well for heavy isotopes.
That's the reason why people have found
when they look that dutarium is 150
parts per million in our blood. And the
other thing you may not know through
evolutionary history cambrian to now
evolution went from one chamber hearts
and fish then went to two chamber hearts
and amphibians then went to four chamber
hearts in us. Why? What was the case? As
we got more complex, you vortex more
blood through through a chamber. And the
human heart is really interesting
because of the trabacula that are
present that really creates a big-time
vortex. And what does the vortex
designed to do to enter the circulatory
system and this pushes all the dutium
out to where the endothelium is? The
middle part which we call lammer flow in
biology is where all the H+ is and that
is the H+ that gets to mitochondria.
Why? Because mitochondria need oxygen.
Most of the red cells that are in there
are carrying that oxygen you know
paramagnetically and dropping it off.
But the key that people don't realize if
blood didn't vortex
and dutarium got in it would be a
problem. This is one of the fundamental
things that biology don't understand is
this is the reason why human adult uh
red blood cells do not have nuclei. If
it had nuclei, it would have
mitochondria. If it had mitochondria,
that the viscosity of the blood, the
dialectric constant of the blood would
fall to 78. We're designed to have a
very high dialectric. Why? Because that
creates vortexes. So, what are the three
vortexes that are important for humans?
ATPAS. Number one, we just talked about
the uh the delivery of oxygen. What's
the number that everybody should know at
this point if you've listened to
anything I've said? 9,000 revolutions
per second of H+. That's what the ATP
does. That creates a vortex. What's the
second vortex? This one I spent a lot of
time talking about over 10 years ago
with my members. I haven't talked too
much about it, but this is the vortex
that I'm real expert in because it's in
my organ, the brain. Uh, the brain
creates a vortex in the phalamus. How
does the vortex created? We have two
lateral ventricles, a third ventricle
that looks like a torpedo aqueduct, and
then the fourth ventricle that looks
like a wine decounter. So, if you've
ever drank wine, especially with me,
you'll know that I vortex the wine. Why
do I vortex the wine? People will tell
you in the wine business, "Oh, it opens
the wine." No, it's an isotopic
fractionation. Why? Because you're
pushing all the bad stuff out to get the
good stuff when you taste it. And what
happens is your lateral ventricles are
not part of the vortex system. And this
is one of the really key things that I
think people who are influencers and not
scientists have really [ __ ] up in this world.
world.
They don't understand how you go from
vortexing in blood to vortexing in the
brain. And it turns out there's a a
organ in humans called the koid plexus
in the brain. And the koid plexus has
massive amounts of melanin in it kind of
like the pectin oculi in birds that do
the same thing. And what happens there
is you are fractionating
dutarium from the blood to knock it down
to increase the dialectric. That's what
the chord plexus job is. And the two
lateral ventricles act like fuel tanks
for lighter hydrogen. It goes through
the aperture into the third ventricle
where it it's located in the front of
the head right above the optic
and then it goes directly posterior
through the aqueduct into this fourth
ventricle chamber. Well, the aqueduct of
sylvvius is the key to the vortex. Why?
Because you have this huge third
ventricle, small fourth. What does it
do? It creates the ventur effect. The
venturi effect vortexes
CSF to further fractionate it. Okay, why
is this important? What sits on the
floor of the fourth ventricle? Remember
what my day job is, Alexis? I'm a brain
surgeon. I know a lot about neuro
anatomy. What sits right on the floor of
the fourth ventricle is the Vegas motor
triion. So you're designed to get H+
hitting that trigone because that is the
exhaust in the gut that links to the
stomach and the pancreas to get rid of
dutyium. Okay. What else is in the
fourth ventricle? That's important for
people to know. The fammen and magendi
is the center port that allows you to go
through the veagal motor triion but into
the spinal cord. But what's out lateral?
It's called the fammen of lushka and
luchka dumps out into the CP angle where
cranium 5 through 12 are. That's where
the dutarium designed to go. It goes on
the top of the the head and usually
exits at the arachnoid granulations. Do
we have a backup system to get rid of
duterum from the CP angle? We do. It's
called meccal's cave. Meccl cave is
where the trigeminal nerve sits. All
three branches are there. V1, V2, and
V3. So, how do we get this whole GPS
system to work? Well, it's pretty
simple. When you understand the sphenoid
bone is the X-axis, why is this phenoid
and what does it do? At the apex, the
big butterfly wing of it is embedded the
middle menal artery. Okay, that's a
branch of the external corateed. What
penetrates the sppheninoid bone in the
middle? the internal corateed artery.
What sits at the junction of the X and Y
axis, the Basler artery, those are all
the three arteries that fill your head.
Why do you have to know something about
the basler? The basler meets at a bone
called the occipital bone and the clus.
The clus is the remnant of the notoord
that's left in humans. Okay. So, this
tells you that the sppheninoid bone is
getting all this information about
dutarium right there. It also
uh has some other interesting things
associated with it. What the pituitary
gland sits in the captain's chair of the
sppheninoid bone. So, what else should
you know about this GPS system? It's
penetrated by two cranial nerves.
Cranial nerve two and cranial nerve
five. Cranial nerve 2 is all the light
information that I've talked about
adnauseium to everybody. But cranial
nerve 5 is actually allows the
mechanical and vibration sense of this
system that works with mech's cave. Why?
Because our face is designed to be
collapsed and it articulates when we
chew at the sppheninoid bone where
meccl's cave is to allow us to duterium
deplete. Why is this important? Because
it turns out if you go back in
evolutionary history and you know this
the two domains of life that started
this out are archa and bacteria. What's
the main difference between those two
between dutarium and bacteria? It's
pretty simple. Bacteria don't like
dutarium and archa can handle it. So
then you got to ask yourself okay we
have this endo symbiosis event where the
two are joined. So that means since we
are ukariots,
there has to be some archan remnants in
us. What are the archan remnants in us
that allowed us to shake, rattle, and
roll to get rid of dutarium? Well, it's
pretty simple. Archa have a different
cell membrane structure and a cell wall
structure that's rigid compared to
bacteria. So when they were in the
ancient GOE oceans, the waves would
knock the dutyium out of them. What's
the remnant in us? our our bones, our
facial structure. Where is the dutarium
kept? In the gravity well of the heart.
