Badlands Media - MAHA News [3.6] Dunkin' on Dunkin', Peptide Freedom, DECLAS on Bioengineered Lyme Disease
Episode Date: March 7, 2026MAHA News is back with a packed Friday show covering the latest developments in health policy, technology, and transparency. The hosts kick things off by discussing a proposed New York bill that would... restrict AI chatbots from offering medical or legal advice, raising questions about whether powerful industries are trying to slow the disruption AI is bringing to healthcare and professional services. They also examine a new MIT study suggesting heavy reliance on AI tools may weaken critical thinking and memory retention. From there, the conversation shifts to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s push for greater accountability in the food industry, including calls for Dunkin’ and Starbucks to release safety data on high sugar drinks. The show also highlights a new initiative requiring medical students at dozens of schools to complete nutrition training before graduation, a step toward addressing chronic disease through better education. Later in the episode, the hosts break down major declassification claims from Dr. Robert Malone linking historical U.S. military experiments to the spread of Lyme disease. They also discuss newly announced peptide policy changes, debates over glyphosate lawsuits, and continued scrutiny of vaccine messaging from federal health agencies.
Transcript
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What's going on, Nate Dog?
Dude, it's Friday.
We got a stack deck of good information,
so I'm ready for it.
I saw that bacon picture you sent me.
That's right.
That's right.
I was making breakfast Saturday,
and I was like, I got to send a picture of this.
I did not.
I did not go on the bacon binge.
No, huh?
I just, it doesn't, I don't feel good.
with the bacon man.
Okay.
But sardines, for sure, all day.
All day.
Might have to try grilling those up.
I wonder what grilled sardines taste like.
I've never tried it.
Ooh, grilled.
I've never tried doing anything with sardines except to eat them out of the can.
Yeah, like, I want to you throw them on, like, maybe a smoker.
I mean, there's all kinds of options.
I'm sure we can get creative.
Hmm.
I hope that wouldn't reduce the, or denature the omega-3s in there, though.
I don't know about the nutritional content.
of grilled sardines.
Yeah, maybe just like a nice, maybe just smoked then.
I wonder if that would help leave the omega-3s in there.
Cyberspeed, we're going to make America bacon again.
No, we're going to make America sardines again.
Sardine sales are up.
I will raise you, I will raise you your bacon.
Good old-fashioned can of sardines.
My wife was going to Costco.
She'd come home with a couple of packs of sardines.
She finally gave up on me.
and she brought home like a whole box loaded.
I'm like right on.
I'm set for the next two weeks.
Nice.
From Costco?
How big are the box?
How many?
What?
I think there's probably seven or eight, you know,
containers per pack,
if that makes sense.
And how many packs in a box?
Oh, man,
you're asking me math on Friday.
I'm going to guess it's probably like one,
two, three.
I don't know, man.
Probably like around like 12 packs, roughly.
Holy crap.
You're talking to solid, like, 100 cans of sardines in one case?
Yeah.
Dude.
It's worth the Costco subscription itself.
Yeah, man.
I mean, why I play small?
Got to have some of the macadamia nuts.
There you go.
What do we got, man?
What do we got?
We are going to be chatting about some AI today in regards to medical advice.
and then we're going to go through
Duncan on Duncan a little bit
discuss some
very interesting things that Dr. Robert Malone's been speaking about
in regards to Lyme disease being bioengineered
looks like Malone is kind of our D-Class guy
Yeah
You know that I'm guessing whatever
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Dr. Martin McCari
don't want to say themselves
They're just feeding that information to Malone
and the Malone's like their PR guy that they're using to declass some of the heavier stuff out to the public, I guess we could say.
Yes.
And he's been talking about some declassifications in regards to Lyme disease being bioengineered coming from ticks, basically.
He's definitely front-ran.
There's been a number of things now that have come up where Malone was talking about it one, two weeks in advance before it became so.
I think he's definitely somebody to, if you're not following him on X, it's definitely
somebody worth paying attention to.
Yeah, he's definitely a signal.
Yeah.
And then we have some criticisms today.
We have some criticisms on glyphosate and then a video that Bata Chiaria put out about the measles
vaccine.
So some things to touch on there that, you know, public awareness.
us these things hopefully will change their mind or change the agenda so we definitely have to
give criticism where criticism is due and then towards the end if we'll get there we'll talk about
some new health tech on the horizon sweet sounds like a good show
my man starting off with a new york state bill legislation has been introduced to new york
not passed yet, but introduced, so it'll be voted on.
New York considers a bill that would ban chatbots from giving all kinds of advice.
Like legal advice, medical advice, I believe, even things like engineering and other things as well.
But of course, in regards to this show, we're talking medical advice.
How much have you used, say, a grok or a chat GPT for any kind of health advice?
I would say for health advice, some, not a whole lot, just because I guess I haven't been in a situation like that.
Legal advice, Grock has literally saved me tens of thousands of dollars with Flowblend and in some cases made me money using it without having to consult with, you know, trademark attorneys and that sort of thing.
So legally, yes.
But I would say I do know there's a lady I know she's probably watching the show right now who has used AI to help diagnose longstanding medical condition that she has not received much help with whatsoever.
And she finally feels like she's making progress using AI to analyze it.
So I think there's a lot of
There's a lot of kind of heard some stories about people using these chat bots to feed their
Just images of their MRIs into or
And it's really helping them diagnose things so I forgot about that point, but it's pretty obvious to me that these industries where you have to pay
You know
Fancy people with their PhDs and the licensed people we have to pay them 500 bucks an hour just to
consult. Clearly, they're terrified of the disruption in their industries, so they want to ban the chatbots.
Yep.
You know, how dare you consult a chatbot to save yourself thousands of dollars and not come to me with my license to get the advice?
