BigDeal - #40 Everything I Learned In Med School Was WRONG | Paul Saladino
Episode Date: December 11, 2024🚀 Main Street Over Wall Street is where the real deals get done. Join top investors, founders, and operators for three days of powerful connection, sharp strategy, and big opportunities — live in... Austin, Nov 2–4. https://contrarianthinking.biz/msows-bigdeal In this episode, host Codie Sanchez sits down with Dr. Paul Saladino, a prominent advocate of the carnivore diet, to explore the intricate relationship between nutrition, health, and modern lifestyle challenges. They dive deep into the controversial world of meat-based diets, discussing the potential benefits and criticisms surrounding this approach to eating. Codie and Paul's discussion encourages listeners to question their assumptions about food and to consider the potential of dietary interventions in addressing chronic health issues. Whether you're a health enthusiast, a skeptic of mainstream nutritional advice, or simply curious about alternative approaches to wellness, this episode promises to challenge your perceptions and spark new ideas about the food we eat and its impact on our bodies and the world around us. Riverside is BY FAR my favorite tool we use when recording the BigDeal podcast. So I got a deal for ya! Record your first video with Riverside - https://creators.riverside.fm/Codie - and use code CODIE for 15% off an individual plan. Want help scaling your business to $1M in monthly revenue? Click here to connect with my consulting team. MORE FROM BIGDEAL: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok OTHER THINGS WE DO: 🫂 Our community 📰 Free newsletter 🏦 Biz buying course 🏠 Resibrands 💰 CT Capital 🏙️ Main St Hold Co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, and welcome back to the Big Deal podcast. I'm Cody Sanchez, and this is for those of you who don't want to just be rich but free and are willing to do what it takes to get there.
This episode today is for you. If you have ever wondered, why am I fat? Or why is it harder to get fit?
Or what is going on in the industrial food complex? Or is American cheese, real cheese, spoiler, that one is a real doozy.
I have Dr. Paul Saladino on the podcast today. This man is basically my go-to list for what should I buy from the gross.
grocery store. He talks about all of the things that are happening in the world around us that
are creating toxicity. We talk about how to work around infertility in some ways. We talk about
what's going on with micropastics. So if you've ever felt like there's too much happening in
health, you can't actually figure it out. You want to sound really smart. You want to listen to a doctor,
break it down live. You want to hear about more studies than you can imagine for the decisions
you make on what you put on your skin and what you put inside of your body. This podcast is for you.
Spoiler, wait for the part about does he wear deodorant or not?
And did I sniff him or not?
Do you think today's processed foods are like cigarettes in the 1980s?
You mean the thing that we don't quite know is killing us but is actually killing us?
Yeah, absolutely.
I think RFK Jr. said it really well and this is timely that we are clearly being poisoned.
I mean anyone who looks at Westernized Americans from a zoomed out
perspective over the last 50 years can see that something has gone horribly wrong with us.
Obesity rates, diabetes, cancer, autoimmunities, everything is going the wrong direction.
And yet we are being, we are being counseled by our government to eat healthy.
And more people will respond to surveys saying they're eating healthy.
More people will respond to surveys saying they're exercising, less people are smoking,
but everything is going in the wrong direction.
We're fatter, sicker, less healthy, more depressed.
So what's going on here?
There's something happening.
Yeah, and what do you say to people who say, we're just eating more calories because food is better tasting and cheaper and more available?
So it's just calories. It's not the GMOs. It's not the processed foods at all. What do you think?
I think they're wrong. I think that if you look at data, we are not really eating more calories.
And if we're eating more calories, it's small. And it doesn't account for the increase in all of these chronic illnesses that are just really double.
over the span of 20 or 30 years. I mean, that's not just a hundred extra calories a day.
And then you have to look at it from a holistic perspective and ask, why are we eating more calories?
Food is not more available today than it was in the 1970s. You can still go to the grocery store.
There were no shortages in the 1970s.
Humans could eat the exact same amount of food. So some studies suggest that we're not eating more calories.
Some studies suggest that we're eating slightly more calories.
But if we are eating more calories, and I think in general a lot of people have the issue,
and it's with satiety.
And I think that that is another insidious problem with ultra-processed food
is that it makes us more hungry.
And that hunger cue is very, very hard for us to ignore,
if not impossible, nearly impossible.
You can be super disciplined and lose weight-eating Twinkies,
but eventually that hunger is just going to catch up with you.
You can lose weight with a caloric deficit of bagels or potatoes or any junk food.
It's something you can't lose weight-eating processed food.
It's just going to be much more difficult.
And when we look at studies, when they put humans in controlled environments, and there's now two studies on this.
Kevin Hall did a study, and there was recently a researcher in Japan that did kind of the same thing.
They can put humans in a feeding ward where they control all of their intakes, and they present people with very similar sets of meals.
One of them is ultra-processed food.
One of them is essentially unprocessed food.
They try and match the foods for presented calories, presented fat, protein, carbohydrates, presented salt, sugar, all of those things.
and people are allowed to eat as much as they want,
and the ultra-processed foods group invariably eat more.
They come back for seconds and thirds.
So there's probably something in these foods
that are also sabotaging satiety,
and that is kind of the beginning of the problem.
Interesting.
What if the counter-argument was
that they just taste better than the healthy foods,
and so we want more of that?
Could that be an argument or no?
Taste better is such a, that's a subjective thing, right?
A taste better is happening in your brain, right?
So taste better is not something that we can objectively measure.
Yeah, that's a good point.
Yeah, it gets confusing sometimes as a consumer.
Like, you know, I have a lot of people on the podcast and I am not a nutritionist,
I am not a doctor, I try to stay fit, but it's confusing because there seems to be a war
going on between multiple sides of the coin, you know, and I think the war is interesting in a few ways.
Like even, I was watching in a video where you said, canola oil,
Canola Oil is toxic sludge and got flagged as misinformation on Instagram.
Like, what is canola oil?
That was fascinating your video.
And like, why do you think that gets tagged as misinformation?
Right.
So it's kind of like who writes the history books?
Who determines what is truth?
In 2024, if I'm saying it on Instagram, meta determines what is truth.
If I'm saying it on X, community notes determines what is truth.
And that's a little bit better situation.
Thanks, Elon.
Not perfect, but a group of community members can have a more sort of democratic process than meta.
You know, Mark Zuckerberg and his CEO of Instagram get to say, well, we've decided that we're going to look at this one meta-analysis, which is a study of studies, on seed oils.
And this researcher, usually they reference a meta-analysis from a researcher at Tufts.
His name is Darius, Darius Mazafarian.
The same guy who gifted us with the Food Compass guidelines that told us that fruit loops and Cheerios were healthier than ground beef and eggs.
That's not great.
The same individual, clearly very omniscient when it comes to nutrition, very wise, nutritional researcher, wrote a meta-analysis looking at some of the randomized controlled trials with seed oils.
And he determined that, no, seed oils are not bad for human health.
So if I contradict him without actually getting to debate him or directly criticize his meta analysis, which is kind of cherry-picked, then meta can just say, nope, we're fact-checking you.
So there is no objective truth in 2024. It just depends on the platform in which you are saying something.
So they can say whatever they want, you know, and you see this now post-election, you see this now, people are just, it's a war of fact-checking, right?
And who fact-checks the fact-checkers? There's no one, I don't have the ability on meta to come back on the back-end and say,
actually, here's why I think you're wrong.
Here's why I actually think canola oil is problematic.
So in answer to your question, canola oil
is made from rapeseeds, which are not actually
a food for humans.
It's different, perhaps, if we're talking about corn oil,
because we eat corn, and we can talk about corn oil, right?
I'm not a fan of corn oil either.
And to get the equivalent of maybe five tablespoons of corn oil,
you'd have to eat 70 years of corn, which is a whole separate conversation.
But rape seeds have never been eaten by humans
and really cannot be eaten by humans.
If you just take rapeseed oil,
there is a large amount of this mono-unsaturated fat
called erucic acid in rapeseed oil.
And that is linked to cardiomyopathy heart issues
in animal studies, and so it's actually banned.
You cannot sell rapeseed oil.
You also can't sell mustard seed oil for similar reasons.
Researchers, I think in the 1980s or 1990s,
genetically modified rape seed oil to,
to a low arousic acid variant,
but still containing this fatty acid.
And that was what was called canola oil.
So canola is an acronym for Canadian oil low acid.
There is no such thing as canola, right?
This is the rapeseed or the canola producers association of Canada,
thinking, hey, we have fields and fields of canola oil.
We have fields and fields of this rape seed,
like let's do something with it.
This is often how seed oils got into our food supply.
They were used originally for other things,
Originally in the early 1900s, they were used as engine lubricants and on ships in the World War I and World War II because they stay slippery when they are wet.
They still maintain lubrication.
So they were industrial byproducts and now they've been used in our food supply.
So that's the first thing that kind of make us, should make us question like, is this something we want to eat?
So canola oil, not really a food for humans, contains small amounts of arousic acid.
But like all of the seed oils, and this is why I think we can really draw a swath across the seed oils, whether it's canola, corn,
sunflower, safflower, soybean, those are the big ones, sometimes peanut.
They're all refined, bleached, and deodorized.
So there's a great video on YouTube of how to make canola oil,
and you see these little seeds that are in this extruding press
and they're kind of like waxy substances getting pressed out.
Then you get this murky oil, which then has to be heated
and then refined and bleached and deodorized and extracted with hexane,
which can be contaminated with benzene.