Why? That's why the heart muscle when
you unfold it looks like a helix. What's
the key though is what's inside the
ventricles and the atrium because it
vortexes the blood even more. Okay? So
you have you have almost like a jet
exhaust. That's how you should be
thinking in the heart. But the heart's
vortex keeps dutyium in the blood and
doesn't let it go to tissues that have mitochondria.
mitochondria.
In the brain, the key place they meet is
the corid plexus. But what's another
place that is open that nobody ever
talks about except probably me? We have
circumventricular organs that have no
bloodb brain barrier. So that is how the
theamic GPS system knows what the
isotopic load of the body is. And what
is it trying to do? It's trying to use
this GPS system, the three coordinates
to figure out how to coordinate things
in the body with circadian biology. So
when you understand that the phalamus
is where this ventricular vortex is in,
what's special about the phalamus? It's
where all sensory input for humans comes
in. Every single part with the exception
of one sense doesn't come directly in.
That one sense is all faction. Why?
Because that's part of the old paleo
cortex. We have a different program for
that. Um
but the phalamus is a huge array. What
else is unique about the phalamus?
Thalamus has humongous
uh cholesterol and DHA in it. Not as
much as the eye does, but the central
retinal pathway into the phalamus
has more DHA than any other part of the
body. So it tells you magnetic flux
between the eye and the phalamus is
huge. What else is important? The eye
gives 48% of the neurons uh that radiate
out in the optic radiations which
surround the ventricular system. Okay.
So, you're getting pretty good
information here that light and magnetic
flux are a big deal for the interior
part of the brain.
So, what does the GPS system in humans
specifically do? It connects us with the
earth, the sun and the moon.
That is how the system works. So when
the magnetic dynamo has a problem, how
is it coupled? How how is our bodies
coupling to it? Well, it turns out where
did DHA come from? Everybody knows
cyanobacteria in the oceans. That's when
oxygen came. That's when the great
oxygenation event happened. So what does
that tell you? Oxygen levels in water
changed. The oxygen levels in water then
changed the magnetic dynamo. That is the
reason why the dynamo got coupled at the
Cambrian explosion. Why? Because prior
to the Camryan explosion, there was no
oxygen in the ocean. And what did that
do? It changed the magnetic flux by
changing the isotopic fraction. And
guess what happens when the isotopic
fraction in water changes? the magnetic
dynamo reacts to it. Which is why I need
to pay attention to what was going on in
the southern ocean because what I just
laid out to you, this is called the
human legarian tells us how we work. So
after doing this big deep dive in this whole
whole
discussion that you know I'm having with
you to kind of educate you on why this
is important, I did the final thing. I
went and looked at humans in Brazil. I
went and looked at humans in Africa
where the SAA was and guess what I
found? They were all getting heart
disease and nerve degeneration.
So guess what? Bees, birds, fish, and
the penultimate mammals on the planet in
the southern hemisphere
are dying. And they're dying at record
rates. And it's not arguable anymore.
And when you understand what this means,
it means the gravity well of the earth,
its z-axis is failing. So what is the
big ticket that I did? You happen to
know. I'm wearing it right now. See what
does that say? Antarctica, South Pole.
So why' I go there? Everybody asked me.
I was looking for evidence that we were
emitting excessive radio frequency
light out of the southern pole. We know
it's not coming out of the northern
pole, but we know it could come out of
the southern pole if we have a magnetic
failure. So, what did we find? We found
that we have unbelievable degassing of
RF coming out of the bottom of the
planet. You know why that's a big
problem? Because RF radiation destroys
melanin. So that means whales, wed
seals, and penguins should be affected
down there. So what did I ask the
biologists that were on the cruise ship
with me? I asked them the same question
about fish, bees, and and uh birds, and
I got the same answer.
So, I knew by using all these physics
deductions, by using first principal
thinking, because our government's
[ __ ] lying to us, that the real story
on the planet
is that magnetic declination has
increased tremendously on Earth and it's
happened unbelievably over the last 50
years. But the proof, the external proof,
proof,
I gave you the biology side, but the
real proof is how fast the magnetic
north pole ran from Canada to Siberia.
And what does this mean now? Because
I've explained the three vortexes in
biology. What's the vortex in the in the
planet you need to pay attention to? The
vortex in the planet right now is in
Siberia. It's uber strong. It's 335
nanotes. This is spinning all the light
light isotopes. Why should this make
sense to you? What do you know that's
happening at the same time all this has
been going on? All the water, the ice at
the poles melted. What do I always tell
people about water? The best water is at
the poles, right?
>> Because it's dutarium depleted and has a
different melting point.
>> So guess what? Now all that dutarium
depleted water is going in the Arctic
Ocean and that magnetic flux is creating
a massive vortex in Siberia.
So what is the midsuture line on planet
Earth just like a neurosurgeon would
think? That's called Iceland right down
the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
Where's the block veagal exhaust?
it's happening in the South Atlantic
anomaly that mimics what's supposed to
happen in us and there's nothing coming
out. So when I realized how these things
are all connected in 2024,
I asked my geology friends, how ge how
geologically active is the Pacific ring
ring of fire? And what I found out,
there's this really big disconnect
between Panama and twothirds of Chile.
And these are all places that I went to,
but I just never said anything to
anybody because I wanted to make sure
before I had this right, I really had it
right. And the Pacific Ring of Fire
above Panama is kicking ass taking apes.
and below it at the southern tip of
South America like where Auay is uh uh
Tiara de Fuego
it's also doing well um but there's a
dead zone from probably I'd say maybe a
thousand kilometers south of Santiago
all the way up to Panama and it's
extends across all the way the whole top
of South America
And now the bleeding edge of the SAA is
in the Caribbean and it's affecting all
the way up until Puerto Rico. Puerto
Rico now stands at the western edge,
western northern edge. So this is no
longer a South Atlantic anomaly. The
anomaly is growing. So what does that
mean for people who you know are my
clients? You know that I have a duty to
tell people where I think the best place
to go is to keep the vortexes and you
running. But we already have pretty good
data that South America is not the place
to go. Okay. But now I can say with some
firmness that the Caribbean on top of
South America is a no-go zone. And I
believe most of the islands in the
Caribbean out deep in the Atlantic Ocean
like Puerto Rico, Turks and Cake House,
all that out not interested. It appears
uh the South American continent will
block the ring of fire. The best place
right now in the world to be is Siberia,
but unfortunately there is no UV light there,
there,
>> so you can't grow a lot of food. But
Iceland for the last 12 years has been
blowing its top like crazy. So believe
it or not, here's a doctor that's made
his living telling people the tropics
are where you want to go. But guess what
the ba best bailout right now is for
people in Northern Europe? It's [ __ ]
Iceland because the magnetic flux and
the sun is good enough for you not to
have a big problem there. Um, do I think
the east coast of Africa is in deep
trouble? Yes. I think this is a place I
would not be caught dead in over the
next 50 to 100 years. Why? Because I
believe all the sea life is going to die
all the way up the western coast all the
way to the beginnings of the Sahara
Desert. Uh, the real problem is at the
tip of Africa there's a thing called the
big iron blob. And for those people who
have listened to me, they probably
haven't done deep enough dives in
geology like I do, but my members know
about this blob because I've talked to
them about it. And this blob is a big
piece of iron that's blocking the SSA.
