Julian Dorey Podcast - #376 - “Disaster!” - Cartel-Tracked CEO on (Legal) Drug 13x More Potent than MORPHINE | Ryan Niddel

Episode Date: January 23, 2026

SPONSORS: 1) GHOST BED: Get an extra 10% off already-great prices at https://GhostBed.com/julian with promo code JULIAN. JOIN PATREON FOR EARLY UNCENSORED EPISODE RELEASES: https://www.patreon.com/Ju...lianDorey (***TIMESTAMPS in description below) ~ Ryan Niddel is the CEO of Diversified Botanics. He is a egalized dr*g market expert who has spoken out about the 7-OH opioid problem in America. RYAN's LINKS: X: https://x.com/Ryan_Niddel IG: https://www.instagram.com/thegenxgentleman/ COMPANY: https://diversifiedbotanics.com/ FOLLOW JULIAN DOREY INSTAGRAM (Podcast): https://www.instagram.com/juliandoreypodcast/ INSTAGRAM (Personal): https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey/ X: https://twitter.com/julianddorey JULIAN YT CHANNELS - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Clips YT: https://www.youtube.com/@juliandoreyclips - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Daily YT: https://www.youtube.com/@JulianDoreyDaily - SUBSCRIBE to Best of JDP: https://www.youtube.com/@bestofJDP ****TIMESTAMPS**** 0:00 – Intro 1:34 – Rocco Vargas, Ryan’s Background, Diversified Botanics, Kratom, FDA, Safety Issues 13:29 – FDA “Safety” Process, DEA Scheduling Threat, $1M Product Destruction, "Wild West" 23:55 – Post-DEA Future, System Failures, FDA Barriers, LLM + Blockchain Solutions 34:01 – Supplement Industry Problems, Untested Products, Market Cycles, Post-COVID Dynamics 45:00 – Why Kratom Isn’t an Opioid Replacement 55:48 – 7-OH Potency, Addiction Risk, Bioavailability, Kratom vs 7-OH Confusion 01:05:16 – Trade Shows, Smoke Shops, Mass Market Access, FDA Classification Issues 01:14:42 – Ethics, FDA Failures, Regulation Gaps, Lawsuits, Bioavailability Interactions 01:25:06 – Blockchain Validation, Transparency, COA Verification 01:39:08 – Ledger Systems, Simulation Theory 01:45:34 – 7-OH Regulation Debate, Prohibition vs Control, Opium Epidemic Parallels 01:52:57 – Potency Arms Race, Best Friend’s Overdose 02:01:38 – Addiction Crisis, FDA/HHS, RFK Talks, Cartel Surveillance 02:10:14 – CCP, Cartels, Russians, Money Laundering Networks 02:21:34 – Corruption, Global Networks, Acceptance of Risk w/ Cartels & China 02:35:37 – Future Model, Research Studies, NSF Approval, Market Structure 02:47:52 – Ryan's Work CREDITS: - Host, Editor & Producer: Julian Dorey - COO, Producer & Editor: Alessi Allaman - https://www.youtube.com/@UCyLKzv5fKxGmVQg3cMJJzyQ - In-Studio Producer: Joey Deef - https://www.instagram.com/joeydeef/ Julian Dorey Podcast Episode 376 - Ryan Niddel Music by Artlist.io Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 There's a lot of f*** up stuff that goes on in the world. From the first time I went to DC, one of the people says, I think you're being followed. What are you talking about? Nobody's following me. The lobbyist team calls me and says, no, we know you're being followed. We can't have a sense of who it is. We're picking pictures, running through some intelligence,
Starting point is 00:00:12 and it's the Cinellone cartel. Following you? Yes. You mean to tell me the cartel's involved in this somehow? I'm out and about in the world. I see an individual, an individual walks past me and says, have fun in DC tomorrow. I don't think you should go.
Starting point is 00:00:23 Now, no one knows I'm going to DC, but what has ended up happening is, when you have an industry that went from zero to nine billion, in 18 months and you have this that you're not going to overdose on is hyper addictive you've now built a customer for life anytime you have a chance to impact people's pocketbooks significantly some people might not want that to happen like i didn't sign up for all this shit because what we build is way bigger than something that's just about creative the transparency i just chose the hardest entering the world to do it originally thinking it was just a cartel just a
Starting point is 00:00:52 cinduline-carat just when you start to look at it hey guys if you're not following me on spotify that follow button and leave a five-star review. They're both a huge huge help. Thank you. No, it's real when Rocco Vargas is like, you know, you got to talk to this guy. Yeah. Yeah, that's Rocco. How long have you known him? Gosh, I've known Rocco now. It would have been 20, 2019, 2018. How'd you mean him? So at an event in Park City, Utah. It was for the launch of, you know, think what, Article 15, when he had the movie production, He's had a lot of things.