So you get these neurotoxic components that are even used to make the oil,
then it has to be deodorized again.
times heated to very high temperatures as high as 500 degrees Fahrenheit.
So you have a polyontactrated oil, which is a fragile oil, which can become rancid, quote, quickly,
being heated to 500 degrees Fahrenheit.
The boiling temperature of water is 212, right?
So that's like basically a very, very, very, very hot stove.
It's an insanely high temperature for an oil like that, and you quickly break the oil.
You degrade the oil very quickly.
So then you take all of that and you package it into a plastic bottle, which leeches,
cadmium lead and antimony into the oil and it sits on the shelf of a grocery
store getting exposed to artificial light four months at a time and oxidizing
further and we are told by the American Heart Association that that is a heart
healthy option because it lowers LDL. That is just such a mind-fuck. And it's
completely myopic because the only metric that we're using to say that it's healthy
is LDL lowering which is a whole other ball of whack.
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My father has high blood pressure, like so many Americans do. He's older. And what's interesting is I've heard you talk about this, that
what does he do? He goes to the doctor, the doctor gives him a series of pills for him to take.
There's some talk of nutrition, marginal at best. And after you,
years of being at the same doctor, nutrition is really not mentioned whatsoever.
It's simply management of symptoms with these pills for this long.
And I remember once we were going on a trip and he had forgotten his blood pressure medicine.
And he's not particularly overweight or anything like that.
He's quite normal.
And he was worried about that.
And I thought, oh my God, we have a healthy man sort of tied to a drug for something that I think you could fix with exercise and nutrition, theoretically.
What's going on there? And if you have high blood pressure, should you just take the pills?
Is that the right answer alone?
So there's two different categories of high blood pressure, right?
There's like primary hypertension and secondary hypertension.
The majority of people who go to their doctor and get diagnosed with high blood pressure have primary hypertension,
which is just related to diet and lifestyle. And most people, even in the mainstream medical community, would agree with that.
Secondary hypertension is very rare.
It can be caused by tumors that secrete things that change the blood volume.
We're not talking about secondary hypertension.
That's a diagnosable medical condition that requires a more sophisticated workup.
Primary hypertension is the majority of what we see.
My father had hypertension, right?
And it is essentially an indication of vascular dysregulation.
So the inside of our blood vessels, these are veins on my arm, but inside our arteries.
When you're measuring blood pressure, you're really looking at the arterial pressure, not the venous pressure.
So they put a stethoscope on your arm and they measure the arterial pressure in an artery that runs here in my arm.
And so that is caused by dysregulation of the cells that line those arteries and don't allow them to expand and contract in a healthy manner.
This is arterial dysfunction.
Vascular dysfunction is what causes high blood pressure.
Most of the time related to systemic inflammation in the body and linked to insulin resistance, also known as metabolic dysfunction.
Insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction, almost entirely fixable.
with primarily diet, intentional dietary choices, and a moderate amount of exercise.
You don't have to be a marathon runner.
And in fact, you probably don't want to be a marathon runner because you can go too far with exercise.
So yes, this is a condition that is completely fixable, but as physicians, we are not taught
to talk to patients that way.
We are given this sort of subtle propaganda in medical school that your patients won't
make dietary change.
It's too hard for them.
Don't even bother asking.
or if you do, spend 30 seconds and say, hey, do you want to, why don't you come back the next visit?
Like, increase the quality of your diet.
Like, eat some healthier foods.
I'll see you in a month if it gets better.
That's all I'm going to say to them.
Eat healthier foods.
What is a patient going to do with that?
You know, go for a walk around your neighborhood, eat healthier foods.
I'll see in a month.
Not surprisingly, in a month, their blood pressure is the same or worse, right?
So we're never given any reasonable tools in medical school.
And before I went to medical school,
I worked as a physician assistant in cardiology, so I've dealt with a lot of people with high blood pressure
even before my residency after medical school, and it's always the same story, right?
It's just, it's much easier to say, here's an ACE inhibitor, here's a calcium channel blocker,
here's a beta blocker, here's a medication, I know that's going to lower your blood pressure,
and my really only job as a physician is to fix the thing that I am charged with, which is your blood pressure.
I don't have any responsibility for really downstream side effects that might occur for,
Unless if they're dealing with your endocrine system or that, then I'm going to refer you to someone else and say, well, I did the right thing, right thing, right, quote unquote.
I did what my governing bodies in medicine have told me to do. I checked the box. He got a side effect. That's not my problem.
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It should want to expect side effects from having high blood pressure, only taking pills.
It seems like maybe that might be a reason why you're having other illnesses and disease pop up, but actually we don't talk about that.
It's like, well, if I manage the symptom, then like whatever else happens.
is totally unrelated to said issue.
No, it's physiologic whack mole, right?
You can't, like, if you have an imbalance in the human body,
and this sounds woo, but it's really not.
Like, if you have an imbalance in the human body,
you simply cannot whack this mole
without three more popping up.
It's very difficult to give someone a medication
for any condition and not have something else
happen because of it.
You give someone a proton pump inhibitor
because they have gastroesophageal reflux, right?
Well, then you have an increased rate of pneumonia.
because of side effects.
Then you have malabsorption of multiple nutrients,
including B12 and other things that are dependent
on the acidity of your stomach.
So you have all of these downstream side effects
because the problem really wasn't
that they had a deficiency of a proton pump inhibitor.
This isn't a pharmaceutical medication deficiency.
This is an imbalance.
It's a signal to us as physicians or as patients, quote unquote,
that there's an imbalance in your body.
In a case of gastrosophageal reflux,
it usually has to do with dysbiosis in the gut
gut at some level, whether it's, you know, the small intestine or some part of this, that's
leading to a reflux and dysfunction of the esophageal sphincter. If you can get at the root of that
and correct that with dietary change, lifestyle change, you probably don't need a proton pump
inhibitor. And this is, it's just the story being played out over and over and over in Western
medicine. It's so sad and it really forsakes so many people. Yeah, it's really sad.
You know, and I think what's interesting about what you do is that, you know, you'll look at these
randomized controlled studies and say
let me show you not only why this isn't true but how to look at studies
and so like you had one where you were looking at seed oil seed oils in humans
maybe it was the same guy but you were saying here's all the reasons why
this study that everything is referencing turtles all the way down to this study
is actually problematic and I think that would be interesting for people to hear like
how do you determine no no my doctor says this study
and why is it that doctors don't take the next step which is go
So, hey, this study isn't actually well executed.
It's a lot of time, you know?
As physicians, we can talk about that with seed oils because that's a really important point.
But as physicians, most of us work in an insurance model, which doesn't pay us for outcomes.
It pays us for time.
And so if we are not seeing four to five to six patients an hour, it's very difficult to even pay your malpractice insurance or make a profit and support.
You know, like, so there's a real financial constraint on physicians very quickly.
You know that in medical school, the specialties that pay more are more prestigious and they're more competitive.
If you want to be a dermatologist, if you want to be an orthopedic surgeon, if you want to be a plastic surgeon, those are the people who do the best in medical school because they make the most money, right?
The people that make the least money in medicine, those are the least competitive specialties.
So medicine is completely based on a financial model and the motivations in medical school are,
to do as good as I can so I can make as much money.
And look, everyone that goes to medical school is super smart
and worked really hard to get there.
But there's even within medical score
that is a ranking of specialties.
And so I have tons and tons of respect for people
that work in internal medicine and family practice,
but those specialties don't pay a ton of money.
And they're doing really good work that people need to receive.
And it's very difficult for a doctor
to look at the methods,
and the history of any study that they're basing their decisions on,
it's so much easier as a physician to just say,
this is where I learned in medical school, this is what everyone else does,
I am protected from malpractice liability if I do this thing,
which is what are the guidelines, I'm going to do that thing.
So in the case of the seed oil study,
or multiple of the randomized controlled trials looking at seed oils,
these are nutrition studies, essentially,
and there are some single-blind, some double-blind,
randomized controlled trials done with seed oils.
most of them were done, in fact, all of them were done really between the late 1950s and the early 1970s.
So they're all 50 to 70 years old.
We haven't had a randomized controlled trial with seed oils in 50 to 70 years.
No one has done these studies.
So we are looking at methods, we are looking at nutritional knowledge that is 50 to 70 years old when these studies were designed.
Why?
Because there's no funding.
What pharmaceutical company stands to benefit?
from doing a trial comparing saturated fats and soybean oil today. None.
Wow.
So much of what we see in the medical literature, so much of what we're taught in medical school,
is pharma-funded research.
That's all that's done today.
That's the majority, right?
It's not all, but it's the vast majority.
And there's a zeitgeist.
There is an accepted sort of network saying,
you can't even ask this question now with what your grant,
you know, your proposal will just be laughed at.
Everyone knows, Cody, quote unquote, that saturated fat is bad for humans.
You can't even propose a study that's using saturated fat in one of the arms of the study today without getting a lot of pushback.
Maybe you could get it through an IRB, but there's become so much groupthink.
And I think that's going to change with this administration and maybe overhaul of the level of the NIH.
But there are certainly questions that have been omerta, that have been unable to be asked in the last 15 to 20 years of research.