But once it gets around this, which is
going to happen probably this year,
guess what's right in its path?
Australia. And Australia, based on the
newest data, has some of the worst
magnetic metrics you've ever seen. And
that's the reason why the fish, the
birds, and the bees have been dying
there for 50 years. It's also the reason
why the Great Barrier Reef is in trouble
since 73. So, what are we seeing?
There's not a lot of land mass in the
Southern Ocean, but just about
everything in the Southern Ocean is
being taken out. So we have the reverse
effect of what happened in the perian
extinction and the exhaust in the perian
was Siberia. Now the magnetic intake the
jet engine is in Siberia.
So this is clearly an evidence of a pole
shift. And where this comes to Becker's
work is when he talked about polarity
shifts. Remember where he did it? He did
it when he was studying amputations in
salamanders and he found that in sleep
the DC electric current went away and he
that current of healing was gone and it
it was because of a magnetic polarity
shift shift in the brain. What does that
correlate to that I just explained to
you in a pretty decent and detailed way?
That's the position of the vortex going
north and south in the axis. What
controls that? Alexis, the appendma has
psyia that beat that controls which way
the vortex goes. What's the link there
between melanin and pomsy and the MITF
ampar system that controls all this?
Those are called tannocytes. Tanocytes
are loaded with melanin and they line
the human central nervous system,
ventricular cavity. And these cells
become really important because there
are magnetically sensitive cells. They
tell us when the vortex needs to go
certain ways. And you know, I famously
did a podcast, I shouldn't say it was a
podcast, it was a webinar probably 15
years ago and I told my members I was
taking an epidermid tumor out in the
brain. I was called by one of my staff
members in LSU
uh to do the case with him. And the
reason he asked me to do it is because I
was used to being an oral surgery
resident. So I was pretty good about
disarticulating the face and the skull
to get into places that are not easy to
get into in the brain. And we did a
transcosal approach went through the top
of the head, split the the corpus
colosum to get into the third ventricle
to remove the medial portion of the
tumor. And we started the case around
1:00 in the afternoon in New Orleans.
And because this was a private patient,
I gave the patient back to my uh my
mentor at that time who's supposedly
teaching me, which I chuckle at to this
day. Uh and he gets in the operating
microscope and starts to remove the
tumor. But when he's in there, I'm
looking on the resonant port and I'm,
you know, I'm I'm designed to be the six
other eyes that he can't see while he's
focused on doing what he's doing so that
he doesn't get into trouble. And I
noticed that the ventricular fluid was
going from the frontal pole to the
occipital pole. And I'm going, that's
[ __ ] wild. And I I said to him, I
said, "Are you seeing what I'm seeing?"
And he goes, "What are you talking
about?" And I said, "Back out of the
scope for a minute." I said, 'Look at
the ventricular system. Because, you
know, we had the whole thing open.
You're seeing the whole top of the third
ventricle. I said, 'Look at it. It's
moving. There's waves going towards the aqueduct.
aqueduct.
And he and you know, he just thought,
"Yeah, okay." He could care less cuz he
wanted to get the tumor out. So, he goes
back to work and the sun sets. We're now
getting ready to close the case up and
I'm looking in the scope again. Now the
vortex is going the opposite way.
And I'm sitting there and I'm going I
said, "Will you look at this again? Now
it's going the opposite way." And he
gave me some [ __ ] reason that this
was tied to anesthesia or this and that.
I'm like, "Uhuh. No way." I said, "The
patient was asleep before when the
vortex was going the other way. This
wasn't anesthesia." And he just wasn't
interested. Of course, I got interested.
Then that's when I learned about
appendama cells and tannocytes and kind
of what they do and that they're big
time linked into this MITF ampar loop
that's tied to both circadian biology
and also leptin the leptin melanocorn
pathway. And I was like okay this begins
to make sense. And then I started to realize
realize
this ties directly to what Becker found
when he put the salamanders on the 2,00
g magnet that he was changing the
polarity the vortex in the amphibian
brain and that's why he was able to let
them go to sleep. And uh the reason I I
discuss all this with you is because you
need to understand that a magnetic
vortex is another way that mammals get
cheap energy for free. And it turns out
that we are the animals on the planet
that use the vortex probably more than
anybody else. I explained to you already
what happened in amphibians. They only
had two chambered hearts and fish only
have one chambered hearts. So, think
about what I said to you when I went in
the Southern Ocean. Should it be
surprising to you that fish died before
us? No. Because the vortex, if they only
have one chamber, they're heavily
reliant on that, if it gets taken away,
they're going to die first. Birds, who
are the other animal that got through
the last extinction event, their vortex
is very different. Their vortex starts
in the eye. Their pectin occuli looks
like a fish gill with all melaninations.
But what's their exhaust? They are truly
a jet engine. Their glucagon exhaust in
their gut work so fast. And this is this
will make you realize why I also scoff
at food gurus. Do you know that every
bird on earth is insulin resistant by
definition? Because they have to be.
because they are isotopically
deuterating themselves through the
glucagon pathway so that they can do
things that no other animal can do. And
they're flying to do this. They can
actually see the magnetic field. So,
they should be able to see where to go.
And remember, the KT event was not an
extinction that knocked the magnetic
field out. It was an exterior problem
that blocked us from the sun. The
magnetic field was still there. That's
the reason why birds survived. They were
able to use the magnetic field to go and
find where photosynthesis was still
working. Okay? Mammals survived because
they used their vortexes being
underground to create fat from light,
specifically blue light. Okay? Which was
dominant after the asteroid hit. But the
the magnetic field was not a big player
in the last extinction event.