Starting point is 00:01:42 It's a long list. So many things. Yeah. So met him at this really intimate little, little setting during Sundance of all things. Oh, nice. A bunch of cool guys didn't know anything about them. Like I was invited because I knew the owner of the actual restaurant there in the bottom of. And so the owner said like, stop by if you want to, got some cool stuff going on.
Starting point is 00:02:00 You might get along with the guys downstairs like, shit, all right. I don't know anything about, you know, range 15. I didn't know anything about black rifle coffee. I didn't know anything about. Oh, they were there too. Yeah, it was, it was all of them together. I'm like, okay, they're cool guys. And then at least the story I'll tell myself is a majority of them big league me
Starting point is 00:02:18 because I'm a nobody right out. I didn't claim to be anybody. But Rocco didn't. Like, we just hit it off and became friends and stayed in touch. And he'd done a whole bunch of things like you said over the past handful of years. And there have been times where just catching up with him, he needed help with, you know, an introduction here, some sponsorship there. And I'm like, and I'll do it.
Starting point is 00:02:37 Like, whatever that looks like. That's cool. I'm like, don't even worry about promoting the company. I'm a part of, but I have so much love and respect for you. Do we just throw some cash at it and let it roll. And so then as he was looking to get out of some of the more in-depth stuff he was doing on the Border Patrol, I'm like, man, why do you come inside with us? Why do you work with us for a while as a place to land? And so he came in, he came internally for, that's probably six or eight months now. He's worked inside of our wall. Yeah, I was going to say this has been, this has been recent
Starting point is 00:03:04 with him working with you. Yeah, he was telling me about this like right when it started like quickly. He's like, yeah, this cratim shit's out of control, bro. It's not. Doing all kinds of stuff to it. Yeah. He gets, you know how he is. He gets like so intense about it. And you're like, I can't tell if this is just a Tuesday for you or if this like,
Starting point is 00:03:19 like, shit just got real. Yeah. And he got real, but it's so funny with him because he grabs those little nuggets. Yes. And then he runs. Yeah. Oh, he fucking moves. And I love it.
Starting point is 00:03:28 But I'm like, hold on. You're kind of right. But you're kind of almost right and kind of not right. And I love him for it because there's so much passion because he gets it. He just doesn't. There's a lot of context of this. Yeah. Yeah. So we're going to go through a lot of things like from the 30,000 foot view today just for people to understand what's going on here because when we're talking about this modern day of legalization and the business that has been abooming out of that, there are a million different doors here, a million different ways people are using it in some cases correctly and for good. In other cases, because things are happening so fast, people are slipping through the cracks and doing some fucked up things. So to start, you are.
Starting point is 00:04:07 the CEO of your company right now. And what do you what do you guys do? Yeah. So I'm I'm the CEO, one of the partners in a company called diversified botanics. And we are a Kratum manufacturer, distributor, um, sales channel, right? And Kratum, I had no idea what Kratum was, right? I'm out of founder of our business. It's been around since 2012. And it's one of those things of when I jumped in, I just got done growing and selling a CBD business, had a little podcast I started that then led to, A handful people reaching out for some advice on different aspects of life or business. And one of the founders of this business reach out to me because there's burnout. Right.
Starting point is 00:04:46 I mean, you get it. When you're under your hustle, you're grind from 2012, 2012, 2018, and you're beating your head against the wall. And you, like, don't know what to do next. And you hear somebody that might have a little insight commend. His name's Dalton. He just reached out and said, man, I don't know if you can help me or not, but could you help me? Man, shit, I don't have any idea. I don't know if what I do is going to help you or not.