I've never used grok or chat GPT for advice per se. I have used them to just write blogs and
articles when I need some quick information on different herbs or mushrooms or things like that.
And it is okay. I wouldn't say it's great because of course these chat bots, they just reference
whatever language models they're fed. So whether that be Reddit or Wikipedia or all that,
but they're definitely helpful to conglomerate just a lot of information real quick and then you
kind of have to sift through that. But yeah, no doubt. I mean, some people have used the chatbots.
I mean, I think that there is tremendous potential for future, you know, especially if we end up with these LLMs, you know, and they have a solid foundation that, you know, that is not swayed by politics or ideology.
They're able to access vast swaths of information.
And so somebody coming to them with a complex problem that, you know, an average doctor would probably need to sit down and pencil through it.
and you're able to reference all of those materials and studies and symptoms, you know, through the LLM,
it can connect dots that, you know, a doctor may not.
And so, you know, whether people have access to them or doctors have access to them,
I think they're going to play a significant role in our future.
What I find hypocritical about this is that we've had WebMD online for 20 years,
giving health advice and like pseudo-medical advice,
It's not a problem there.
Yep.
But as soon as a chat bot starts doing it, then it's an issue.
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, there's definitely some concerns, too.
I mean, I'm not justifying New York's actions here, but there's definitely some concerns,
you know, a chat bot gone rogue giving crappy advice.
Oh, yeah.
No, you need to put that in your eye, you know?
Yeah, you need to take, you know, 10, 15 grams of creatine instead of a little less.
So it could.
You could have the chatbots go.
rope but uh yeah you know it's just they only base it off the languages it's fed so yeah but heck if
you can feed your MRI image into it and it can give you something no doctor could have why not
dude and it's at our it's at our fingertips it's instantaneous and it's either free or relatively
cheap for people to access that knowledge i mean that's yeah and i've known i've haven't done this myself but
I'm aware of some, like, personal trainers that have fed that have asked ChatGPT to just make
workout programs or diet programs, and they can do it like that.
Yeah.
Pretty good workout programs, too, where you can put the metrics in with your prompt, and, hey,
I'm looking for more athletic training or weight loss training, something like this.
Oh, you can definitely.
It is amazing.
Yeah.
But ChatGPT also apparently makes some people kind of really.
retarded. So MIT, this is a new MIT study. MIT hooked up people to brain scanners while they
used chat GPT. And they found that chat GPT users showed a 55% weaker brain connectivity than people
who didn't use it after just four months. Yautch. So what they did is they split a bunch of people
up into three different groups. One used chat GPT to write essays. One used Google and one used
nothing but their own brain. They wore EEG monitors that tracked brain activity in real time
across four sessions over four months. And the brain only group built the strongest most widespread
neural networks. Google users in the middle, chat GPT users had the weakest brains in the room
every time. Then the memory test hit. Participants were asked to recall what they'd just written
minutes earlier. 83% of chat GPT users couldn't quote a single line from their own essay. Couldn't remember
the words. And then in the final session, chat GPT users were told to write without AI and their brains
were measurably weaker. They just couldn't do it. 78% couldn't recall their own writing.
So it's just pretty clear that when you purely depend on these chat bots, GROC, chat GPT,
your critical thinking sucks.
Yep.
And that makes sense.
That kind of goes back to what we're just discussing with using AI for your own health.
It's like if you put, I mean, that's kind of like giving your power over.
It's probably a very similar result as to giving your power over to a doctor just because they're in a white lab code.
you're giving power over to the AI.
You definitely don't want to do that.
Yeah, GROC is great for sourdough recipes by all means,
but just don't have it do your thinking for you, right?
Yeah.
And we have some shy inch to back that up now.
And it's pretty clear.
I mean, when you, just, for instance, in like our,
I guess, citizen journalist industry,
every single day I see dozens of comments on Twitter of people tagging GROC and then saying,
hey, GROC, is this real?
Yeah.
Is this real?
Is this legit?
It's a helpful tool because it can help you find some information maybe you didn't know,
but people are purely depending on GROC sometimes to tell them if something's real or not.
Like their own two eyes, they can't go through the discernment process themselves to vet the information.
and they're purely depending on grok to do it.
Yeah.
That is very true.
Well, I'm going to have to pay attention to that because I remember when I started Floblende,
I was writing all the emails, all the marketing copy, and it was taking a ton of time.
And since AI has come out, I rely on it pretty heavily to help me do all that stuff.
Again, it's a great tool.
You just have to be careful how you rely on it.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Totally.
I don't want to end up as that 55% weaker brain activity.
Jersey here.
Writing is extremely important to her.
Have to physical, or him, sorry, didn't mean to misgender.
Them.
Writing is extremely important to them.
Have to physically write a word just to understand it fully.
I've always been a fan of notebooks, man.
Been a fan of notebooks.
I like to actually write the things down.
And when you write them with your hand, even as opposed to type it,
not even talking about AI here, but you remember it a lot better.
That is a thousand percent true.
Yep.
If there's something I have to remember, even pretending to write it,
even if you have nothing there, pretending to write, it helps you lock it away.
Yeah, I definitely have not used AI that much either.
Nate, you probably use AI more than I have.
But now and again, if you are trying to make a meme,
I've used it to make some memes before or change.
the words on some memes if I want to change it a little bit.
Find news of the day. Sometimes it's helpful to comb through current events and things.
It's helpful, but you just don't want to depend on it.
Cool. Now we got some clips of RFK.
You know, last week's show that Joe Rogan interview he did with RFK Jr. came out right before we went live,
so we weren't able to see everything from it.
Here's an interesting clip that Nate found of RFK Jr.
Speaking to Joe Rogan about how bad big food and big pharma and everything is, I suppose.
Yeah.
Everybody makes money on keeping us sick.
The food companies make money on getting us a sick, but pharma makes money on keeping us sick.