It's very hard to do any research today that questions.
the lipid hypothesis, which is again something we can talk about regarding LDL, cholesterol,
and direct connections of heart disease. That idea is so entrenched that if you propose a study
to question that, it's going to be pretty hard to get this approved. So if you wanted to do a
randomized controlled trial with seed oils in humans, that's not observational, you're looking at
five to seven years with three to five hundred patients maybe to start, a thousand would be better,
you're looking at $20 to $50 million to fund that study. Who's going to put that bill?
Like, nobody.
Like the butter association isn't, and if the butter, there's no butter association, right?
But like, if the National Tallow Association funds it, there's going to be so many cries, it's corrupt, right?
So, you know, agriculture can't fund it.
A seed oil company wouldn't, why would they fund it, right?
Why would Kraft or Procter & Gamble or Bungee, which is a company that makes seed oils,
why would they fund that study?
If it could potentially make seed oils with that.
And a study like that, if it were done, that would,
erode the foundation of so many of the foods that we are given in the grocery store so profoundly
that it would probably cause a collapse of our food system for a short amount of time. If RFK Jr.
is able to actually get meaningful legislation or meaningful scientific decision-making done on seed
oils, think about how many foods in the grocery store are going to have to be labeled differently.
That is a multi-billion dollar, potentially hundreds of billions of dollars are on the line here.
There's a lot on the line with this with seed oils. So there's a lot to be protected there in terms of
the conceptualization by the public that
Doritos, as long as I don't eat too many,
maybe it's not the biggest problem.
When the flip side of that coin is,
look, we live in a free society.
You can do what you want.
You're sovereign, but that's freaking poison.
And if you, like eating Doritos,
you need to understand that's poisonous for you.
We're allowed to do things that are poisonous for us.
We're allowed to drink alcohol.
You know, we're allowed to do a lot of things that are poisonous,
to take risks, to smoke cigarettes.
but hopefully we can get some real honest conversation
and maybe even some studies that need to be done
to help people understand that like that is poison.
Do what you want, but don't give it to your kids
thinking that it's okay.
So it's a really tricky, it's like a Gordian knot.
It's really difficult to untie all of this.
Yeah.
Well, and what's crazy I think is like, for instance,
and we'll blur this out because this is a buddy's company
and we like the buddy.
But I had no idea until I saw another video that you did
about aluminum cans.
I was like, I'm doing so good.
I don't drink plastic.
Of course I don't because that would be bad.
And people say microplastics are not good.
So I have my nice little aluminum can.
But talk to me about what is inside here,
because it turns out maybe this isn't such a good idea.
It's not ideal, right?
So you're still drinking out of a plastic bottle,
drinking out of an aluminum can.
There's really clear videos that have been done
where they take acid, a sulfuric acid,
and you can dissolve the aluminum.
And what you end up with is a plastic bag.
like a condom. Yeah, you can kind of twist the plastic inside of it. You can twist the plastic
or you can completely dissolve it. There's a plastic bag in your aluminum can invariably. You
cannot put any liquid in an aluminum can like that because the aluminum will leach into the fluid.
And we know that you probably shouldn't be drinking aluminum. You know, you shouldn't be
wrapping your food in aluminum foil for the same reason. We don't want the aluminum touching food.
There's potentially problems with excess aluminum in our diet. So what do we do, right? Everything has to be in
glass, it's not really tenable in terms of weight and economies of scale, but I just think it's
important for people to understand that knowledge is power, know better, do better, and for those
people that are suffering, which is really, this is the ethos of all of the content that I make now,
and it's been an evolution, it's like, look, if you're thriving, don't change anything.
But if you're not, I want people to know that there are a lot of these inputs that they're doing
in their life that could be potentially, that could be potentially contributing in a cumulative
manner. I did a video recently about these printer receipts at grocery stores. People were mad.
People got super triggered, but look, there's solid evidence that touching these receipts can lead to absorption of endocrineosupting chemicals through your skin.
So, like, don't hate me.
Like, this is thermal paper.
This is a big deal.
I mean, Shannon Swan's been on Huberman's podcast talking about this.
This is not pseudoscience.
Now, is one receipt going to kill you?
No.
And I said that in the video.
But people just get so triggered because they can't wrap their head around the number of things that are toxic in our environment.
And I get it.
We live in a pretty scary place.
And so it's not about being perfect.
It's just about doing better.
And what I'm about is kind of hope for people.
I've met so many people over the years in medical school, in my training, working as a PA, working as a physician, who end up at a place of despair because they're sick.
And no doctor they see gives them any idea that there's a way out.
All you can do is take this medication, which we know has side effects.
So that's incredible to me.
If you don't have a way out, what are you supposed to do?
You might as well just, you're going to live the rest of your life with a lower quality of life than you could possibly have.
That's wild.
That's horrible.
But I want people to know that there are so many ways out that they may not have heard about.
I just want to put it out.
There are tools for people when you're ready.
And we're doing great.
Drink out of cans.
Who cares?
Touch your receipts.
Okay, fine.
But if you have hormonal dysfunction, infertility, low libido, obesity, depression, like some of these inputs, they matter in a cumulative way.
being intentional with little steps can make a big difference over time.
So true. I mean, for instance, I have a lot of girlfriends.
Now I'm a little bit older who are struggling with infertility.
And, you know, it always bothered me that the story about reproductive rights was
always one-sided. It was like reproductive rights are, you know, abortion rights.
And I think you should believe whatever you want to believe about that.
But I want the other side of the coin too.
Reproductive rights are also, why is it harder for women to get pregnant seemingly?
And why is nobody talking about that?
So maybe along that same vein, I hear Paul Saladino will not date a woman who wears lotion,
perfume, or Lulu Lemon. Is this true?
It's pretty true.
It's pretty true.
Or if she's amazing, I'm going to try and convince her not to do those things.
Okay, so let's talk about it.
So what's the deal with lotion, perfume, Lulu Lemon, and women?
So let's do lotion and perfume first.
These are cosmetics, but all cosmetics, anything that we're putting on our skin,
whether we're a man or a woman, is being absorbed.
Skin is and it's not a lipid, you know, impermeable barrier.
It's not a water impermeable barrier.
A lot of things you put on your skin can be absorbed.
We know this and this is the problem.
We are porous, right?
We have pores.
This is how we sweat and pheromones come out and we regulate fluids in our body.
We are full of holes.
We just can't see that.
So anything you put on your skin is going into your body
and being absorbed into the cells at your dermis and epidermis.
So there have been interesting stuff.
interesting studies looking at women, specifically in the study, and cosmetics and personal care
products, whether it's deodorant or lotions, and women who make a change and remove the personal
care products that have parabins and phalates and other endocrine disruptors.
A lot of the stuff around forever chemicals is not noted on labels, so it's subtle.
But women who make an intentional change to remove those things, we see noticeable, marked,
sadistically significant decreases in levels of these compounds in their body within a few days.
Wow.
It's, and we're talking like, the levels can go down by 50%.
So there's a massive input and we, these are not things that occur naturally in our
bodies, right?
These are BPS, BPA, PPA, Parabins, phalates, which have many iterations and incarnations.
And why are those bad?
Why don't we want them at us?
Because they disrupt, they look like our hormones, right?
They're, they're imposters.
And so they mimic, a lot of them mimic estrogen specifically, so they can mimic estrogen
at the receptor and block its action.
They can stimulate excess estrogen action.
They're disrupting our hormones.
We are delicate, right?
And we're resilient, but we're also delicate, right?
So, like, humans have never been in contact with these chemicals.
There are things in, quote, nature, that affect us in certain ways,
but these are just new things for us.
Maybe in another million years, I don't know if homo sapiens will last that long,
or 300,000 years, our bodies will adapt to these compounds,
but they're not very adaptive now.
These compounds have only been in our sphere of existence for the last 50, 30, 20, 10, 5 years.
That's way too quickly for our bodies to adjust.
Who knows if we ever will?
So now they're just this new piece of information that our bodies are unaware of.
And it really can cause problems for humans in terms of, like you said, fertility, all sorts of hormonal things in women and men.
Yeah.
You know what's interesting, too, is have you seen the new trend with young girls where they,
young girls are starting to put on cosmetics and skinne care products younger than ever.
So if you look at actually the growth in the cosmetic industry in female cosmetic products,
the number one growth is sub-16 years old. So we are having facial, like we are having
salicylic acid and eye cream for 12 and 11-year-old girls who do not need it, by the way,
whatsoever, of course.
And so fast, with such high margins, that they also are creating these little, they're
like refrigerators for little girls.
And I swear to God, you can look it up and see if there's a video here for you, but there's
these little refrigerators that they put on top of the girls' countertops that you put all
of your face products in.
And this is a new trend for them.
And they're starting to be these side effects for young women where, not young women, young
girls, where salicylic acid on like a face that doesn't have acne, you're not really getting acne
when you're 8, 9, 10, 11.
And so it's interesting to see,
I can't even imagine what's going to happen
in the next generation,
because I didn't start all that
until I was in my 20s, probably.
Wow.
You know?
It's scary.
Yeah, I think so, too.
And you look at young girls
hitting puberty earlier and earlier,
you know, there are all of these compounds
in our environment that are affecting us negative.
But you also asked about Lulu Lemon.
Yeah.
It's the same thing.
I mean, you know,
I just saw an article a couple of weeks ago
about whether it's a sports bra or
leggings when you sweat in these you can it increases the absorption of chemicals in these
pieces of clothing significantly if you're wearing leggings and they're dry it doesn't look like we absorb
much from it right women don't absorb much from the leggings but women most of the time this is
athma leisure they're like going to the gym after some you know you're yeah or me in the sauna right
you're in the sauna or you're running so a lot of times women especially men don't wear as many of these like
tight products on our bodies we can so
sometimes men in Jiu-Jitsu wear these rash guards, right, which are kind of the same thing as like a
sports bra in some ways, right?