It appears that what's going on now on
Earth, it's not a new phenomenon. I
don't want anybody think that it is
because this has happened at least 500
times in Earth's history. The key thing
that we will not know, but I do know
that everybody's following it is we
don't have a library of Alexandria to
know how severe this event really is
going on in the southern hemisphere. We
also don't understand how this ties into
coronal mass ejections. But if you look
at what governments are doing now, some
of the things that we are all scratching
our head begin to start to make some
sense now because you start going, "So
maybe that's the reason why this is
going on and they're not telling us
about this because if they told us,
you'd have 8 billion people on the
planet running to the places that are
the oasis that the swarm satellites are
telling us, hey, things are good here now.
now.
in your world, in my world, why is this
new data a big deal?
So, you probably have figured out from
the discussion we had about the link between
between
540 million years ago magnetic
inclination and the sun that that's how
we sculpt hletypes.
Hllet types are paying attention to all
this. So, how should you be thinking
about a hletype? Now it's basically a
GPS system for the matrix in your body.
But it turns out the matrix in your head
or the GPS in your head has to
coordinate with that matrix and hletype
in you. What does a magnetic declination
event mean
given the way the human legarian is
constructed? It means hletites no longer
matter. How's that for a shock? So your haplletype
haplletype
can get you in trouble if you live in a
magnetically decline place. So this gets
back to the question you asked me
earlier. So is this why the B thing is a
big deal around pesticides and
non-native EMF cities? Yeah, because
guess what magnetic declination mimics?
It mimics glyphosate in the food supply.
It mimics uh non-native EMF's ability to
take dutyum out of your blood and put it
where mitochondria are. But is that
effect the big effect? No. It's the
facade of the bigger problem going on
inside the earth. Why is this the case?
We are seeing evidence of every maha
disease in places where the magnetic
field is failing now. Because now that
we have new data maps, we can now look
at zip codes and go, so that's the
reason why people were dying, you know,
from this here. So, for example, let's
take probably the most controversial
thing is COVID because that was the last
big effect. Uh, do we now understand why
people died the way they did? If you put
a magnet magnetic declination map over
where COVID debts happen, you're going
to be stunned how coincident they are.
They they match almost perfectly. So,
what's the game now? What is the real
game for true mitochondrial
uh biophysic people that are listening
carefully to what I'm telling you? Your
goal is to live in a place where
magnetic inclination is happening. And
if you think that latitudes
and tropics determine this, you're wrong.
wrong.
Okay? And I've known this was coming for
a long time. I just didn't know it was
going to change on a dime.
Because in the 20 years that I've been
teaching this science,
I I'll be the first one to admit this. I
didn't think in a million years
that Siberia would go from 15 anatel to
335 in 320 million years. It happened in
20 [ __ ] years. There is nothing
precedented for that in the geologic
record, the physics record, astrobiology,
astrobiology,
nothing on Earth. We just don't know
what the slope of that line is. And it
turns out the slope of that line is now asmmptoic.
asmmptoic.
So that means the way I teach has to be
adapted to this new data. So it turns
out we have something new called the
volcano protocol.
Turns out volcanoes are a really good
place to be. So to show people that I've
been paying attention this for 20 years
now I've told the members on my site. I
said, ' Do you understand the the choice
that I had to make five years ago? Was I
going to the Chickixaloo Crater in
Mexico or should I go to El Salvador?
And I will tell you what the the the
decision tree was for me. The decision
tree was the Chickixloo Crater was the
last sight of the last extinction event.
It's where the asteroid hit the planet.
What was the things that were pro for
this area for me? 30 kilometers of the
crust were blown off. That means we're
closer to the dynamo. Okay. The base of
the crater also has a volcano in it. The
Gulf of Mexico is [ __ ] teeming with
life. Okay, which also is unusual
because it is a tropical area. It should
be a desert for for life because it has
less oxygen in the water when it's warm.
But the exact opposite was there. But
then I kept looking what was going on in
the surface with the Mexican government,
the Mexican people. I didn't see things
going higher. One of the other things
that was a positive for Mexico, the
cenote system there, because where the
asteroid hit was made out of carst.
Carst normally dutarium depletes
rainwater. For 65 million years, the
rain came down in uh in this area of
Mexico. All the cenote system is dutier
and depleted. I'm like, this has got to
be the place. But the thing that stopped
me was the politics
and the people there were not thriving.
there was an intuition in me. Just
stopped me. And I said, I just don't
know if this is the right place to go.
And then what magically happens? I go
and look to places relatively close
around there. And then I find the land
of volcanoes where they have more
volcanoes per kilometer square mile than
any other place on Earth. And that's
called El Salvador. And I see this guy B
Kelly and he's getting rid of his atomic
mass called MS-13.
He's giving Bitcoin to people. The
people there are all smiling. They they
look radically different than what's
going on in Mexico. So what do I decide
to do? Five years ago, my intuition
that magnetic inclination was higher in
El Salvador than Mexico, and I jumped.
And I'd be honest, I was not sure if I
was right. I can say to you today, that
was the best decision of my life. Why?
Because right now
things of higher latitude than the
Chixabaloo crater, remember Chickabaloo
is 20 north.
Puerto Rico is 18 north. Puerto Rico
is fast becoming um
how shall I say this calmly?
A dementia ward for humans.
And um it's a it's not a good place to
be. And it it does appear that the
continent of South America is going to deflect
deflect
most of what's left towards Africa and
then towards Australia.
There's no evidence outside of
the southern northern Atlantic Ocean
that this is getting bigger. It looks
like it's going towards
Africa. This is going to have huge
impacts from both Africa, the southern
Indian Ocean, probably the tip of India.
Um, do I believe uh Australia all the
way out into the South China Sea is
going to be impacted? Yes. One of the
other things I found out from the swarm
data that stunned me, the best bailout
for Australia is Philippines and uh New
Zealand. the southern island. So what am
I telling you now? The southern island,
not the northern island that's got a
better latitude.
So Philippines I normally would not have
told people to go to. Why? Because it's
got too many people, too much non-native
EMF from all those people. But the
magnetic field that's there compared to
other places around is off the chain.
And remember, that's technically where
the Pacific rim uh of fire starts and
then goes up to Japan, comes through
Alaska, and goes all the way down. What
else did I find out about the map? I
found out that the southern and northern
islands of Japan, excellent. Not a bad
place to be. This is the most shocking revelation.
revelation.