The insurance, you would think insurance would want to keep you well, but it doesn't.
It actually makes more money if more people are sick.
the hospitals.
How does the insurance company make more money if people are sick?
Well, I mean, think of it this way.
If you're Lloyd's of London,
do you want one ship?
And you're insuring all the ships in the ocean.
Do you want one ship to sink here,
or do you want a thousand to sink?
If a thousand sink,
everybody's going to be paying you premiums
to ensure themselves against that eventuality.
And you're making money on the friction.
So you're making the money that comes into this.
You're making your money on the money that comes to the system.
The more that you pump up that fund the money, the more you make.
So, you know, nobody is interested.
Nobody is economically incentivized to make people well.
And we are not going to get well until we align those economic incentives with the health
outcomes that we want, which is nobody gets sick.
We end the chronic disease epidemic.
and that's what we're doing now.
Of course insurance profits on us being sick.
People are healthier.
They wouldn't need the insurance.
Yeah.
So we do, right?
Just like, weren't we talking about this a couple weeks ago
in that the reason they sell insurance is,
you know, there has to be some risk there
for them to make money off insurance.
So say, fire insurance for your home,
the insurance industry is incentivized
to at least have people have a little bit of fire risk in their area.
They don't want too much fire risk,
otherwise that people's house are going to burn,
they're going to have to pay out a bunch of claims,
which they don't want to do.
But they need at least a little bit of risk there
to scare people to give them a reason to buy the insurance.
And it's the same thing with health.
There needs to be a little bit of sickness there in society to give people a reason to go buy the insurance,
but they don't want people to die, obviously, and then they'd have to, you know, wouldn't be buying the insurance anymore.
But yeah, they need a little bit of sickness there.
You know, I can't help but wonder, as you were talking about this, this idea hit me, is I wonder how much of it,
I wonder which industry fights easy, cheap, natural solutions to health issues more, whether that's pharmaceutical or insurance.
I mean, I would maybe equally, I don't know.
I mean, just the simple fact that these things aren't covered by insurance right there.
Yeah.
You know, people aren't getting write-offs on their insurance.
I mean, wouldn't that be a great thing?
If you could prove you're taking supplements or prove you have a workout program or something and then send that into the insurance company and they'd lower your premiums or lower your costs because you're able to prove just like driving, right?
If you have a good driving record, they're going to lower your costs on that.
Yep.
So why not, you know, if say you tick, oh, yes, I am a smoker, if you, you know, foolishly admit you are.
then they're going to raise your rates.
Well, why can't you prove you're healthy in various ways
so they lower your rates, but they don't do that.
Yeah.
Not to my knowledge.
Hey, I got to say, man, this new background on the video,
I'm seeing like a green kind of hue to it.
Looks good.
You like that?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm digging it.
Looks good.
We need an intro for Maha News.
That's what we need.
We need an intro video.
All the other Badland shows have real cool intro videos.
I'll do that.
Well, I'm not going to have AI make it.
Okay, let's dunk on Duncan a little bit, man.
Yes.
Do you have any Dunkins around where you're at?
I don't know if I've ever been to a Dunkins.
I think most of them are over on the East Coast.
Isn't the East Coast thing?
I don't think I've ever been to a Dunkin' Donuts.
Like you go over to the East Coast and they're like every other street corner, it seems like.
But I know over here, Montana and the,
West Coast. I don't even think they have much of a presence at all. Yeah, I've got no idea what
they're, I mean, obviously I know their food is trash, but I've got no idea like what the draw of it is.
Yeah. Anyway, RFK is calling on Duncan and Starbucks to release safety data for their high sugar
beverages. Okay, I do know all about Starbucks. Because obviously, Seattle, that's where I grew up.
I've been to their
like headquarters
location
uh
Starbucks is bad
anyway
when you walk out of the headquarters
location
did you weigh more
just out of curiosity
we call it the dirty mermaid
out here
and
it's a common thing
people in Washington
actually hate Starbucks
and you'll see bumper stickers
on a bunch of people's cars
like Freds don't let friends drink Starbucks
because they try to support
like the small
barista stands or the small
coffee shops, the local ones.
So actually in Washington,
Starbucks is pretty hated.
But outside of it, obviously, Starbucks,
you get like one every two blocks in a major city, right?
Yeah.
It's disgusting coffee anyway.
It tastes burnt and
like terrible.
Starbucks is terrible coffee.
Well, yeah, because they're using paint thinner
to strip the coffee from there.
I don't know much about Starbucks.
I don't even remember the last time I'd been to one.
But anyway, here's RFK on Duncan.
Duncan.
Duncan is known for recruiting big stars for its ads, but now it's drawing criticism
from HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who says many of the drinks at Duncan and Starbucks contain too much sugar.
Show us the safety data that show that it's okay for a teenage girl.
And drink an iced coffee with 115 grams of sugar in it.
sugar in it. Federal dietary guidelines recommend...
115?
150, I thought.
Was it 115? 115.
Either one.
Can you do a real quick search while I play the rest of this video and look up...
Do like, I don't know.
What are the sizes at Starbucks?
Fancy French words or whatever.
look up like a 20 ounce iced white mocha those those are the white girl drinks
like 20 ounce yeah like 20 ounce iced white mocha from starbucks how much sugar is in that
look that up real quick while i'll play the rest of the video got it meal should have no more
than 10 grams of added sugar but nearly every drink on the duncan menu exceeds that amount
overconsumption of sugar can lead to obesity type 2 diabetes and heart disease according to the
CDC. We just bought this large frozen coffee with skin milk from Duncan and it may not seem like
it, but it contains about this much sugar, 112 grams. That's about the same as eating six
servings of Breyer's vanilla ice cream. That's just straight diabetes. Straight diabetes. Did you get
that count? Yeah, so the iced white mocha has looks like 49 grams of sugar. And that's in a 20 ounce?