It's a polyester piece of clothing that is to adhere to our body and we get super sweaty in it.
So men are not immune from this, but generally we're thinking of women wearing leggings and
sports bras sweating in them.
There is documented research evidence that that increases the absorption of endocrine
or disrupting chemicals.
Again, BPS, BPA, BPA, which is a whole bispinol series, parabins and phylaids, into the body.
And then what does it do?
We're just now beginning to understand this.
Wow.
Yeah, plus, have you seen women's leggings lately?
They are everywhere.
They are very tight.
There's collective, Tanner's going to laugh.
There's these new leggings that you just see, I'm like, I'm a chick and I'm looking.
I'm sorry.
They are up in everything.
So what do you do?
You throw your expensive leggings away?
You buy only cotton ones?
What's the answer here?
I mean, again, it's just like knowledge is power.
No better, do better.
Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
If you're thriving, maybe that's not the biggest input.
Maybe that's not the biggest lever to pull.
If I'm in that situation, I'm thinking, okay, somebody needs to start developing leggings and sports bras in better fabrics.
This is a business opportunity for a whole growing segment of men and women.
If it's men, if it's rash guards, right?
I mean, for me, like, I'm a surfer.
There are zero companies that make board shorts out of anything but polyester.
And believe me, I've tried to surf in cotton shorts.
It doesn't work very well.
It's horrible, right?
Yeah.
There was a company, Kelly Slater's company,
used to make wool board shorts and they discontinued them.
So hopefully, by education, there can be an increased awareness
and demand for these products in the market,
and it's a new space.
I've seen women starting to wear leggings that are cotton,
or look, if it's 5% spandex, but mostly cotton,
that's way better than 100% polyester.
Way better.
Also, underwear's for women.
You know, what is your underwear made out of?
I did the whole organic cotton switch.
It's probably important.
Like, these tissues that are covered by sports bras and underwear are very absorbative.
They're mucosal tissues.
So it's a big deal.
Okay, really important comment.
The thing is, I haven't met that many super hippie women that age super well.
You know, it's like there's a lot of wrinkles.
Oh, maybe that's why.
It's because they're all vegetarians.
You know, my husband's really funny.
He'll be like, you don't need Botox.
I'm like, you never seem without it.
Like, you have no idea.
You don't know what I look like if I never get Botox because I've had it before.
Don't tell me it's bad for me. I don't even want to know.
We can talk about it. It's a separate conversation.
Okay, okay, okay, fine.
But, like, what do you think about this, you know, aesthetic we have today, at least for women?
It looks a certain way, and it's really hard to get products that are healthy on your face.
So, again, this is just my perspective as a man.
You're not doing Botox.
I don't do Botox. I've never done Botox.
I've never really done anything cosmetic for my face, and people will be like, yeah, that's because your face, that's why you look old.
You look old.
Great.
Internet's rude.
Thank you. Whatever. People will use that as an opportunity, I'm sure to hate, but like I don't want to put chemicals on my face. I refuse to do it.
And in terms of the Botox, I'll just say this. Like, as a man, I have trouble dating women whose foreheads don't move.
Look at this. Because I'm perplexed. I'm upset. I can't even, I can't lift an eyebrow. Is it working?
I mean, you want to see it. You want to see the wrinkles. There are, there are 200 plus. People can fact up here on this. Maybe I'm off a little bit.
There are many, many muscles in the human face.
And I think that we've evolved this very delicate communication between men and women,
but also between women and their children and men and their children,
whereby our expressions, like this is so much communication in the way that I move my face beyond an intonation of my words.
That's true.
So I can be on a date with a woman and think like, I, there's nothing coming back at me, right?
Like, I have no idea what's going on here.
How are we going to form a partnership?
And I actually have concerns, and there's some, there is a hypothesis that women with too much Botox could potentially impair pair bonding with their children.
Because the infant is not seeing the woman's face move.
Remember during COVID when everyone was wearing the masks and so many kids were sort of delayed in terms of their social skills?
Botox is kind of the same thing, but with the top half of the face.
Or, you know, with the forehead and around the eyes.
Yeah, I don't do the eyes.
Now they have these new silicon strips.
This is really, I'm sure, important to you, that you could put on here instead.
That's supposed to help with the lines.
But, yeah, you can be pretty vain watching yourself on TV all the time as a woman.
Also, I think, you know, we did a series that, like, opened up my eyes.
I mean, if you think about my generation, I'm 38.
And we went through, let's see, what do we go through?
We went through heroin chic, remember that, like Kate Moss, so like as skinny as humanly possible.
Oh, I didn't know what it's called. Okay.
Now you do.
Add that to your repertoire.
You tell me about crazy, like, multi-syllible words in medicine.
I'll teach you about heroin sheikh.
Okay, heroin chic.
Let's go.
Yeah, okay.
So we got heroin chic back in the day.
That was where we were told be as skinny as humanly possible.
That's sexy, right?
And then we went from that to actually expanded bodies.
So like the big Kim Kardashian butts, the Pover Fittlish, the silicon chest.
Then we've most recently gone to releasing all of those.
So now we want to release the fillers.
We want to have a more natural look.
And so in my lifespan, which is like 20 years of being cognizant of these things,
We've had three materially different body types as a woman.
And so imagine that.
These young women these days are thinking that they actually have to change their body composition in order to fit a beauty norm.
How scary?
It's so hard.
I have a younger sister, so I'm a little bit aware of this because I always felt for her having to go through these beauty norms.
And I think that she's navigated it very well and very gracefully.
But I think in many ways, I think that it's got to be very, very difficult as a woman to navigate that today,
whether it's dating or marriage, and especially a woman who is in the public eye, right?
I mean, I'm a man.
I'm a 47-year-old man, and I still get self-conscious about being in the public eye,
and I've just kind of released it and been like, look, this is what I'm about.
I'm trying to do the best I can and be authentic about the way I look as a 47-year-old man.
I take care of myself, but it's hard, right?
And I think it comes back even more on women because there are such different,
I would say impossible beauty standards.
Yeah, well, and also there's like financial reasons for why.
women care about it. Like we have quote-unquote pretty privilege and I should check my
validity of my studies, but there's quite a few studies that show that women who wear makeup
have a double digit, we won't get that specific about the numbers, but somewhere between
15 and 30% increase in pay just from wearing makeup versus not, all things else being relatively
equal. That's crazy. So you can kind of see why you might start paying more attention to the
way that you look and dress. Which makes a lot of sense.
It's like I'm reminded of Lance Armstrong and the Tour de France. If every
everyone is doing steroids, if everyone is doing EPO, erythro-o-retho-repoetin, if everyone is doing drugs in your sport, you have to do that to even be seen as competitive.
And so in the marketplace, it's a hard thing for women because if men on the other end, and I always wonder how much of these beauty standards are women doing it for other women versus women.
Probably the most.
Versus women doing it for men.
But if men are seeing this, our perspective on this is being warped, you know?
Or other women, you know, who want to date women.
Right.
So like whatever prospective partner you want, their perspective of what someone attractive is,
is being warped, again, by social media and these crazy norms that are happening.
AI is not helping that.
Yeah, I agree with that.
Truth.
You don't use deodorant, toothpaste, no lotion, no cologne, and you use.
use beef fat as sunscreen? Mostly truth, yeah. I use, so I don't use deodorant,
generally speaking, if I'm going somewhere and have to be super professional,
and I don't want to have any scent, I might use apple cider vinegar or rubbing alcohol,
but I don't use any traditional. You just rub it underneath? Yeah, you just spray it or rub it underneath.
Are you smelly? I don't think so, but I smell like a human. You smell like a human? Yeah, I mean like
he smells lovely. Could I potentially? Okay, ready? Let's go.
You actually smell totally normal.
No deodorant.
No deodorant.
And you're sweating.
I'm sweating.
Throughout the day.
Yeah, yeah.
Wow.
I think that a lot of...
Cody approved.
Okay, wow.
That was a tense moment there.
Go to God sideways.
And I don't use toothpaste.
Again, this is one of the things that I get a lot of flat for.
No toothpaste.
Toothpace is just silly.
Like, look, I don't...
First of all, I'm not a fan of fluoride.
And there's a lot of fluoride in toothpaste.
There's a lot of fluoride in drinking water, et cetera, et cetera.
So please filter your water with a filter that actually gets fluoride out.
You don't need fluoride in your toothpaste.
When I was a kid, I had these fluoride trays that they used to put in my mouth in the dentist.
I shudder to think about this.
Anyway, you don't need fluoride in your toothpaste.
And there are natural toothpastes that don't use fluoride,
but then they have things like SDS, sodium dodesal sulfate or diatomaceous earth.
Things that could even be, SDS could be disruptive to the gut flora.
Sometimes diatomaceous earth or other ingredients are too abrasive for the enamel of our teeth.
Isn't that like what murders little insects that you put in place?
and stuff.
Yeah, and maybe diet,
maybe diet, not even
isn't in toothpaste anymore,
but they use, sometimes they use things
that are abrasive.
People used to brush your teeth
with baking soda.
Yeah.
This is not a good idea, right?
It's way too abrasive for the enamel.