Starting point is 00:05:06 So dove into the business a little bit from. afar and end up saying, okay, I love what I call the art and science of business. I didn't necessarily love Kratum. It was neutral to me. But understanding what that was, ended up, they offered me the opportunity to come internal as like a fractional COO for a period of time. And probably for the first two and a half years, really, maybe even three years. I didn't give a shit what Kratum was. It's crazy. What is crazy? So you can explain to people obviously. Yeah. Like, what is it? So Kratum is this incredibly polarizing plant. Most people, you say cratom, they conjure up thoughts of cannabis and CBD, and it's really pretty far away from that.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Kratum is a tree that grows in Indonesia and Thailand specifically, right? Southeast Asia. And it's a physical tree. It takes four to five years to grow to maturation. Is this like in the rainforest, like that kind of tree? It's almost more in like the swampy marsh type of area. Right. So there's a little 250 acre plotline in Florida that's starting to grow some cratom.
Starting point is 00:06:07 But it's one of those things of you have to be committed to it because it's five years. Yeah. Like you don't get to kind of grow a cratum tree. That's a big commitment. It's a commitment because there's no yield for five years. And so these leaves on a tree, they have a very low melt point. So you can't smoke them. When you manufacture product, you can't heat it up too much or you break down anything that's good in it.
Starting point is 00:06:28 So it's a complicated plant into itself. Whoa. And so the first stated consumption of cratum that we can find is like 1880, where farmers in Indonesia, would leave their house, would grab a couple leaves off a tree, and they would just chew it throughout the day. And what would it do for? So they would state that it was energy, focus, mental clarity. It's almost like we would call probably a new tropic now.
Starting point is 00:06:51 Now, I'm not professing for it to be new tropic, but that's kind of the anecdotal statements that they would have had back then. But then when they would get home from a long day on a farm, their family would have also grabbed leaves off a tree and steeped it into a tea. And from seeping into tea, really low heat point. have it almost like a, a social elixir, like a bonding tonic.
Starting point is 00:07:12 So you come back from a hard day of work, you'd have a meal with your family, and everybody would sip this cratum tea, and they found it to be relaxing and sedative and analgesic and bonding. And so it's the same leaf. But when you consume it one way, it's energy focus and clarity.
Starting point is 00:07:28 When you consume another way, it's relaxing sedative and analgesic. All right, quick question there, because you had said you can't smoke it because it has a low melt point. Correct. But they were able to make tea with it and that's not a problem? Well, so it's hard for me to think about that.
Starting point is 00:07:43 Of course, not a problem at all. So our anecdotal research would say if you get much above 90 degrees Celsius, you start to break down the chemical components of Kratum. Right. So for us, a steep of tea, you don't have to be above 90 degrees Celsius, right? That's a pretty significant temperature. Yeah. So you can, you know, slightly under a boil, have water and just.
Starting point is 00:08:06 slowly be introducing leaves to it. And quite frankly, it tastes horrible. Like, cratum tastes bad. Like, it's not like, oh, this is awesome. I can't wait to try some cratum. It doesn't taste good. You're not making me excited about it. Man, I'd just like to call it what it is.
Starting point is 00:08:20 Like, these are just what has been stated. And it's what we see as well. And so fast forward all the way from 201880, that first stated consumption that we could find and go all the way to 2016. There's something called the DeShay Act. which essentially was legislation that was passed. It said if product was consumed in the U.S. prior to, gosh, maybe it's 2004, October 11th of 2004, October 11th, 2002, one of the other. It was grandfathered in under old ways of viewing dietary ingredients, nutritional supplements.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Why that matters is you could make structure and functional claims. You could make implied benefits. You could say all these things. It was grandfathered in under a whole different ways. of viewing the world. Well, nobody could find evidence of that from Cratum because when it was imported into local Thai grocers and things like that, of course, you probably had suggestively, maybe immigrants, maybe, you know, a lot of cash-heavy transactions, there weren't a lot of receipts for things. And so, I'm sorry, it's 1994, not 2004. We couldn't find, and it becomes important in a minute,
Starting point is 00:09:32 we couldn't find evidence of being consumed in the U.S. prior to 1994. Because we could. We'd have a whole different conversation right now. All this stuff I had no idea about Julian. Like this is all, it wasn't relevant to me. And now it's hyperrelevant. I'll explain because it impacts the entire supplement industry. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:52 I mean, I've never heard of it until Rocco called me about it. You know, this wasn't like a thing in my lexicon at all. No, I mean, I was an amateur bodybuilders at the very, I think that's, being a little generous with what I was doing. I mean, you look like you're still doing all right. Well, you know, you take enough anabolic. You do stuff like that. You can put on size.