The best place to be in North America is
the Illutian Islands in Alaska.
continental United States is absolutely horrendous.
horrendous.
Uh the only state that may be okay is
Washington state because the Pacific Rim
is still volcanically active underneath
it. But when you go from Oregon all the
way down to Guatemala, you hit a dead
zone. It's it's almost like it's Mars
based on on the data. And that explains
the reason why California has no living
fish in their Pacific Ocean.
It's also concerning that western Mexico
is also used to be a fishing mecca.
I went there on my world cruise too uh
through the whole place. Talk to all the fishermen.
fishermen.
Fish are when people from California
come down to go fishing. They normally
used to catch tuna all the time. Now
they catch fish like this big.
Most of the fishing is done further
south. Where is the fishing spectacular?
Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua.
Nicaragua.
Then Panama slacks off. I do think
Panama slacks off because of the canal
traffic. But then it's a variable dead
zone from Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, all
the way in northern Chile until you get
past Santiago.
Like the Pacific Rim is the blocked
veagal exhaust for the planet and that
exhaust needs to open up
for things to go. So do I think
eventually what will happen to get the
magnetic dynamo back? The key sign will
be when we start to see huge eruptions
and earthquakes begin to happen in
Chile, in uh Peru,
in Ecuador. Why? Because that needs to happen again. It may even happen in the
happen again. It may even happen in the ocean. We may not see it. Um I guess the
ocean. We may not see it. Um I guess the other place I should talk about based on
other place I should talk about based on the data that's important is Hawaii.
the data that's important is Hawaii. Normally, people would think Hawaii is a
Normally, people would think Hawaii is a great place. Believe it or not, the
great place. Believe it or not, the magnetic declination that's happened on
magnetic declination that's happened on the Big Island is pretty substantial.
the Big Island is pretty substantial. Uh, the only place that's still pretty
Uh, the only place that's still pretty active is Kilawea. Monaka and Monaloa
active is Kilawea. Monaka and Monaloa are dead. They're also encumbered big
are dead. They're also encumbered big time by military radar. So, as far as
time by military radar. So, as far as I'm concerned, Hawaii is still a no-go.
I'm concerned, Hawaii is still a no-go. There's other better choices in the
There's other better choices in the Southern Pacific if you're going to do
Southern Pacific if you're going to do that. Uh but Hawaii is not part of the
that. Uh but Hawaii is not part of the volcano protocol. Um
volcano protocol. Um and I think that explains
and I think that explains kind of what I've been doing the last 2,
kind of what I've been doing the last 2, three, four years. Then it should make
three, four years. Then it should make sense based on what I'm teaching people
sense based on what I'm teaching people because now we also know that RF is
because now we also know that RF is pouring out of the southern hemisphere
pouring out of the southern hemisphere because it's blocked. Why? because
because it's blocked. Why? because that's the entropy dump of the earth
that's the entropy dump of the earth from the magnetic flux it's losing.
from the magnetic flux it's losing. That's exactly what's happening. So,
That's exactly what's happening. So, this is just like a refrigerator. When
this is just like a refrigerator. When you put your hand in, your food's cold,
you put your hand in, your food's cold, but you put your hand on the back of it
but you put your hand on the back of it and hot stuff's coming out. The RF
and hot stuff's coming out. The RF that's being liberated is really heat.
that's being liberated is really heat. It turns into heat and it's expelled
It turns into heat and it's expelled into space. What is the effect when that
into space. What is the effect when that happens in us? That's entropy dump that
happens in us? That's entropy dump that happens in our brain. and the heat comes
happens in our brain. and the heat comes off our head because we're frying our
off our head because we're frying our mitochondria. And how do we know that's
mitochondria. And how do we know that's the case? There's studies now out there
the case? There's studies now out there that I've posted on Twitter the last
that I've posted on Twitter the last couple days that show that RF radiation
couple days that show that RF radiation makes incoherent melanin. Incoherent
makes incoherent melanin. Incoherent melanin degrades into dopamine. Dopamine
melanin degrades into dopamine. Dopamine then breaks down and what happens? It
then breaks down and what happens? It leads to neurodeeneration.
leads to neurodeeneration. And fundamentally, this is the reason
And fundamentally, this is the reason why everybody's addicted to things that
why everybody's addicted to things that emit microwaves and RF. Why? because it
emit microwaves and RF. Why? because it destroys your melanin, makes dopamine.
destroys your melanin, makes dopamine. You think you get the dopamine hit, but
You think you get the dopamine hit, but what continues to happen? This fire
what continues to happen? This fire burns in your body, you lose all your
burns in your body, you lose all your melanin, and you're losing your magnetic
melanin, and you're losing your magnetic flux. You You become a fish, you become
flux. You You become a fish, you become an amphibian, you become a bee that
an amphibian, you become a bee that lives in the southern hemisphere. And
lives in the southern hemisphere. And we're seeing this effect in different
we're seeing this effect in different parts of the planet. Non-native EMF is
parts of the planet. Non-native EMF is an exacerbator to this effect.
an exacerbator to this effect. bad light, not having UV and near
bad light, not having UV and near infrared light exacerbators to this
infrared light exacerbators to this effect. Why? Because that's what drives
effect. Why? Because that's what drives photo repair in mammals. The problem is,
photo repair in mammals. The problem is, and I know you're going to ask me this
and I know you're going to ask me this question.
question. Does photo repair matter when magnetic
Does photo repair matter when magnetic declination is in your area? The answer,
declination is in your area? The answer, >> that's exactly what I was going to ask.
>> that's exactly what I was going to ask. >> It doesn't. It doesn't matter. And what
>> It doesn't. It doesn't matter. And what matters the most is the magnetic flux.
matters the most is the magnetic flux. And this is something from my 20 years
And this is something from my 20 years when I've done podcast, we always talk
when I've done podcast, we always talk about light, water, magnetism, but
about light, water, magnetism, but nobody ever wants to talk about the
nobody ever wants to talk about the [ __ ] magnetism.
[ __ ] magnetism. >> Mhm.