So our mouth is like a reflection
of our gut flora, right?
And if you have bad breath,
is not that you're not brushing your teeth with toothpaste,
it's that you have dysbiosis in your gut, right?
So it all comes back to quality of food.
I used to, I remember this time when I was in P.
school so my late 20s I was going out on a date with a woman and I had just I used to love
Listerine I was like this is the greatest stuff ever it just and I left the house and my dad was like he just
said what I can smell it's too much and I was like no it's good it's good I used to just crush the
mouthwash but now we know that mouthwash it kills all of the flora in your mouth which are
essential for the production of nitric oxide there are studies in people who are working out in the
gym that when they use to when they use mouthwash it actually
attenuates how much muscle they can gain. It affects the quality and the improvement in your
physiology when you do workouts by using mouthwash. So you don't want to carpet bomb your microbiome
in your mouth, in your gut. We need these bacteria, and we cannot sterilize ourselves. We cannot. Look,
if you go to the bathroom, wash your hands fine, but understand that there are endocrine disruptors,
potentially microbiota disrupting chemicals in
many of the soaps we use.
And so I don't see the point to using soap on my skin.
I'm not like, I'm not literally swimming in mud all day.
I'm okay, you know?
So no washing hands with soap after going to the bathroom?
Well, what's in the soap, right?
Yeah.
Is it fragrance?
Is it paraben?
Is it phylaid?
Is it triclosan?
Which is, I think, pretty problematic for the human gut,
microbiota.
So if you want to use, like, a natural soap after you go to the bathroom, okay,
but know what's in it, right?
So many of these fragrances and parabens and phalates are problematic.
So just water?
Water most of the time, yeah.
What about like tallow body soap?
Tallow body soap would be much better.
Better.
Much better, yeah.
And again, I think that as humans, we are worried about what other people will think.
We want it.
We don't want to smell a certain way.
We don't want our breath to be bad.
And so much of this comes back to the quality of just the way we live our lives, right?
What is the quality of the food you're eating?
That's when you get bad breath if you're not eating that way.
So that's the issue here. And I think that there are ways to make healthier toothpaste, but again, it's kind of based on this
fear around if I don't brush my teeth my breath will be bad and that's not really what happens like humans have a natural smell which
probably is attractive to people. I mean the other question is do you want to we probably cannot cover our pheromones
But you we probably don't want to cover our pheromones for our partners for potential partners
more than like at all like we want to
people to smell us as humans. That's a connection that we have with other people. And this is all
completely against a societal norm and so it's very controversial. But I want people I'm on a date with
to be able to smell my pheromones as a human. We can talk about birth control too. There's so many
I now smells your pheromones. What's that? So I said now I've smelled your pheromones.
You smell my pheromones. So we're on the same page. You kind of you can and you know like if
you're on a date with someone or you're dating someone you want to know
if there is genetic compatibility there.
And that is affected by our pheromones and these signals.
And though there hasn't been much research into human pheromones,
the evidence is so overwhelming that they're there,
just anecdotally or observationally.
We have, humans have pheromones.
All other mammals produce pheromones.
Why would humans not produce pheromones?
Have you seen the studies on birth control?
This is relevant.
So women who take birth control select different partners
when they're presented with sweaty t-shirts.
So they've actually, this, speaking of like,
Speaking of who funds these studies, like, look, maybe there's hope for seed oil studies because somebody funded a study where women on birth control were given sweaty t-shirts from men, and they knew sort of the immunologic signature of the men in the t-shirts.
And women on the birth control selected different mates in terms of compatibility with their genetics than women off birth control.
So what happens is that women on birth control select men who have more similar genetics.
Women off birth control select men with different genetics, mostly at this MHC antidex.
gin locus in the immune system.
In nature, mates are generally chosen based on genetic diversity.
You want someone with different genetics than you,
so you have the most robust offspring in terms of mate pairing, right?
And you can see in populations that have a lot of inbreeding
that people generally have more diseases
and become less robust quickly.
This happens in a lot of populations to get these rare diseases
that are amplified that shouldn't happen.
We want diversity in terms of human mating
and combinations of genetics.
And so women on birth control are kind of choosing the wrong partners.
So scary.
And it begs the question of women on birth control choosing a partner, getting off birth control,
getting pregnant, and then how many relationships does that end or cause problems with
when you're actually not that compatible with your partner now and you've had a child with them
or you're pregnant with them.
That's wild.
So in terms of choosing a partner, pretty important to know these things and sample these things.
There's another study that I'll mention which is really wild on the same topic.
They looked at strippers, and there are strippers on birth control and strippers off birth control.
And when the strippers off birth control are performing, they earn the most tips right around their ovulation.
They have a huge peak in the month when they ovulate.
And the rest of the month is like less tips, right?
Women on birth control earned the same amount of tips all month, and it was much lower.
So if there are any strippers listening to the podcast, and you want to make more money, you got to get off birth control.
control but clearly men know right and men are paying women more when they're
ovulating there's something going on here they're communicating and being on
birth control abolishes that so like making mate pairing more difficult birth
control pheromones smelling that's how we got on this topic from like soaps
and perfumes and all these things fascinating so let's say that you buy into it
and you're like okay I want to decrease a bunch of these endocrine disrupting
extra things that we do what do you do so that you can
still sort of managed through society.
Do you, is it tallos soap?
Is it shaving your armpits if you're a man?
Is it eating certain types of food?
How do we not be smelly and also be healthier?
So again, the option, it's pretty simple, right?
There's like rubbing alcohol, apple cider vinegar.
There are more natural deodorants now that have no parabens
and phyilates.
There are more natural toothpaste if you absolutely want the minty,
fresh feel in your mouth, which whatever, you do you,
you know, like there's options.
And I think that it's avoiding
the lesser options, avoiding the ones that are going to be problematic in a cumulative fashion,
because there's a lot of things that we're putting on our body and in our mouths that are not even
food. We haven't even talked about food yet, right? So yeah, there's so many better options today.
Again, there's probably a niche for food or for clothing companies to make better quality clothing,
but you don't have to be completely, you know, living in the jungle in Costa Rica like me.
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and I want to give back to the community.
Ooh, then it's the vacation of a lifetime.
I wonder if my out of office has a forever setting.
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Well, you also, you told me about, what is it, is it seed oil tracker or seed oil?
Seed oil scout.
Seed Oil Scout, which is cool, so you can go to restaurants and try to find restaurants that don't use seed oils.
Yes, the guy that did that app is coming to the film premiere tonight.
Oh, amazing.
Yep. So Hardin Soil is doing a premiere of a mini documentary that I did with them.
It's called Fed Eli, and it's about seed oils.
And that's tonight, and he's coming to that.
Oh, that's amazing. Yeah, it's awesome.
So when you go to restaurants, again, it's the overarching framework that I keep coming back to is that convenience is the enemy of health.
If we just do what everyone else does, we get what everyone else gets.
And most of the people in our sphere, unfortunately, are going to have health issues or chronic disease or infertility issues.
And if we want to live a life that is different than that, we have to be intentional and swim upstream.
And that means inconveniences, whether it's inconvenience of cooking your food ahead of time or the inconvenience of going to a restaurant and being that guy or that girl that asks the waiter, what is this cooked in?
Or looking at the menu beforehand and thinking, do they have something that is unlikely to be cooked in seed oils?
sauces, these things are almost invariably full of vegetable oils, seed oils.
Yeah, I mean, because of you actually, I listened to a podcast you did with somebody else,
and you laid out this framework, and then I thought, well, this will be fun.
I just want to go for a week and ask all of the different restaurants that I go to,
nice restaurants, expensive restaurants, what sort of oil they cook in, and it just said,
I say, I have some allergies, which is true.
I have allergies to some things.
It doesn't happen to be those, but then I feel like they might have to tell me.
And I can only find two restaurants here that only use olive oil.
Dai Duet.
Dai Duet and the well.
Really?
Yeah.
And we talked a little bit about seed oils earlier.
I think seed oils are problematic for humans when they're sitting on the shelf.
What happens to a seed oil when you heat it?
So now you're heating it again.
It becomes even more highly rancid and oxidized in the process when you heat it.
So one of the worst things is French fries, right?
That is a friar. You're boiling the oil for days at a time. I went to a KFC and an in and out recently to do content, and I asked them, how often do you change the friar oil, which is peanut and soybean oil? They say once a week.
Once a week, you have a seed oil to start with, which is highly ranted and oxidized, and then you're boiling it for 12 to 16 hours a day, and you're changing it once a week? Are you kidding me?
We're going to have to save the new administration, because did you see the new picture?
of them with RFK held hostage on the plane with McDonald's.
I was so disappointed.
They're the ultimate trolls.
It's like the best entertainment of all time.
Do you think they were trolling?
I think RFK probably was like, yeah, you know, what are we going to do?
But I think that they are brilliant at it.
But I, you know, I thought it was interesting because I looked at one of your other posts
about the number of ingredients that just McDonald's pickles have.
And then, do you remember that?
Yeah, it's like, what is it, like 19?
19 in French fries.
I think pickles had five to seven ingredients.
Yeah, I think it was 10.
Yeah.
Which is like, how is that even possible with the pickle?
You would think a pickle was just vinegar and salt and a pickle, right?
And a cucumber.
Yeah, or a, right.
Right.
Is that how they make those?
Right.
Cucumber.