Starting point is 00:10:09 I mean, that's what it was. I was naturally a skinny guy growing up. I graduated high school at, gosh, about 6-1 and 175 pounds. So I was skinny. And now you're 6-1-235, 240? I try to say office scales, about 250, 255 somewhere there. There's still a little remaining. That's good.
Starting point is 00:10:27 You can come train with me. We'll do it clean here. No steroids. I love it. I love it. You'll kick my ass. It'll be perfect. So then you fast forward 2016.
Starting point is 00:10:37 And this is where it gets a little interesting that the industry at that point was just powders and capsules. You take leaves off a tree, you dry them, you import them. You put it in a capsule-based format or you put it in a little jar and you put it in orange juice or you put it in water. Got it. Because it doesn't mix well. It's not water-soluble. It tastes really, I can't- This sounds so inconvenient this fucking plant.
Starting point is 00:10:58 It's horrible. Yeah. I mean, it is. But you're CEO of a company. Well, we make it. eventually more convenient. But it's not convenient to start with. Yeah, I don't know. You're not, selling Joe yet. He's the sales signal over here. Yeah, we'll get there. Yeah, let me give you some stuff that tastes really bad. But if it's efficous, right, that's kind of, that was a whole
Starting point is 00:11:16 pitch to it. Efficus. Yeah, good, right, that it would work. And so you look at 2016 and a bunch of companies imported product that had salmonella in it. And there wasn't testing, I mean, there should have been testing, but it was a Wild West. You think of the days of spice. I don't know, if you like the synthetic cannabis that that came out talking about like posh spice or something almost the same time it could have been but now there was a whole industry called the spice industry or the bath salt industry that was that was that was that was booming and so you got a bunch of i would say unique characters that were we're selling spice the federal government said hold on you literally have evidence of people in florida that are turning into cannibals like
Starting point is 00:11:57 eating people's faces off like you can probably find old videos of this oh yeah you know what we've talked about this on the podcast before. Yeah. It's wild. Who the fuck brought this up? Was that when you were here yet, Deep? Someone brought this up about like the dude eating faces in Florida. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Because he was high on bass salts or something. Yeah. Yeah. All right. We'll see if we can find it. But please continue. Yeah. There's no problem.
Starting point is 00:12:20 So you have unscrupulous individuals not meeting testing criteria because it's a, it's a rogue industry at that point. Yeah. It's not, I didn't know this at the time. But in the supplement industry, when you bring a supplement to market, the FDA would require you have to be able to prove it within a reasonable sense of certainty
Starting point is 00:12:40 that it's air quote safe. Well, it's interesting. The FDA says there's a whole bunch of ways to prove that it's safe. One way would be in vitro studies, so little petri dishes, did it hurt somebody? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:51 The other is if enough people consumed it and didn't say they had a negative effect, that's also safe. No, there's a third way too. Yeah. You take the fucking head of the FDA at dinner in a nice steakhouse, you say, eh. We'll get there as well.
Starting point is 00:13:03 And then they let that go through. We'll get that as well. But there's actually no mechanism to submit a product to go to market in the supplement side. Where that becomes interesting, you think of all the influencers, you think of all the people that pop up that just are magically making product out of nowhere. Waking up with back pain isn't getting older. It's a sign your mattress stop doing its job. Ghostbed fixes that.
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Starting point is 00:14:35 ghostbed.com slash Julian link in my description below and using promo code Julian at checkout. Once again, use that link in my description below and use promo code Julian at checkout for an extra 10% off. Some exclusions apply. See site for details. There's actually a documentary called Bigger, Stronger, faster that was Mark Bell, Anabolic, steroids, all that stuff. And they actually showed that they went to, I'll say, a Home Depot or Lowe's. They went to the parking lot. They grabbed some Spanish speaking individuals. They brought them into one of the guys' houses. They packed up supplements right in front of people.
Starting point is 00:15:09 And they sold it online. It's completely legal, right? There's no quality control. There's no anything. You'd be shocked at how much that's actually going on, not just inside the cratum space, but the supplement space overall. I would not be shocked about the supplement space at this point.