Yep. And then a white chocolate mocha has 73 grams.
Oh my God.
That's, I mean, about 40 grams, I think, is a soda.
Like your average can or bottle of Coke.
Granted, that's high fructose corn syrup,
which is even more insulin spiking.
But still, there might be some high fructose corn syrup in those iced white mocha's.
But man, that is so much sugar.
And we wonder why people have the freaking diabetes.
Yeah.
Yeah, seriously, when I go to coffee, like I do like going to coffee shops and drive through coffee stands.
Not the nudie ones, they make disgusting coffee.
But, yeah, I never understood the nudie coffee stands.
It's like, coffee sucks.
Isn't that a Washington thing?
I've seen them elsewhere.
Usually you see them around military bases.
Yeah.
Because it's a draw for the military guys to go to the bikini stands or whatever.
But it's like the coffee.
sucks. And if you want to see some nudie girls, I don't know, just Google some photos. But get better coffee.
Although, um, Americano, three shot, 16 ounce black Americano. And sometimes it's wild. If you go to a
coffee shop or a drive-through stand, the baristas will look at you like you're crazy if you just want
your coffee black. Yeah. I've gotten that before where they're like looking to me, no, no cream.
no sugar like no just black americano three shots 16 ounce like nobody does that you sure i just
give me some black ass coffee shut up it's wild like they're pressuring you to get stuff in it uh but yeah
black coffee i usually do the americano but mine is with heavy cream and uh touch a honey that's the
way to do it touch a honey now i won't lie when i'm at home
I'll do my French press, but I will add some creamer half and half.
And then brown sugar is my thing, man.
That's my secret sauce to making a good homebrew coffee is brown sugar.
I still haven't tried it.
I got to do that.
I keep saying I'm going to try it and I haven't yet.
Yeah, how much?
I mean, not even a tablespoon, maybe two teaspoons in a small mug or something.
And I don't usually end up drinking the whole thing.
so it's not that much
but I love me some brown sugar in my coffee
anyway
after RFK
was calling out the Duncan's
Governor
Morah Healy
oh Massachusetts
at Mass Governor
okay
Cool
Massachusetts Governor
come and take it
Wait wasn't it
Massachusetts like 10 years ago
that was making a huge fuss about
soda
You remember that?
Maybe it was New York
There was a big fuss about selling like 20 ounce sodas
Kind of rings a bell
But they wanted to like ban soda because obesity or something
Yeah they were talking about doing that because of yep
Sounds familiar
It was quite a while ago
Anyway so now they're now they're trying to protect the
100 come and take it
Literally communism
how dare you take our Dunkin' Donuts? This is communism.
RFK said,
No one is taking away your Dunkin.
But isn't it reasonable to ask whether a drink loaded with 180 grams of sugar safe?
It's like a crack addict.
Yeah.
How dare you take away my Dunkin's?
Oh, no.
180 grams of sugar.
Oh, man.
Yeah, I'll pass on that drink.
I don't think you could pay me to drink it.
You imagine the crash after drinking?
I have a price.
You could pay me to drink that, but that price would be high.
I'm sure I'll drink that 180 grams of sugar for 100 bucks.
I'd do it for 100 bucks.
Wouldn't do it every day for 100 bucks.
I'd do it, you know, just once.
Okay.
I mean, I can't blame you.
All right.
Your buck for a month of a gym membership.
Yeah, right.
that hundred bucks will go to a gym membership what's the what's the highest price you'd pay on a gym membership
I think I don't know for a for a person like for just me
uh like probably 40 45 bucks that's that's about yeah that's like top end yeah what I'd pay
I like I like a nice gym like the one I go to right now has uh uh steam sauna that's real nice
on some days.
You know,
like I like to have the full experience.
If I'm going to go there.
But then I've also gone to the,
you know,
low ceiling dark gyms
where you just go in there
and there's just a bunch of dudes
ripping weights.
I've done that too.
They both have their appeal.
That's my jam.
That's my jam.
I think my gym right now is like 30,
35,
but it's a hole in the wall.
It is mainly free weights.
Right?
So squat stands, powerlifting stuff.
It's got a little bit of an indoor turf track.
You can push a sled on.
But it, no fancy nothing.
No sauna.
No tanning beds or anything like that.
But those are the gyms, man.
And usually you'll find those gyms in warehouses.
They'll take like half a warehouse,
house, convert it into a, I don't know, three, four thousand square foot.
It's usually owned by a dude who's balding in his mid-40s, retired law enforcement or retired
military or like ex-powerlifter.
Yeah.
You know, he's jacked.
He's got some muscle, but he's a little overweight, balding, mid-40s.
Maybe it's him and his wife that own it.
and those are the best gyms man but man you got some of them 80 bucks a month now like what is this
yeah yeah 77 a month now at the local ymcAs oh it's wild yeah and then some of those
uh crossfit gyms are like 150 a month boot camp gym like boot camp gym like i dig the
the community aspect of CrossFit.
That's fun.
You got like a certain time of the day
where you go work out with some friends, right?
Granted, I think some people get into CrossFit
and they don't have like the structural strength
to start doing power cleans
and tossing around weights like that.
So, you know, ask a chiropractor.
They love CrossFit.
Helps keep them in business.
But that much money, though,
just to go work out with some friends.
friends.
Yeah.
Most I'd pay is like 40 bucks for a gym membership.
Can't call yourself true Washingtonian if you've never been to Dix and didn't have at
least five different coffee stand punch cards in your car.
That's good.
That's true, man.
Hey, Dix are only in Seattle, Tacoma, though.
So I grew up over in Kitsap.
There's no Dix Burger is over in Kitsap.
So you can't blame me if I've never been.
been to a Dix.
Although I think I have just once.
I've been to a Dix once.