So this is, I'm super excited for RFK Jr.,
super disappointed he was in the photo with the McDonald's,
but super excited for his overhaul.
of the FDA to the Food and Drug Administration.
Yeah.
This has to do with this generally recognized as self
or the grass designation on foods.
I think in the United States,
we don't even know how many chemicals are in our food supply now.
People estimate 5 to 10,000 chemicals that are part of this GRAS system.
So these are chemicals that are supposed to have been tested
for humans, safety, and are generally not,
because there is a process of grandfathering these chemicals
in over the last 20 to 30 years,
where companies can just say, oh yeah, we tested it,
we're just going to say it's safe.
And the FDA is allowing this to happen.
And one of the really interesting juxtapositions
that's been highlighted recently by a number
of awesome people in the health space
is the difference in European foods versus American foods.
In Europe, there are maybe four to 500 of these chemicals.
In the United States, there are five to 10,000.
We don't even know how many there are.
These have all come in in maybe the last 15 to 20 years.
So how many chemicals are in our food supply
that are problematic for us long term
that we don't even know about?
And these are not vitamins and minerals.
These are additives, sodium pyrophosphate, sodium benzodia preservatives, TBHQ.
Who knows?
Like, dimethyl polysiloxane, which is an ingredient in SilliPuddy, which is in McDonald's French fries.
Right, like these are dyes, red 40, yellow 6, yellow 5, blue 5, right?
We don't know what these do on humans long term.
There have been some studies, but it's wild to think about.
I think this is a huge part of the problem for humans is that when you eat an ultra-processed food,
whether it's flaming hot Cheetos or tockis
or this other Franken foods that I see at the grocery store.
There are tons of these things in there
and they're just, they're accepted as safe.
Kellogg's is saying that Red 40 is safe.
I mean, a bunch of people marched to Kellogg's headquarters
in Battle Creek, Michigan, and Kellogg's didn't even let them endure.
Which is crazy.
Kellogg said, no, the FDA says our food is safe.
When there are multiple studies in kids showing that these food dyes
can potentially be linked to.
either allergic conditions or behavioral problems.
And the same could be true of so many ingredients
that we're not even thinking about in your ultra-processed food of choice.
We don't know what these things do to us as humans.
Well, and also I think humans are incredible at self-rationalization.
So like those people that are in Kellogg's and in Pfizer,
you know, they don't actually, they're not evil demons
trying to take over the world most likely, but you know, could be.
But I think most people were great self-rationalizers.
And so if we explain that, hey, urban populations have food deserts,
hey, this is a core constituency for most people who are of sub-economic level, thus without us,
they can't actually eat, then we will explain our way into really bad practices as humans.
And I think that's what we have to watch out for.
I mean, have you heard Callie Means talk about this when he worked at Coca-Cola and these other,
you know, these other businesses that if there was any suggestion of regulation that they would use
a race card or a, you know, a financial hardship card, and they would not allow
the regulation, like it is a, you know, you, that's racist to say that these junk foods,
which are more affordable, are unhealthy. How are lower income populations going to be able to
afford their food? This is, there is so much sort of, you know, maneuvering on the back end
to protect these ultra-processed foods, which have huge margins and are easy to make and
continue to support their availability for us as Americans. And look, I, it's a Pandora's Box.
They're already created.
I think humans should have the ability to choose to eat those foods.
I just think we need honest, candid conversations about what these things can be doing to us as humans.
You know, a cigarette package has a warning label on it.
And in other parts of the world, the warning labels are much more graphic than they are in the United States.
I've seen cigarettes in New Zealand and other places when I've traveled.
And they have pictures of people with trache tubes who can't breathe or on ventilators.
They have pictures of people on dialysis or with, you know, plastic surgery need in their face
because they've had so much cancer in their nose and mouth from chewing tobacco.
In the United States, we have a little warning in words.
They don't have any pictures, but why don't we have warning labels on lays potato chips
and Doritos?
There's no question at this point that those foods are harming humans.
Yeah.
In many ways, in kind with sick.
Like every time I make any sort of comparison to cigarettes, the nutrition mob comes after me and says, Paul Saladino is claiming that Doritos are worse than cigarettes.
Like this is crazy, right?
It's like, get over yourself, guys.
I'm not saying that, but Doritos are not health food.
And cigarettes are an interesting juxtaposition.
Cigarettes have a warning label, why don't Doritos?
Yeah, I agree.
Well, and you know, the other thing that's interesting is like my father is a perfect example.
You know, it's hard for other generations to get on board with it.
You know, I'll talk to them often about like, hey, you know, let's, you know, I saw your post on shredded cheese, American cheese, you know, and trying to explain this to a different generation is very hard.
So I think the work's really important because we need to push back with some graphic illustrations, like that canola oil video of the sludge getting made, you're like, I don't know much, not healthy.
I can just tell.
Not a good idea.
That's it.
We have an intuition.
Right. Yeah, which is true. But as we kill our microbiome, the intuition becomes harder. So I think it's very, very true.
Yeah, and as, I mean, this is mirroring the conversation around beauty standards and humans, as the conversation gets diluted and confused, which I think is the main tactic that a lot of these manufacturers are trying to do, what is healthy and unhealthy becomes more blurred and unhealthy food becomes more normalized.
And we lose our intuition.
A blue potato chip, right, unless it's blue corn, which, you know, corn is a separate conversation, but like a blue potato chip with food dyes, this is probably, I think our.
grandparents will be able to look at that and think that's a frankin food you know we're only a few
generations removed from that level of intuition but at a very simple level when it comes to food
if your grandmother didn't recognize this food why are you eating it that's such a you just you just
don't eat it and if your grandmother's mother didn't like that a few generations back we were so much
better even without any conversations around more nuanced of like meat versus plants like just
what are the foods that were in our food supply a hundred years ago
they're not like what we eat today.
Let's talk really quick about what you eat because you have a unique method for eating
that includes like a more limited food supply.
Will you talk about the foods you will put in your body?
Yeah, yeah.
So I have a history of autoimmune illness.
I had pretty bad eczema and asthma as a kid.
Both of my parents are in the medical system.
My dad is a doctor, my mom is a nurse practitioner, so I got over-medicated as a kid.
They did the best they could.
They didn't know.
My dad wasn't trained either when he went to medical school at Georgetown University about foods.
So you think that you got those people?
because of overmedication when you're younger?
No, I just know that I had those,
for whatever reason, a genetic predisposition
in the setting, in the context of eating
standard American diet,
manifest those things, and I was over-medicated as a kid.
So I grew up with a lot of medications.
That didn't affect me positively either.
Giving your kid lots of antibiotics can affect their gut floor, right?
Giving your kid lots of stimulants to treat their asthma
because we used to give children theophilin,
called theater. I got this in my applesauce when I was a kid. It makes kids anxious and
hyperactive. So that doesn't help with elementary school performance or learning. So these things
negatively affected my life and it was this sort of domino effect. So at some point in my life,
generally when I was out of college, I began to think about my food and started thinking about
what I was doing with my food that was giving me this autoimmune condition, this series of
autoimmune conditions. Really, it's a triad. It's called an atopic condition, right? It's basically
the eczema, asthma, and allergies.
And it got to the point that it was bothersome to me.
And I had numerous flares in my eczema that were very severe,
requiring more systemic steroids, which are not great for anything.
And at times in medical school, the eczema would get infected,
and I would get in Patigo.
So like from being on the mats for jiu-jitsu,
so really impairing my quality of life spurred me to think more specifically
and intentionally about the foods that I was eating.
Now, that has been a personal journey that I've written about
and talked about on my social media.
It began originally with a vegan diet many years ago, a raw vegan diet, which didn't do much for my
autoimmune conditions, but I did lose 20 plus pounds of lean muscle to the point that I got super
super skinny.
I'm about 165 pounds now.
I was less than 145 at that time, and that was not intentional.
I was eating as much as I possibly could, but without animal protein, the muscle goes away.
In my case, and in many others as well.
So that was a raw vegan diet.
Then I sort of did paleo and a paleo diet of meat and vegetables and nuts and seeds didn't fix the eczema.
And I got to the point where I was thinking in my residency at the University of Washington after medical school, I have really bad eczema right now.
And I'm eating 85 to 90% organic foods that are colloquially considered to be healthy.
No processed food.
What is going on?
There's something in my diet that is still triggering my immune system.
That was when I did a carnivore diet, so strictly meat.
And that was interesting because it fixes the eczema.
Then fast forward a year and a half later,
I end up with some issues regarding electrolyte balance due to long-term keto ketogenic diet.
And so I started to add foods back in, which is the ultimate goal, I think, for a lot of people,
if they do elimination diets like a carnivore diet.
And first I added in honey, then I added in fruit, and I found a pretty interesting middle ground,
kind of carnivore 2.0, which I've called animal-based just as a framework for people in hopes that it's healthy.
I don't think everyone needs to eat this way, but I think it's a good starting point for people.
And so an animal-based diet is basically meat and fruit.
But a lot of foods we think of as fruit, a lot of foods we think of as vegetables, are actually fruit, things like avocado or cucumber or squash.
So the reason I make the distinction between fruit and vegetables is that one of the interesting things about thinking about food that we eat from a carnivore lens
was that there actually are defense chemicals in vegetables.
And some of these can be detoxified when we cook them or when we ferment them, but not all of them.
people with autoimmune conditions do feel better when they eliminate some or all vegetables.