Starting point is 00:15:21 It is a wild. So, it is a wild west space. So you have the people in Spice that were making money, hand over fist, selling people's synthetic cannabis, essentially, bath salts, eating people's faces, all types of stuff. Yeah, by the way, Miami cannibal attack, this was the context, right? That's what you're talking about. Yep.
Starting point is 00:15:39 On May 26, 2012, Rudy Eugene attacked and maimed Ronaldo Popo, a homeless man on the MacArthur Causeway in Miami, Florida. During the 18-minute filmed encounter, Eugene accused Popo of stealing his Bible. Can't do that. Beat him unconscious, removed his pants, and bit off most of Popo's face above the beard, including his left eye, leaving him blind in both eyes. As a result of the incident shocking nature and subsequent worldwide media coverage, Eugene came to be dubbed the Miami Zombie and the Causeway Cannibal. The attack ended when Eugene was fatally shot by an officer of the Miami Police Department.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Although friends and families filled in details of Eugene's life, the reason for the attack remains unclear. Eugene was employed at a car wash at the time was divorced and had a series of petty criminal arrests from age 16 with the last in 2009, while police sources speculated that the use of a street drug like bath salts might have been a factor. Experts expressed out since toxicology reports were only able to identify small amounts of marijuana and Eugene's system, leaving the ultimate cause of his behavior unknown. But also, like, you can get fucked up on drugs over a long period of time if you're abusing them and your mind is mush. Yeah. For sure. Yeah, that doesn't sound like
Starting point is 00:16:57 weed caused that that would not be weed but again bas salts were deemed synthetic cannabis yeah synthetic weed and so it doesn't shock me that there was trace elements of cannabis in the system because it wasn't cannabis and so that really led to some of the some of the scheduling or some of the eradicating of that industry so you have all these individuals that were making money hand over fist selling spice that then said okay what do we do now yeah oh well we'll we'll bring in cratum cratom be the next thing so they just start bringing in cratum like a boat load a whole industry yeah Yeah. And so no testing, no things like that. That leads to the Salmonella that happened. And Salmonella ended up, I think, and don't hold me to this. I don't know the exact number. But let's say there were somewhere between six and 16 stated deaths. Yeah, we can pull it up. 2016 salmonella. Yeah. It's going to be 15, 16 somewhere in there. Yeah. And saying, okay, that then put cratim on the FDA's radar of saying, what is this shit? What's really going on? So the FDA at that point, Scott Godlead was ahead of the FDA and said, we got to, we got to ban this stuff. This is. got to be a Schedule 1 because there's back then they would have said cratum had 46 different
Starting point is 00:18:02 components now we know it has 52 so the science is emerging on it what do you mean components so they're they're called alkaloids subalkaloids or metabolites kind of the the atomic structure of what's in the cratum leaf okay and so each of those 52 different components alkaloids subalkloids metabolites they all have their own unique mechanism of action on the human body two of those are partial mu opioid agonist inside your body. Oh, I know what that means. Yeah, partial. So we'll get into the whole whole thing on this stuff. And so
Starting point is 00:18:33 just the tip? Just the tip. Right now. Got to leave a little, got to keep people excited. Get a little heroin, not all of it. Correct. Correct. Just a little tap. So what ends up happening is the FDA sees that and says, shit, we got to schedule this stuff. They get the DA riled up. They said, this is absolutely the next
Starting point is 00:18:51 this is the next heroin. We got to stop this. So 2016, I think either Q3 or early Q4, 2016, the FDA and DEA said, we're going to get, this is going to be a schedule one. Come out, the whole industry shits themselves. Like, oh, well, we're got to, it's all gone. And because these individuals were used to the spice world, used to the bassoat world, it was just another money making hustle to make a bunch of cash knowing it was going to be short term. It's a story I'll tell myself. I wasn't involved in the industry then, but it kind of maps out that way.
Starting point is 00:19:21 Well, and one of the only times we can find the DEA started by saying, yep, it's going to be a schedule. But by early 2017, the DA pulled back and said, there's actually not enough evidence to show this is really an opioid. Because this is how it got on the radar in the first place, something that doesn't have to do with the actual drug itself, to salmonella. Correct. Yeah, by the way, we pulled this up just so people can get context on what you were already talking about. But this is from archive.c.gov. as of April 5th, 2018, a total of 132 people infected with outbreak strains of salmonella have been reported from 38 states.