But I definitely,
because I never ventured
over to Seattle, Tacoma, so you can't blame me.
Although,
the five different coffee stand
punch cards thing, 100% true.
100% true.
I thought Dix was like a super store,
like a, you know, like a sporting
good store. Oh, yeah,
there's a Dix's sporting good store, but in
Seattle, there's a
local burger joint called Dick's
Burgers. And
I don't know how many
of them there are, just a few,
but they're peppered around like Seattle,
Tacoma. And
it's like a
Seattle, local Seattle thing, Dick's Burgers.
But I never really ventured
over to Seattle, Tacoma that much.
So
I think I went to Dix one
time.
Long time ago, but
you have.
Yeah, lived on those burgers growing up.
Funny.
Cool.
Anyway, next story.
RFK Jr.
announced 53 medical schools will begin requiring nutrition training starting next fall.
Whoop, whoop.
53 medical schools across 31 states are driving the national movement
to champion nutrition education and reshape the future of medical training.
beginning this fall, these schools will require every medical student to complete 40 hours
of comprehensive nutrition education or competency equivalent before graduating.
More than 30,000 physicians each year will now graduate equipped with nutrition education
to help prevent, treat, and reverse chronic disease.
This is how we implement the MAHA agenda.
say how many hours?
40?
I mean, that's better than, what was it, 10 before?
Was it even anything before? I think they did have to take a nutrition class, but it was
like one quarter.
Yeah.
One class, quarters worth.
So, yeah, 40's okay, but still rookie numbers.
Still rookie numbers, really.
Like, it should be in, in,
say what, an eight or 10 year doctorate degree for, you know, to get your PhD, they should have
one full year at least dedicated to movement and nutrition.
Yeah, I agree.
And alternative forms of, say, herbal healing and Aravitic Eastern type healing, but, or at
least just different types of, yeah, homeopathy as well, throw that in there.
but I say one full year of holistic medicine,
which includes posture, corrective exercise, movement,
biomechanics, as well as nutrition, supplements,
herbal healing, homeopathy, things like that.
It's kind of even sad that this is an announcement, isn't it?
Dude is so sad.
And 40 hours is still quite pathetic, honestly.
Yeah.
But it's better and it's a requirement now.
Okay, cool.
Is this continuing education or is it just, it's just for graduation?
Yeah.
Huh, yeah, good question too.
I mean, they should be required a certain amount of hours every year or two.
Yeah.
Continuing education.
But a, step by step.
peptide news on Joe Rogan's podcast,
RFK Jr. said
14 of the 19 banned peptides
can be legally compounded again by U.S. pharmacies within a few weeks,
which will ensure Americans are getting a good product from ethical suppliers
versus black market drug dealers,
the 19 compounds on the FDA's,
Category 2 compounding safety list include.
You got BPC 157, very popular for healing from injuries.
I think we might have a couple people in the chat that are on BPC right now.
GHKCU, that is a common peptide for hair growth.
Give me some of that shit.
You're too fog-gone, man.
Just giving you shit, bro.
I've actually got some, I bought some GHK just off the internet, not injectables, but
topical.
Yeah, topical.
And it seemed to help out.
Like, my hair was, seemed more fuller after a couple of weeks.
I was thinking about using the BPC.
Like, if my ribs didn't heal quick, I was thinking of using the BPC, but I healed up fine.
I feel a lot better now, so.
Oh, heck yeah.
Yeah, I can finally work out again.
It was good.
I went for a run a few days back and felt pretty darn good.
So you can breathe again.
I mean, that's like, you know, it's kind of nice being able to do that without pain.
Yeah, squats, lift weights.
I wouldn't say I'm 100%, but I'm probably 90% back into it.
I can toss around weights again and run pretty strenuously.
Anyway, that's your list.
I don't know anything about any of them
I've heard of the BPC
Yeah sounds interesting
Love to learn more
Checking out some of the comments here
40 hours to be viewed akin to a middle school gym class
Yeah
When you put it that way
Yeah
40 hours pretty
I mean that's like
Monday through Friday
8 to 5 right
So it's like one week of all week
they're just in nutrition, which is pretty pathetic on this.
But is well, yeah, I bet a significant portion of people in chat right now have spent more time learning about nutrition than that.
Well, dude, if you just watch this show since we started it, you're already, you're 40 hours, right?
There you go.
One hour every day for how long have we been doing this?
Yeah, probably, we've probably done 40 hours. We've easily done 40 hours worth of shows.
Easily.
Count in the few living shows we've done too, man.
Oh, yeah, just watch us and you get your continuing education.
Cool.
All right, guys, we've got a couple of sponsors here to shout out,
and then we're going to get to Robert Malone and his declassified docs on Lyme disease.
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Dude. Just so you guys know, I don't know what the ads are going to be like before we run them.
So I haven't seen that one yet. And I'm dying. Tiny Bright. Oh, God.
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So, yes, soft disclosure for your beard oil.
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Speaking of AI.
Speaking of AI.
That's a good use of AI.
Okay, cool.
Let us get into our declassifications from Mr.
Robert Malone.
Dr. Robert Malone.
Declassified documents link U.S.
Bio Weapons Program to Lyme Disease Outbreak.
Exclusive military released
282,000 radioactive ticks
and suppressed
co-infection research for 40 years.
That's a
huge statement.
I mean, we've all known it.
We've all talked about it.
but it's official.
That's massive.
Yeah, I find it huge that Robert Malone is the one getting this exclusive, I guess.
I mean, that's just, he's like the point man of,
it's kind of been this way for months,
but the point man of hardcore disclosure coming through FDA and HHS.
Yeah.
It's like whatever RFK and Makari, like we said earlier,
whatever they can't or don't want to release,
They just give it over to Malone, and Malone's kind of their guy to get a lot of this stuff out.