Not everyone needs to, again, if you're thriving, don't change anything about your diet, but
I like this idea of putting tools into the world for people that they can access if and when
they need them. So for me, I know from adding foods back that a lot of the vegetables actually do
trigger my eczema, whether it's chocolate, tomatoes, which is technically a fruit, but it's a
nightshade fruit. That whole family seems to trigger my eczema, white potatoes,
don't really agree with me. So some foods that we think of as healthy are problematic.
Spinach is a good model to illustrate this because we think of that as like Popeye and it's this
super healthy food. It's green. But spinach has a lot of a compound called oxalates or oxalic
acid. Oxalates are a major component of the main kidney stone that humans get. 75 to 80%
of kidney stones are calcium oxalate kidney stones. And dietary oxalate can be a major contributor to
that, probably the biggest contributor to our oxalate levels in our body. Oxalates are
naturally produced in our body in small amounts from breakdown of certain amino acids, but
spinach and other foods, almonds, navy beans, rhubarb, turmeric powder are some of the big
ones. These are huge sources of oxalates. So if you have kidney stones or you have a
family history of kidney stones and you don't want kidney stones, it might be well to
avoid those things. We know that there are poisonous plants in the environment. I
mean, I grew up in the Northeast and at Christmas we would have these
Ponsetta plants. Have you seen those? Super toxic, right? So kids, like little kids should not
eat the red leaves of the Pons. So we, like, not all plants are benign for us. And there is
this spectrum of plant toxins. So that's an interesting distinction for me to think about.
Again, you can detoxify some of these plant-dicense chemicals with cooking or fermentation, but not
all of them. The problem is that you have so much good content and so many things that I want to
talk about. Because, you know, I think a lot of the people listen to this podcast, we're interested
in money. We're interested in building businesses. We're interested in, you know, maybe ethics and
morals and what it means to be an American. But man, you can't really have a strong bank account
without a strong body. Or if you do, what does it really matter? What's the point? Yeah, what's the
point. And so I think this is really interesting for anybody who wants to live a better life. I mean,
also just if you want to have better brain function and cognition, you've got to be healthy.
It's going to pay dividends, right? Having better mental clarity.
means everything in your life is amplified. Romantic relationships, family relationships, business, make more money.
You want to express your highest potential. You know, what's interesting is you have an
Oregon food supplement line. What's it called again?
Heart and soil supplements. Yeah, you have heart and soil supplements and I actually forgot to tell you this, but my husband Chris is a big user of them. Oh, cool. I brought you guys some. Oh, he's gonna love that. He gets all my gifts, actually
But he actually got me on them because I found that organ meat was really helpful for my face. I
Like just like collagen like I found for a while I was traveling a lot
I don't eat enough protein typically and I don't do fillers or anything like that and I kind of had these like bags under my eyes
And anyway one of my doctors like you know are you getting enough collagen and so I started taking some collagen protein kind of mess with my stomach I didn't really like it can and and then I started eating some organ meat
But this is TMI for the internet. I felt like I smelled different is that a thing? Do people eat a lot of Morgan meat smell different? Was it better? What did your husband?
say is it better or worse different oh like the smell that he's weirdo like you he's like he's like
I love the smell of you I'm like I don't know it's completely possible that you could smell
different now the context is is there a human that's kind of turned on to this or in the same
space and like you know they're into it yeah he's a creep he loves the workouts oh the internet's
like this we're going to have somebody weird YouTube comments but what I will say is that the
supplements that you have I don't have that okay yeah and so that was that was actually
really helpful for me but talk to me about
I think if the average person would hear, you know what I should do?
I should eat more heart and kidneys than organ meat.
That sounds gross.
Plus there was a really big, huge guy that did it, and there was a bunch of crazy stuff that came out about him.
I know.
And so why would I do anything crazy like that?
Why would I eat organ meats?
So if you look at meat, so you go to the grocery store, you see ground beef,
might eat chicken, you see fish, you see steaks.
That's all muscle meat.
Muscle meat is super nutritionally rich for humans, very bioavailable protein.
But it doesn't really have a full complement.
of vitamins and minerals and organ meats, especially liver, if you start with liver, are this beautiful,
are this beautiful sort of completion of a nutritional profile. If you look at what's in a steak
and what's in liver, there are very few vitamins and minerals that are not represented there.
Vitamin C, so raw liver and raw steak do actually have vitamin C, but people could argue rightly so
that you're going to get more vitamin C from orange juice. But other than vitamin C, there's not
much in looking at a whole suite of vitamins and minerals that are not present
in animal muscle and liver.
People would say fiber, that's a separate conversation.
So we get it.
But if you just look at muscle meat,
high in B12, high in zinc, high in iron,
not a lot of copper, not a lot of folate,
not a lot of biotin, liver has all that stuff.
Liver has copper which balances zinc.
So historically, humans have always eaten the organs.
We waste nothing, right?
Whether it's for calories or necessity
or some sort of historical intrinsic knowledge
that these organs are beneficial for fertility and vitality,
we waste nothing.
I went to Tanzania. I spent time with the Hadesa, some of the last hunter-gatherers left on the planet.
And when they had the liver of an animal, we hunted a few animals together, they treated it like gold.
Two hands placed gently on a rock, cut into small pieces distributed evenly among the tribe.
This is a treasure.
No, they cooked it.
Okay.
This is a treasure in their world.
All of the organ meats are a treasure.
The hunter who killed the animal gets to eat the brain.
And that's something that's queasy for us.
But there are pieces of the organs, there are parts of the animal, the organs that are a reward to hunters.
Historically, the heart was gifted to also the hunter who killed the animal, some sort of spiritual recompense.
So there's a lot of history of humans eating organs, and when you look at the science, it's fascinating around the nutrient profiles.
But one of the coolest things for me is that building this company hardened soil that does these organ capsules for people,
that I do think make it easier to get organs.
They're freeze-dried, which preserves as many of the nutrients,
as we can in a gelatin capsule,
is that the team over there's amazing,
and they did some really fascinating research
about nutritional benefits of organs
that go far beyond the vitamins and minerals.
And to do this, we had to go to libraries in Germany,
like Heidelberg Library, and find the original volumes.
Because the historical research has been done since late 1800s
to like the 1950s and 1960s, but most of it
has been in Europe.
And it's in German originally.
So because it's in German doesn't mean
that it's interesting, compelling research,
but it does mean that most of us in the United
in the Western English-speaking world have never seen it.
And so we actually had to find the original volumes
and translate the research from German to English.
And what you see is there's a lot of evidence
that organs do support the corresponding organ in humans,
which really breaks the mind of a traditionally trained doctor like myself.
So when you give, we can take an embryo, for instance,
and you put a little bit of liver on the embryo,
and that liver concentrates in the liver of the embryo.
You can do this with radioisotope labeling,
you can do it with like other types of labeling.
And you can see, like not visually, but in terms of measured research analysis, that the organ goes to the corresponding organ.
So what is going on there? It's fascinating.
And there are many, many stories now.
It's an anecdote, but this is a summed amount of lived human experience that I think is really important not to ignore.
Of humans eating organs or eating the desiccated organs like we make and having benefits in the corresponding organs.
We make a supplement at Hardin Soil called Her Package, which has,
uterus ovaries, fallopian tubes, kidney, and liver.
And so many women who have struggled with
for its infertility or PCOS have found benefits from taking this.
Again, this is just anecdote,
but it's a fascinating sort of question to be asking.
Are these organs...
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Beneficial beyond the nutrients in the organs.
The dose of the organs is three grams a day or less.
And there's interesting research that when you look at the organs,
it's a fraction of the organ called the microsomal fraction that contains things like microRNA.
And the hypothesis now that we come to looking at this old this historical research which is fascinating is that there are probably
Signals in the organs that are preserved in the freeze drying process but potentially denatured when we cook the organs
That can signal and actually affect the genetics or the gene transcription and translation in the corresponding organ
So there's actually information and signals that could support an organ beyond the amount of hormones because it's minuscule amounts of hormones in three grams of death
desiccated ovaries, right? We have another one for men which has testicle in it called whole package
Similar results for men in terms of male vitality
The amount of testosterone in whole package is minuscule. It's in there
We've tested it, but there's not a lot of androgens and this was an original criticism of the organs that you would have to eat
500 pounds of testicle to get a biologically active dose of testosterone
Maybe that's slightly off, but even a three gram dose appears to be beneficial and there was actually a guy
there's been some published research in, I think it's 1889 in The Lancet, which is a historically, obviously, very long-standing journal.
I believe it was Brown-Saccarred, who has a neurologic syndrome named after him.
He taught at Harvard, elite universities in Paris, who injected himself with a testicle extract and reported that he had increased vitality at 72 years old.
So this is fascinating, right?
Guys doing interesting things over 100 years ago, most of this research on organs has been lost, but were just
helping to revitalize it and get people back into thinking about like oh let me eat the
whole animal and if you can eat some of the animal some of these organs raw which
obviously has potential risks that people should be aware of or desiccated that is
freeze dried it's pretty interesting what's happening here I think it's going to be a
real sea change when people start to understand and maybe we get some new contemporary
research on this in a lab did you know for instance silencer versus raw milk which is
more illegal in war states I bet raw milk
Raw milk. Isn't that crazy?
Wow. Yeah, like in Texas, you have to have permit numbers on raw milk here locally in order to get it and you can't get all different types.
But there are more states where raw milk is illegal than silencers, which I thought was interesting.
Okay, next one.