>> Mhm. >> Turns out now the magnetism is turning
>> Turns out now the magnetism is turning out to be the biggest part of the story.
out to be the biggest part of the story. Why? Because we're living on a planet
Why? Because we're living on a planet where at least half of it has got a huge
where at least half of it has got a huge magnetic stressor. And it's a stressor
magnetic stressor. And it's a stressor that I never thought was going to be an
that I never thought was going to be an issue for probably 25 50,000 years.
issue for probably 25 50,000 years. I got bad news for you. It's an issue
I got bad news for you. It's an issue for all of us right now. So, the single
for all of us right now. So, the single most important thing in your life is
most important thing in your life is still the sunrise. What's the second
still the sunrise. What's the second most important thing according to my
most important thing according to my update that I'm giving you now? You
update that I'm giving you now? You better live in an area that has magnetic
better live in an area that has magnetic inclination,
inclination, not declination.
>> So, what percentage of like the disease burden that we're currently facing do
burden that we're currently facing do you think is caused by man-made factors
you think is caused by man-made factors versus this declination?
versus this declination? >> I think they're all just exacerbators.
>> I think they're all just exacerbators. Why? Because the data that I found of
Why? Because the data that I found of life in the areas of magnetic
life in the areas of magnetic declination are off the charts. I mean
declination are off the charts. I mean you just go look at cardiovascular
you just go look at cardiovascular injuries in Brazil in the last 5 years
injuries in Brazil in the last 5 years and you'll be stunned. I mean you'll be
and you'll be stunned. I mean you'll be truly stunned. Um it's really really
truly stunned. Um it's really really shocking. And then when you see the way
shocking. And then when you see the way the map has changed in North America,
the map has changed in North America, like we didn't spend much time talking
like we didn't spend much time talking about this, but remember I told you I
about this, but remember I told you I was a big fan of Mexico, you know, 10
was a big fan of Mexico, you know, 10 years ago, let me tell you, if you think
years ago, let me tell you, if you think Mexico is bad, you should see the big
Mexico is bad, you should see the big part of Mexico that is that is
part of Mexico that is that is absolutely worse,
absolutely worse, it's almost Sahara Desert bad. And
it's almost Sahara Desert bad. And remember, Mexico City's got a volcano on
remember, Mexico City's got a volcano on it. But that volcano has no magnetic
it. But that volcano has no magnetic power whatsoever. It's almost like it's
power whatsoever. It's almost like it's been zapped. The best place in Mexico is
been zapped. The best place in Mexico is still where the Chickixaloo Crater is,
still where the Chickixaloo Crater is, but it's being impinged on now by the
but it's being impinged on now by the SAA. And that is the reason why I think
SAA. And that is the reason why I think Mexico's pilot lights been turned out.
Mexico's pilot lights been turned out. Okay. The interesting thing is the pilot
Okay. The interesting thing is the pilot light is turned on as soon as you get to
light is turned on as soon as you get to Guatemala. Like Guatemala hasn't a
Guatemala. Like Guatemala hasn't a volcano that's erupting right now. Um we
volcano that's erupting right now. Um we have more volcanoes here than any place
have more volcanoes here than any place on Earth. Costa Rica's got uh volcanoes
on Earth. Costa Rica's got uh volcanoes that are erupting right now. Um
that are erupting right now. Um Nicaragua doesn't. Uh but Nicaragua
Nicaragua doesn't. Uh but Nicaragua still on the map looks really good. Uh
still on the map looks really good. Uh there's no evidence of anything that's
there's no evidence of anything that's dying there. Panama is the interesting
dying there. Panama is the interesting one.
one. To me, Panama, I think, is okay. Panama
To me, Panama, I think, is okay. Panama doesn't have any active volcanoes, but I
doesn't have any active volcanoes, but I think Panama is the country you're
think Panama is the country you're asking about. Is that one affected more
asking about. Is that one affected more by man-made stuff than anything else? My
by man-made stuff than anything else? My belief right now, based on the data I
belief right now, based on the data I have, that's my answer. But when you ask
have, that's my answer. But when you ask me the question,
me the question, how much of human disease burden do I
how much of human disease burden do I believe today in April of 26?
believe today in April of 26? If you would have asked me the question
If you would have asked me the question a year ago, I would have told you
a year ago, I would have told you 70 80% by man-made EMF.
70 80% by man-made EMF. Today
Today 10%.
10%. >> Wow.
>> Wow. >> That's how big a deal this change is.
>> That's how big a deal this change is. Why?
Why? Because the change has been so
Because the change has been so substantial. The change in bandwidth for
substantial. The change in bandwidth for EMF hasn't been this substantial. You
EMF hasn't been this substantial. You know, we went from zero to 6G.
know, we went from zero to 6G. The last time that I looked at the
The last time that I looked at the magnetic shield was at 05. And I've been
magnetic shield was at 05. And I've been monitoring it, but I didn't have good
monitoring it, but I didn't have good data because the data has been hidden by
data because the data has been hidden by governments. They they don't want us to
governments. They they don't want us to know this.
know this. >> Yeah. And um when this data came out, I
>> Yeah. And um when this data came out, I was like, "Holy fuck." Like I could not
was like, "Holy fuck." Like I could not believe how bad it was. And like there
believe how bad it was. And like there was clues. I don't want anybody to think
was clues. I don't want anybody to think there wasn't clues when I started
there wasn't clues when I started tweeting two years ago about the [ __ ]
tweeting two years ago about the [ __ ] earthquakes here and the eruptions here
earthquakes here and the eruptions here and the weather changes in different
and the weather changes in different places. And then when the aurora hit
places. And then when the aurora hit Puerto Rico and Brazil, I was just like,
Puerto Rico and Brazil, I was just like, "Wait a minute. that those those are
"Wait a minute. that those those are like two auroras almost coming together.
like two auroras almost coming together. That that tells you the weakness in the
That that tells you the weakness in the field has to be tremendous. And why is
field has to be tremendous. And why is this a big deal for like the people in
this a big deal for like the people in Brazil? This is the part that I think
Brazil? This is the part that I think people are going to be bothered the most
people are going to be bothered the most by
by what happens in a place like Brazil now
what happens in a place like Brazil now is the vanel and belt comes down.
is the vanel and belt comes down. Dutyium and tridium are going in. What's
Dutyium and tridium are going in. What's the problem with tridium? Because we've
the problem with tridium? Because we've never really talked about this.
never really talked about this. >> It's radioactive, right? Well, not only
>> It's radioactive, right? Well, not only radioactive, but it's got two neutrons
radioactive, but it's got two neutrons and one proton.
and one proton. >> Here's the thing. When it gets
>> Here's the thing. When it gets incorporated into your methyl groups on
incorporated into your methyl groups on your DNA, you know what it emits? It
your DNA, you know what it emits? It emits a beta particle. You're being
emits a beta particle. You're being radiated from inside out. And here's the
radiated from inside out. And here's the other bad news. Why don't we have any
other bad news. Why don't we have any good data on this from other extinction
good data on this from other extinction events? You know what the halflife of
events? You know what the halflife of tridium is?
tridium is? >> 12.32 years.