What drives me crazy, though, is like, okay, so the military made a decision to drop all of these ticks, radioactive ticks, and then suppressed any sort of treatment or investigation, and yet are we ever going to see any sort of justice for the people that made those decisions?
Half of them are probably dead now.
Robert Malone does
funnies once a week
featured on whatfinger.com
I don't know what you're talking about
I hope I didn't just read some
spam comment but
you are a subscriber so
I have no idea what what finger is
what do you mean funnies
you click that link Nate
I don't want to click that
I mean it's Polaris
been in chat for
we know Polaris okay
But we'll check that out later.
Okay, anyway, this story.
So declassified documents and testimony from a CIA operative described the 1962 deployment of infected ticks against Cuban sugar cane workers.
It's part of Operation Mungoose, the Kennedy administration's effort to destabilize Fidel Castro.
The operative now in his 70s told researchers that the strangest thing he ever did was drop infected ticks on Cuban sugarcane workers using a transport aircraft at night, almost skimming the surface of the Caribbean to avoid Cuban radar.
After returning from Cuba, the operatives' four-month-old son developed life-threatening fever, requiring emergency surgery.
His CIA commander advised him to burn all the clothes you took to Cuba, burn everything.
The deployment was canceled because of wins, making payload delivery difficult.
And then later in the 60s, the U.S. military released almost 300,000 Lone Star ticks made radioactive with Carbon 14 across Virginia along bird migration routes.
The radioactive marking allowed researchers to track the ticks spread using Geiger counters over several years.
Before the experiments, Lone Star ticks were not found above the Mason-Dixon line.
But within years of the Virginia releases, they established populations even as far north as New York for the first time.
Wow.
And then just a lot more information on it.
disease emergence timeline just a couple years after the apparent Virginia deployment of the
radioactive ticks he started seeing Lyme disease outbreak around Cape Cod and Connecticut
huh scrolling this whole thing here this is a doozy oh wow it's a whole book man yeah so this is
is Malone being our D class guy.
Right here.
Let's check out the interview he did about this with Chanel Rion.
Not getting any audio.
That might be a Streamyard thing.
Uh-oh.
Come on, Streamyard.
Pull it together.
Nothing?
Nothing.
Blumber.
Chat, can you hear it?
Give us a...
Yeah, I got a message from Streamyard saying that audio might...
be something or other disconnected and audio went down.
So I think that's a streamiered issue.
Yeah, nobody's getting a, I can do this.
I forgot, show comments on screen.
Cool.
Yeah, bummer, streamer.
But anyway, Robert Malone.
Robert Malone reveals that all of RFK Jr's children have suffered from Lyme disease
as a result of living near the epicenter Lyme, Connecticut.
Yeah.
Yeah, RFK in a video released, I was probably like four to six months ago.
Well, it's when they had the panel.
So maybe that was only a couple of months ago when they had the panel about Lyme.
And he was discussing how it's dangerous.
It's literally dangerous now to be out in the woods for Americans because of this issue.
That and Sasquatch.
Got to be careful with ticks here.
Got to burn the tall, dry grass and spring to reduce ticks.
around your house. I'm so thankful that I've never lived anywhere that had bad ticks.
So, yeah, east, east coast thing.
You know, there was a fire I was working in Montana, and I was working right next to the river.
And I remember I was wandering away from the truck down this little trail, came back to the truck.
It was maybe like a 10-minute walk, came back, and I remember I had at least five ticks on.
me here in Montana.
Like, no, thank you.
I've been to Montana quite a few times, but never dealt with ticks, at least that I remember.
Yeah, I haven't seen them like that ever before around here.
I've spent quite a bit of time out in the woods.
Where was that fire at?
It was over next to Missoula.
It was a couple hours.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, a couple hours south of Missoula, I think.
Because I spent I spent plenty of time Billings hell enough Flathead Valley on the highline all over Montana and I've never never encountered a tick
No I've encountered more rattlesnakes than ticks
Yeah, montana
But yeah wild
Maybe do they have years do they have years where they're worse than others? I would imagine so I really don't know a whole lot about ticks
So yeah
When I saw that I was just like that's kind of wild
I don't know.
I guess they're spreading.
Because I remember one year, I was quite young, maybe 15, 16, but I was at my uncle's house,
and I was doing a lot of tree trimming for him out near Helena.
And I was outside for a while over the course of like a week or two.
No ticks.
I don't remember any ticks being a problem.
Yeah.
So I'm just wondering if maybe it's worse than others.
Ticks out in Minnesota.
I never been to Minnesota.
I don't know
I don't know nothing about that
Nick of the Woods
Would you say Missoula is a liberal city Nate
Yeah
Is it?
Yeah
It definitely is
I was in
Missoula in 2010
I think for a football game
It didn't seem all that liberal
But
It was a long time ago
It is
They got all the
All the parades
the college of course
yeah
like 15 years ago
and I wasn't political back then
so I was just there to
drink beer and watch a football game
tell you what though
what an awesome
college to go do that
in Missoula
at least back then
oh yeah back then definitely
yeah
cool
a few other things
ASIP panel to discuss
vaccine injuries long COVID in March.
Their next meeting is in 12 days.
My math is mathing.
So it sounds like Monday the next next week.
March 18th, 19th,
ACIP panel, which is the panel, Malone is on, of course.
Yep.
They're going to be talking about COVID vaccine injuries,
long COVID, other recommendations.
So we'll see what we get.
from that.
Do they just meet twice a year?
You know, that's a good question.
I do not know.
Sounds like they do, because it says here their last meeting was in September.
They must meet like once in the fall, once in the spring, every few months or something.
Three regular meetings each year.
Okay, gotcha.
So like spring, fall, summer.
Got it.
Makes sense.
Cool, cool.
And then last thing I think we'll get to in this show here is a little bit of criticism.
Trump administration just filed a, this is according to the high wire here.