Hom schooling with no curriculum versus fentanyl.
You're saying, I mean, I guess that's crazy.
Is that great?
Home schooling with no curriculum, that's important caveat versus fentanyl.
And it turns out that homeschooling is more illegal.
How fucking crazy?
easy as that.
They want your kids propagandized.
They want your kids hypnotized.
Oh my God, it's a real problem.
But I want to play some other games with you really quickly.
Rapid Fire, and this is perfect.
We can start with raw milk.
I just did a, is this a bad idea or not, you can tell me.
I just did a raw milk goat milk cleanse with like herbs for potential parasites.
I did it for like 14 days, eight days only raw milk.
First it was awful, I think, because of the herbs.
Like, it didn't feel very nice.
It's not enjoyable.
Also, I'm like marginally lactose intolerant.
Oh, yeah.
So it's really fun for everybody.
But afterwards, maybe, but it's placebo.
Maybe I feel better.
Was that a bad idea or no?
You know, I don't know anything about the.
Raw milk cleanses.
Yeah, raw milk cleanses.
I think raw milk is amazing.
You drink it?
I drink it all the time.
I drank it before I came over here.
I've got raw milk in my backpack right there.
Of course you do.
Yeah, in a stainless steel water bottle
with some glyphosate-free honey.
That tracks.
Because you've also been known to take what to an airport that's really weird.
Coconut's.
Yes.
Although I knew that trick.
You did?
Yeah, but the straw.
Yeah, you knew the straw trick.
Yeah, that's an important trick.
I take all kinds of weird things through airports.
They're always like looking at my stuff.
I'm like, yo, guys, it's just hamburgers in a glass container.
There's some squash there.
And I brought some persimmons on the airplane today.
I had some air dried steak, and that's about it.
And coconuts.
Okay, so we're into raw milk.
Shredded cheese.
Can I just talk about raw milk?
Yes, do it.
Let's do it.
So raw milk, any raw food has a risk of containment.
There are hundreds, if not thousands of people sickened every year by eating salad, right?
Sushi, all kinds of things that we are exposed to. Beef tartar.
Raw foods have a risk, and the quality of the raw milk determines everything about how good the raw milk is going to be on the back end.
If there's no difference between raw and pasteurized nutritionally, why drink raw?
Why not just do pasteurized?
But there's a lot of interesting science about raw milk positively affecting the immune systems of kids who drink it when they grow up on or off farms.
on or off farms. So there are specific studies looking at lower rates of asthma, exsmon
allergies, the things I suffered from but didn't drink raw milk growing up in kids who drink
raw milk, whether they grow up on a farm or off a farm. That's interesting stuff, that
raw milk could potentially program our immune system in certain ways. So we're kind of back
to the organs thing, right? We're back to animal foods benefiting other animals across
species. That's fascinating to me. So I would argue there are unique benefits to raw
milk and we should help support producers producing it safely and cleanly.
Why did we stop doing raw milk versus pasteurized? Good question. So up until the
early 1900s all milk was raw. In the early 1900s people were moving off of
farms into cities and people wanted milk. A lot of people were sickened by
raw milk because they were milking cows in subsanitary conditions, mixing feces or
urine with the milk, doesn't sound very appetizing, and they were feeding cows
swill, which is the spent grains of alcohol fermentation. That's where the term swill comes from.
And so they were feeding cows garbage foods. They were milking them in sub-sanitary conditions,
and people get sick. And then the milk was heated and pasteurized. And that helps with a
public health issue. And we never sort of got back to the idea that we can now, with more
technology, make milk raw in clean conditions and potentially expose this to people who can
benefit from it.
Goat milk or cow milk raw?
I like both. I prefer goat milk, but that's just what I have access to easily in Costa Rica.
There's a goat farm near me. I can go and milk the goats and see them.
Stop it. No, I've done it.
I'm just picturing Paul Saladino with like a coconut in one hand, a goat in the other.
It's like an utter in one hand. Yeah.
That's pretty incredible. Actually, this is a big movement. I feel like trad wives everywhere
into your lifestyle. You probably have them knocking down your DMs right now.
I wish. No? No, I wish. Okay, calling all single women.
I need a trad girlfriend.
Yeah, you do.
I feel like they'd be into this.
The thing about cow milk is the casein variant.
So there's A1 versus A2 casein and cow milk,
and some people find they tolerate A2 better.
So all Jersey and Guernsey cows are A2.
And sometimes you'll see this terminology on cow's milk now.
It'll say A2, A2.
If I'm going to drink cow's milk, I prefer an A2 cows milk.
All goat milk, bison milk, camel milk, horse milk, whatever.
Everything else is all A2.
So if people are sensitive, think about A1, A2 if you're drinking cow milk.
cow's milk or if you want A2 and you can get goat that's easier. Goat has about 11% less
lactose so still a significant amount of lactose for people that may be lactose intolerant.
Despite anecdote, it looks like people can still get lactose intolerance from raw milk.
If you start slow, maybe you can change it.
I used to be pretty lactose intolerant and now I drink probably a liter plus of raw milk
per day and don't have any lactose intolerance symptoms, but it doesn't happen immediately.
And if you are lactose intolerant and you want to do
milk, you can do kaffir, which is fermented milk or yogurt or cheese. There are a number of
raw cheeses that are fermented for more than 60 days that have essentially no lactose.
That's fascinating. You know what I found really interesting is when I did the goat milk
cleanse, I was satiated. I was not hungry. Interesting. All day. Right? Going back to our earlier
conversation about satiety. 100%. So people are you hungry? I'm like, I'm actually not.
Like, I'm actually, do I want that cheeseburger? Yeah, that sounds nice. But do I actually feel
like I physically need it? No, I don't. So it's really interesting. I want
hit on this is this one's call it this one's for Stanley Sanchez my father let's talk about
american cheese and shredded cheese really quickly because he's a big fan of both and your videos they
mess me up a little bit yeah so the thing is shredded cheese a lot of shredded cheese has
cellulose on it to prevent caking and when you I've done this in the videos put shredded cheese
in water you can see that the water turns cloudy it's just full of cellulose which is wood pulp
and it's hard to know what type of cellulose the manufacturer uses some types of cellulose some
cellulose derivatives are probably pretty harm before the gut. But if you don't want wood pulp on your
cheese, you might just have to deal with shredded cheese that calms a little bit. A lot of shredded
cheeses also have natamicin added, which is an antifungal agent. You don't want your cheese to be moldy,
but again, do we really have confidence that we know what long-term exposure to an antifungal
like natamicin is doing to human guts long-term? We have all sorts of species in our gut, in our gut,
some are bacteria, some viruses, some are fungi. We want them to coexist healthily and happily,
and more additives in your food with shredded cheese.
American cheese is not actually cheese.
It's only a cheese product.
It cannot legally be called cheese
because of the actual ingredients in it.
And if you look at it under a microscope,
it's full of all sorts of garbage, right?
It's packaged in plastic,
so certainly there are endocrine-disrupting chemicals
from that plastic leaching into this sort of plastic cheese.
It's full of microplastics.
It's just not a good thing to be feeding our families.
So what type of cheese do you eat?
I like any sort of raw cheese.
So there's raw cheeses traditionally,
like Parmigiano Reggiano in Italy.
That is a raw cheese by definition.
You cannot have a Parmigiano Reggiano certified cheese
that is not raw.
An equivalent in sheep cheese is pecorino.
Guerriere is often raw.
I like all of the raw cheeses.
Okay, that's good to know.
All right, if somebody's listening to this today
and they're like, where do I start?
Like what are like the three easy things today
that I could start to do if I want to detoxify,
either the things I put on my body
or the things I put in my mouth,
What do you leave them with?
Start with your food, right?
Because you're taking it into your body.
This is becoming the cells of your body.
So I think that there is very little that we do in our lives that has a bigger impact than the food that we eat.
And I think that don't let perfect be the enemy of good when it comes to your food.
If you have health issues, think simple.
Start maybe with meat and fruit and then see if the health issues get better over time and then add things back gradually.
And that's just, I think, a good starting point for people as a frank.
as a blueprint doesn't have to be that exactly.
More broadly, just get rid of processed foods,
eat things that your great-grandmother would have recognized,
and you'll be in a really good space with regard to food.
In terms of clothing and everything else,
just gradually start reading labels,
and you'll be sort of wide-eyed and surprised,
and think about what you're putting on your body,
what you're putting on your skin,
and improve that as you can.
I love it.
I've been lately ending with this question of,
you know, what's one, either, maybe in your case,
it's a study,
maybe it's a book, maybe it's a short story that you keep going back to again and again.
Like, is there a source of inspiration for you written that you go back to?
Inspiration or a study that I am interested in in terms of the research.
Could be anything.
Could be your favorite.
Maybe you're really into fantasy books.
That looks like you.
I don't know what it is.
I don't know what it is.
But you tell me, what do you go back to or is top of mind for you when I go to something
that Paul keeps going back to to learn from?
Do you know who Khalil Gibran is?
Yeah.
He wrote a book called The Prophet.
That's one of my favorites.
Yeah.
So in terms of not science-related, just life lessons, I always go back to the prophet.
Why?
I just find it beautiful.
I find the words beautiful on marriage, on children, on relationships, on love, on work.
You know, it's just, it's a very interesting set of poetry that I think holds a lot of resonance for me.
I love that.
Yeah.
Paul Saladino, thanks so much.
Thank you so much for having me.