>> 12.32 years. >> Yeah.
>> Yeah. >> So, guess what? will never will be able
>> So, guess what? will never will be able to see the isotopic signature. So what
to see the isotopic signature. So what did I start doing two years ago? I
did I start doing two years ago? I started looking for evidence of other
started looking for evidence of other isotopes that could give me a clue. And
isotopes that could give me a clue. And the best isotope that I find was oxygen
the best isotope that I find was oxygen 18. And this should make sense because
18. And this should make sense because when the magnetic field gets weaker,
when the magnetic field gets weaker, the heavier stuff is going to stay on
the heavier stuff is going to stay on Earth, the lighter stuff is going to be
Earth, the lighter stuff is going to be thrown off into space. So that means
thrown off into space. So that means oxygen 16, which is what most of us use,
oxygen 16, which is what most of us use, will be there. And it turns out there's
will be there. And it turns out there's a lot of rocks from the Peran extinction
a lot of rocks from the Peran extinction that are still accessible and geologists
that are still accessible and geologists are sampling. And what are they finding?
are sampling. And what are they finding? The uh the oxide minerals in these rocks
The uh the oxide minerals in these rocks are all oxygen 18. So
are all oxygen 18. So we now can say pretty clearly that the
we now can say pretty clearly that the environment in the perian was loaded
environment in the perian was loaded with dutarium and tridium. And the
with dutarium and tridium. And the interesting thing is that's precisely
interesting thing is that's precisely what we're seeing in humans that get
what we're seeing in humans that get sick now that they're duterrated. I
sick now that they're duterrated. I haven't seen anybody triated yet. I
haven't seen anybody triated yet. I haven't. But if it's going to happen,
haven't. But if it's going to happen, >> how are you testing for it?
>> how are you testing for it? >> Well, radioactivity.
>> Well, radioactivity. >> Okay.
>> Okay. >> I mean that that'd be the number one
>> I mean that that'd be the number one thing like and I'll tell you the other
thing like and I'll tell you the other other thing I'm using and this should
other thing I'm using and this should make some sense to you. Remember we
make some sense to you. Remember we talked about dialectric constant the
talked about dialectric constant the like your tap water is 78 and when you
like your tap water is 78 and when you go in the sun it goes up to 160. That
go in the sun it goes up to 160. That means what is it effectively a measure
means what is it effectively a measure of from physics? It's called electrical
of from physics? It's called electrical resistivity. Okay, there's more
resistivity. Okay, there's more resistance in the water. But what does
resistance in the water. But what does it mean to people who listen to this
it mean to people who listen to this podcast? It means that you can carry
podcast? It means that you can carry more light energy from the sun in water
more light energy from the sun in water in your system. And what does that mean?
in your system. And what does that mean? It becomes less viscous. So if you think
It becomes less viscous. So if you think about less viscous that's good for
about less viscous that's good for vortexes. That's what mammals have. We
vortexes. That's what mammals have. We got three of them. So that is the reason
got three of them. So that is the reason why viscosity is a big deal. So when
why viscosity is a big deal. So when you're duterrated or triated you
you're duterrated or triated you basically have maple syrup for blood or
basically have maple syrup for blood or CSF. Okay. And that increases the
CSF. Okay. And that increases the inertial problem in your head or in your
inertial problem in your head or in your heart. So how what would be the best
heart. So how what would be the best test? Uh uh Alexis and I think when you
test? Uh uh Alexis and I think when you were at my house we talked about this. I
were at my house we talked about this. I told you that I like thermography,
told you that I like thermography, right?
right? >> Mhm. because you know that you're going
>> Mhm. because you know that you're going to get a weird signal on a thermogram if
to get a weird signal on a thermogram if the blood is too viscous. And what am I
the blood is too viscous. And what am I seeing in some of my ladies with breast
seeing in some of my ladies with breast cancer? What am I seeing in some of my
cancer? What am I seeing in some of my patients that have hydrophilis?
patients that have hydrophilis? I'm seeing changes on their face that
I'm seeing changes on their face that the vortex changes like it looks like
the vortex changes like it looks like they're getting no blood flow into their
they're getting no blood flow into their head. And I want you to think about what
head. And I want you to think about what I said about the spphenoid bone being
I said about the spphenoid bone being the x- axis. That sppheninoid bone has
the x- axis. That sppheninoid bone has all three divisions of the artery that
all three divisions of the artery that feeds our brain, external, internal, and
feeds our brain, external, internal, and basor artery. So when you see a white
basor artery. So when you see a white spot in the middle of someone's face, it
spot in the middle of someone's face, it tells you that their CSF ventricle is
tells you that their CSF ventricle is like filled with
like filled with um concrete. And you know, a lot of
um concrete. And you know, a lot of these patients get diagnosed with normal
these patients get diagnosed with normal pressure hydrophilis or they'll get
pressure hydrophilis or they'll get diagnosed with hydrophilis, but it turns
diagnosed with hydrophilis, but it turns out that's not really what they have.