Trump admin filed a Supreme Court brief in support of Bayer.
Three of the nine DOJ attorneys who signed it previously worked for law firms that represented Bayer.
One defended Bayer in a lawsuit over pesticides killing.
honeybees. Another worked on the legal team for Bayer's acquisition of Monsanto. They are now signing
briefs on behalf of the U.S. government in favor of that same company. And the case before the
Supreme Court will decide whether individuals can bring state-level lawsuits against pesticide manufacturers
for failing to warn about cancer risks. If Bayer wins, lawsuits go away.
Wow. Kind of wild before as well because RFK Jr.
personally represented a Roundup cancer victim and won a $300 million verdict against Monsanto.
So I imagine there is some dissension within the ranks right now.
RFK Jr., I'm sure not happy about certain recent Trump administration moves about glyphosate.
Yeah.
Although, as we did cover RFK, you know, I think he was talking about this to
Rogan but he mentioned he understood the need for that executive order.
He doesn't like it, but he understands the need for it.
And, oh, in fact, I saw a video on Twitter about that weed-killing laser machine.
Oh, yeah.
I've actually seen quite a number of videos talking about it right now.
Yeah, they put out a promo piece.
Wasn't it like there's like 10,000?
Man, I don't want to say it because I don't remember.
I thought there's some crazy number of lasers and they're using AI to scan the ground underneath it.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
I was wondering what that would do with like a broadleaf type crop.
I mean, I'm sure once it hits a certain point, they couldn't use it.
But if the original crop is taken over, then that's just mind-blowing.
Pooh, peop, peop, pooh.
I wonder how much a unit like that costs
and like what the lifespan is.
Like if it breaks down out in the field,
I don't think you're getting out your pool bag
to wrench on that bad boy.
I wonder if you could reprogram it
to shoot lasers at your enemies.
Yeah, right?
I turned it upside down.
You got a bad bug night.
Mosquito's bugging you a little bit.
You just strap that on the back of your four-wheeler
and do a couple loops around the yard.
Got some burglars in your neighborhood.
just drones shoot down the drones yeah but uh that's wild though anyway this is the
this is apparently the technology arrake junior was referencing uh when he was speaking
about things they are doing to get us off herbicides and pesticides but um be tracking this story for sure
Yeah.
I'm sure Maha movement will be as well because, yeah, I don't know.
But there is this.
Bayer is threatening to pull Roundup from the U.S. market completely if Congress doesn't give them total immunity over glyphosate.
So when I guess you don't really know when the Supreme Court is going to rule on things because it's kind of up to them.
Yeah, I mean, I would imagine that it's probably.
in the Supreme Court's best interest to drag their feet on this?
Probably just kick the can down the road because if they,
you know, no matter which way they rule,
people are going to be pissed off at them.
So, yeah.
I think it'd be better to kick the can down the road
because then you could just let the lawsuits either bleed bare dry
or finalize, get settled.
Yeah, well, and I guess from what I understand,
There are several other options for producers of glyphosate in the United States.
They're just not as advanced as bear.
So it would give them time to establish.
I mean, I would rather not see any of that crap put on our food.
But I also don't want us to starve or pay 10x for corn chips.
No doubt.
So we'll keep an eye on this one.
We'll see what the Supreme Court rules and when.
And then another criticism here, this one for Bata Chiarra at the CDC.
Would you call this Nate a hostage video?
Yeah, I did.
It looked like there was definitely a hostage video.
Totally looks like a hostage video.
Yeah.
Let's see what he says.
Ah, dang.
No audio.
no audio
what is you do in stream yard
well we have captions on this one so we can just read the captions
I'll play the video but
I don't think I need to play the whole two minutes
yeah it's I think it's towards the mid
middle where he starts discussing vaccines
he says oh
the CDC is responding to measles
our mission is straightforward
word. Protect the American people from infectious diseases. Blah, blah, blah, blah. Build this on trust and
openness and honesty. We need to contain the measles. We're working closely with health issues throughout
the country with regular coordination meetings and we stand ready to provide CDC technical staff.
Laboratory support vaccines and therapeutics upon a request. State partners are also engaging
faith-based leaders to support education and vaccination outreach with their communities.
there is no care for measles
which is why prevention is so critical
the MMR vaccine remains the most reliable
and effective way to prevent it
two doses
are 97% effective
yeah just
and then at the end of the video
he repeats that again
does he
yeah yeah
yeah
vaccination remains the most effective way to protect yourself
from those around you blah blah blah blah
total hostage video
Meanwhile, we all know that, you know, back in the day,
Measles was like, yay, I get a break from school.
Take some vitamin A, chill out, play some Nintendo.
Who makes the MMR shop, Merk?
Probably has some mercenary.
You're ready to, ready to murk him.
Wasn't Barakaria, like, wasn't he censored for, on social media for his,
staunch opposition to the COVID vaccines?
I think so.
I believe that was one of the
one of the things that
launched him into
some fame.
At the end of the day, you can just choose not to get it.
Yeah. Yeah, I'm just saying this doesn't do
a whole lot for my, you know, like, go CDC.
But at the end of the day, we don't exactly
want people to trust the government, even if the people in government are better than they were.
Yeah.
Kind of the whole idea is just to collapse the whole freaking system.
So I'm not totally opposed to them making asses of themselves to make everybody distrust the system.
So, okay.
I won't be too mad, but I will act mad.
So people distrust the whole system and we can burn it down.
I will act mad.
So anyway.
When's your next fight club meeting, by the way?
Just curious.
I don't know.
I don't speak about that.
At the end of the day, you know, even with RFK or Marty Baccarri, them in charge, you know,
it's we still should take our matters, take our health into our own hands.
Yeah, a thousand percent.