out that's not really what they have. They're duterrated. And where the real
They're duterrated. And where the real problem is, they're not able to clear
problem is, they're not able to clear dutyium at Meccl's cave and they can't
dutyium at Meccl's cave and they can't keep it in their heart vortex because
keep it in their heart vortex because the vortex doesn't have the gravity
the vortex doesn't have the gravity well, doesn't have the power. It's like
well, doesn't have the power. It's like your heart goes bad, it's a magnetic
your heart goes bad, it's a magnetic stall. So that's the reason why people
stall. So that's the reason why people that have like hydroavos have bad
that have like hydroavos have bad hearts, they really need to get to
hearts, they really need to get to volcanoes. Why
volcanoes. Why we need to see if we can keep the dutium
we need to see if we can keep the dutium in the blood and get it out of the
in the blood and get it out of the brain. So then one of the things that I
brain. So then one of the things that I start telling people is I want them to
start telling people is I want them to start chewing gum and I want them to
start chewing gum and I want them to start chewing mastic gum. The reason for
start chewing mastic gum. The reason for that is when you masticate you're
that is when you masticate you're putting pressure on the maxilla. You
putting pressure on the maxilla. You know that the maxilla and the mandible
know that the maxilla and the mandible are pole electric. the piso electricity
are pole electric. the piso electricity gets sent to the petrus uh part of the
gets sent to the petrus uh part of the temporal bone but and also the junctions
temporal bone but and also the junctions in the sppheninoid that's where the
in the sppheninoid that's where the mech's cave is if we can knock that
mech's cave is if we can knock that stuff out there then we can start
stuff out there then we can start getting the flow through the aqueduct of
getting the flow through the aqueduct of sylvvius in other words what we're what
sylvvius in other words what we're what we're really saying is mitochondrial now
we're really saying is mitochondrial now I've become a vortex
I've become a vortex thermodynamic clinician why I am trying
thermodynamic clinician why I am trying to get them back uh to a state where I
to get them back uh to a state where I can break their lattice. This is the
can break their lattice. This is the reason why dutarium depleted water now
reason why dutarium depleted water now is probably the greatest hack everybody
is probably the greatest hack everybody can use who lives in an environment
can use who lives in an environment that's not good. For example, you're in
that's not good. For example, you're in Jersey. Bad news. Jersey is not a really
Jersey. Bad news. Jersey is not a really good place to be because it's it's
good place to be because it's it's failing big time too. So dutarium
failing big time too. So dutarium depleted water for people that have
depleted water for people that have these problems is huge. Let me tell you
these problems is huge. Let me tell you the other implication for this because
the other implication for this because this will probably stun you.
this will probably stun you. Now, can I say with some definitive
Now, can I say with some definitive proof behind me that I understand
proof behind me that I understand hypothyroidism better? Yes, your brain
hypothyroidism better? Yes, your brain is shutting down thyroid because
is shutting down thyroid because with no magnetic vortex, if your
with no magnetic vortex, if your metabolic rate was high, you'd be
metabolic rate was high, you'd be creating steam like Antarctica is
creating steam like Antarctica is making,
making, >> right?
>> right? >> Coming out your head. So, guess what?
>> Coming out your head. So, guess what? >> It's adaptive.
>> It's adaptive. >> You got it. You're you're frying your
>> You got it. You're you're frying your circuits. So women who are out there
circuits. So women who are out there that have hypothyroidism, I I can tell
that have hypothyroidism, I I can tell you for the last
you for the last I'd say last year, I've been telling
I'd say last year, I've been telling them stop taking their thyroid meds,
them stop taking their thyroid meds, >> right?
>> right? >> I want them not to do this. I want them
>> I want them not to do this. I want them to do way more grounding. I want them to
to do way more grounding. I want them to do more cold thermogenesis. I want them
do more cold thermogenesis. I want them to begin to listen to loud music. I want
to begin to listen to loud music. I want them to start pounding their chests. I
them to start pounding their chests. I want them to start chewing gum. Like we
want them to start chewing gum. Like we have to go back to the archan way of
have to go back to the archan way of removing dutyium when our lattice cannot
removing dutyium when our lattice cannot be defragged. And are there things now
be defragged. And are there things now out there that can defrag the lattice
out there that can defrag the lattice differently? Yeah. Like Dutmium depleted
differently? Yeah. Like Dutmium depleted water is probably the safest, cheapest
water is probably the safest, cheapest one, but is there evidence out there
one, but is there evidence out there that the psychedelics can do it? Yes. Is
that the psychedelics can do it? Yes. Is there evidence out there that cannabis
there evidence out there that cannabis plays a role here, too? It Yes, there
plays a role here, too? It Yes, there is. There's good evidence for that, too.
is. There's good evidence for that, too. But again, people that are
But again, people that are neurocognitively impaired,
neurocognitively impaired, these drugs are are going to have
these drugs are are going to have different effects. Why? Because the
different effects. Why? Because the inertial pressures that they have both
inertial pressures that they have both in their heart and um their head is
in their heart and um their head is different. Like let me give you I'll
different. Like let me give you I'll give you a perfect example. This will
give you a perfect example. This will just show you how much I've been paying
just show you how much I've been paying attention to this because this just
attention to this because this just happened actually yesterday on Twitter.
happened actually yesterday on Twitter. So, I have a lot of general surgery
So, I have a lot of general surgery friends that uh I stayed in contact with
friends that uh I stayed in contact with for my residency. And one of the things
for my residency. And one of the things that they started telling me about 10
that they started telling me about 10 years ago is that they were starting to
years ago is that they were starting to see way more splenic um ruptures,
see way more splenic um ruptures, spontaneous at traumatic splenic
spontaneous at traumatic splenic ruptures. And they kept asking me, "What
ruptures. And they kept asking me, "What do you think this is from?" And I said,
do you think this is from?" And I said, "Well, I think I have an idea. The
"Well, I think I have an idea. The spleen is where we take red blood cells
spleen is where we take red blood cells out every 120 days.
out every 120 days. red blood cells swim in 150 parts to
red blood cells swim in 150 parts to dutarium. I said, could it be that if we
dutarium. I said, could it be that if we have more dutarium in the blood that the
have more dutarium in the blood that the blood is getting cycled out faster and
blood is getting cycled out faster and the spleens are getting bigger? And if
the spleens are getting bigger? And if that's the case, you should be able to
that's the case, you should be able to do CT scans and see the spleen hanging
do CT scans and see the spleen hanging off the back wall of the um and it
off the back wall of the um and it should be sagging. So, don't you think
should be sagging. So, don't you think people started to do that? And they
people started to do that? And they said, "You're right. All these people
said, "You're right. All these people had spleens that were hanging alone."
had spleens that were hanging alone." Then I said to one of my general surgery
Then I said to one of my general surgery buddies in New Orleans, I said, "The the
buddies in New Orleans, I said, "The the way you should use the test that you
way you should use the test that you should use in the lab that links to this
should use in the lab that links to this is homocyine." Why? Homocyine
is homocyine." Why? Homocyine relies on methylation. So that if people
relies on methylation. So that if people are heavily deuterated their homoyine
are heavily deuterated their homoyine should go up their spleen should get
should go up their spleen should get bigger
bigger >> should also have an effect on their
>> should also have an effect on their kidneys and their lungs as well you know
kidneys and their lungs as well you know and this is what like Max Gilhne and the
and this is what like Max Gilhne and the people that you talk to call [ __ ]
people that you talk to call [ __ ] visceral fat it's not [ __ ] visceral