That's the lesson here.
that is the lesson here and then last thing to mention is to grab your discount
gart tickets virtual gart tickets are on discount for the next few days i think that ends next week
i'm getting that correct jessica if you're in the chat let me know but i think next week
they go up to full price but right now you can get discounted virtual tickets for nashville gart
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You'll get a bunch of fun behind the scenes content and live streams
and you can watch it from the safety of your couch.
April 9th to 12th, Nashville Gart.
Check it out at badlandsmedia.tv.
Cool, cool.
Let me bring up the chat and then we'll say hi to you guys
for the last few minutes
before we close this one for today.
A lot of people in the chat letting us know about their measles testimonies.
They were fine, apparently.
Fortunately, I think I did get the MMR when I was a kid, so that probably explains a lot.
Same.
I got it as well.
Yeah.
All right, guys, any last questions, comments, concerns?
Let us know in the chat.
Otherwise, we will finish up.
Today, it's going through a lot of comments here.
Had one question earlier, actually.
I saw somebody asking about melatonin.
Let me see if I can find that.
What that is.
Whole chat ago, I'm not going to be able to find that.
Yeah, it was like towards the beginning, I think.
Yeah.
Oh, there you go.
Geochem.
What's up, man?
Future question.
What are my thoughts on melatonin batter good?
You got two doggy friends in their twilight ears.
They're wearing you down.
You just want to help them sleep.
Yeah, I mean, for human use, melatonin's good.
It's solid.
I would just do the lowest dose possible for human or animal because your brain can become depending on it.
So if you're using melatonin to sleep, it's best a cycle.
Maybe week or two on, week or two off, just to try to get your circadian rhythms back set again.
And I would do the least amount, the least dosage that works.
So I think they make some melatonin supplements that go up to 10 milligrams at pop.
I would just one or two milligrams.
And if you're using it for an animal, just kind of by weight.
So if they're bigger dogs, they might be able to handle one milligram.
Or you could find tablets.
You can cut into maybe half or a quarter, depending on the size.
but you know do your research on that one not necessarily advice here but uh i'm not against melatonin
just cycle with it be smart by how much you use and uh it does give some humans weird dreams i
will some people don't like melatonin because it gives them weird weird dreams or they wake up groggy
so yeah there's elthianine and elphine as well would probably have
help. Yeah. And then
doing these scenes for
animals, you know,
reference
chat GPT before it's illegal.
See
maybe what we'll help the
puppers. Yep, I'll be there
in Nashville with a booth
that is the plan.
Isn't
some CBD's good for
sleeping? Yeah,
CBN. CBN is
tremendous for rest, relaxation, and sleep.
And CBD can help as well.
Cool.
Works differently than melatonin or al-heanine as well.
So I have no idea.
I know that dogs utilize the cannabinoids in, like, hemp oil
differently than humans do.
So it hits them different.
So I have no idea if it's better or worse.
I tried using CBD on.
a cat before when I had to take the cat on a multi-hour road trip and it didn't do anything.
Nothing.
But that wasn't for like sleep or I mean, it's kind of foolish to expect CBD to work for a freaking road trip for a cat.
It's worth a shot, man.
It was worth a shot for sure, but it's like thrown them right into it and I don't even think I tested the CBD.
But anyway, for dogs, maybe.
Yeah, totally.
Chill them out, help them sleep.
Supplements are not a one-to-one trade-off with dogs.
Yeah, I mean, animals can use some, not all, but some human supplements,
although you need to, of course, figure out by weight and a lot more.
And you do have to be careful.
Some supplements animals should not use that humans can.
They can use bacon, though.
Can they?
I just felt like we didn't talk about bacon enough this episode.
I had to round it out.
They can eat sardines for sure.
One track mine, Jordan, one track.
There you go.
Pets are different, cannot take all human drugs.
Definitely not.
They can take some.
There's some herbs and supplements that animals can take,
but definitely not all of them.
And a couple of good, reputable vets here, Dr.
Karen Becker and Dr. Judy Morgan.
Cool. Some suggestions there.
I'm not familiar with good holistic vets,
but sounds like those might be some good suggestions.
Nate the Baconator, bro.
The Baconator.
We're getting you a shirt.
What's up, Rick?
Glad to have you, Rick.
Pickle Rick, Nate the Baconator and Sardine Saither.
Nate Bacon.
That's got a ring.
Nate Bacon.
bait naked
there you go
all right guys
that will finish it
it
finish us up here today
appreciate you all for tuning in
uh subscribe
do the like button
smash the like like the smash button
when flow blend
bacon man
I don't know
I don't know it's not on the road map
you probably should
I mean we're getting
yeah
I know we're getting requests for bacon
flavored couches, dude.
All right, Cyber,
I will let you know.
And not going to lie.
When I was younger, I really liked the,
what is it like the beef jerky?
Oh, the chew?
Yeah, like the dip.
Yeah.
I tried to put with that.
What company makes it?
Jack Slinks or something?
Back off or, yeah, I don't know.
Yeah.
I remember that stuff, though.
Oh, I loved it.
It was so good.
But of course it sucked.
They put corn syrup and soil oil and garbage in it.
But man, like packing my lip with beef jerky.
Oh, yeah.
You just nibble a little bit here and there.
Yeah.
I love that.
Nate Bacon shirts for Gart.
Dude, that should be part of our intro for this show.
Well, AIU with like bacon arms or something.
And then I'll be sardine saither.
Oh my gosh
When you're doing a three-day bacon fast
I hadn't considered it
Well you probably should
Yeah
We'll put that one on the docket
For never
For never
Three days would be rough
Three days of only bacon
I'm pretty sure by the end of day one
I would be a little burnt out
You're uh yeah
Probably
All right guys
We're done. We'll see you next week. Appreciate all you.
See you guys. Take care. Have a good one.
Thank you so much for joining us and don't forget to hit the thumbs up on this video.
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