Starting point is 00:19:59 And since then, there's been another 45 more ill people from 19 states. But they said that, is there anything? Oh, yeah, there it is. Whole genome sequencing analysis did not identify any predicted antibiotic resistance in isolates from 60 ill people and three cratum samples. Testing of eight clinical isolates using standard antibiotic, antibiotic susceptibility testing methods
Starting point is 00:20:22 by CDC something, something, something, laboratory also did not show any resistance. 57, 73% of 78 people interviewed, reported consuming cratim in pills, powder, or tea. There it is. Most people report consuming the powder form of cratom. So did they like snort in it? No, no.
Starting point is 00:20:43 It's it's a capsule they drink it. Oh. Yeah, it's a really like airy powder. Like our production facility, there's the shit in the air all the time. Like we operate in what's called an ISO 7 compliant facility with haphilters and all this stuff because it's just it's really light. And so when you grind it up into the capsule base form or the powder base form, you, I guess someone maybe could snort it, but I don't know how. I've never considered that mechanism of consumption. But people do great. People do some crazy shit. So they could. So in our business at that point, the two founding partners said, well, shit, we don't want to go to prison. We're going to destroy all of our product. So they took it up to North Salt Lake, incinerated it all, about a million dollars with the product. Wait, your guys did. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Holy shit.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Yeah, because. Yeah, because. Yeah, because. Yeah. Yeah, of course. Good for them. Well, because it was going to be a schedule one. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:34 Like, you're in possession of it. That's no different than being in possession of heroin at that point. But isn't there like a rule that like if you brought it in legally and now they declare it that way, you just like, I don't I don't know, call the hotline and say, by the way, I have this. I had it legally. So what do you want me to do with it? Yep. I believe that to be true.
Starting point is 00:21:51 The legal team that they had at that point recommended they just go ahead and incinerate it just preemptively. Again, before my time. Who was it? Saul Goodman? Take it up there. Burn it. I think that's how it feels to me a lot. But again, I need to make certain that it, that contextually some of this could be a little bit wrong because I wasn't around at this point.
Starting point is 00:22:12 And so what is it happened. is the DA then reverses that that ruling. They say there's not enough evidence to call to schedule one. And so the partners saying, holy shit, we built this business. Oh my God. We just incinerated a million dollars with the product. What do we do? That's a tough day. It is a tough day. So Sean, the second founding partner, end up taking a double mortgage on his house. Oh my God. Borrowed a I think it's 60 or 80 grand against against his house value and brought in just enough to keep the ball bouncing like just enough. But it's just powders and capsules. So a a true commodity, right?
Starting point is 00:22:44 There's nothing unique to it. Because think about it, inside a cannabis world, the way I view it, you can manufacture strands, you can do some crossbreeding, you can do all types of stuff. And I'm not a cannabis guy. So again, if I'm wrong, I'm wrong. But because these trees take five years, there's no hybrids. There's no crossbreeding.
Starting point is 00:23:00 Like these are trees that have been in Indonesia and Thailand for hundreds of years. Right. Now, did Sean, because obviously you have this whip them a roll that happens where it's like, oh, we're schedule one. Oh, we're not doing that. It's legal again. But the whole thing is born out of this is a very new thing. This is, this was something that we didn't have a ton of research on or whatever.
Starting point is 00:23:22 And obviously people try to start businesses or whatever. But after this back and forth happens, I understand like, you know, Sean has a mortgage to pay and stuff like that. But are there questions of like saying, okay, maybe it's not a schedule one right now, but maybe we're going to find out something later that could make it that or that this is not going to be helpful for people. How did he reconcile that? 100%. So Sean and Dalton owned a business that was some sort of nutritional supplement or dietary ingredient, 2010, 2011, 2012. Okay. And it was in Huntington Beach, California, where they were operating.
Starting point is 00:23:56 And they had Thai workers that were helping them pack out packaging. Yeah, it's awesome. And so the businesses is in the process of either shutting down or retooling. And Sean and Dalton are physically packing orders to ship out. And Sean's complaining how his back hurts, how he's tired. And one of the Thai workers says, Mr. Sean, try some of this. And it's four or five capsules of Kratum now. But at that point, just four or five green capsules.
Starting point is 00:24:23 He's like, I'm not taking that shit. What is it? Kratum, crate him. He goes, I'm not going to get high. I don't, that's not what I do. No, no, it's good for you. It's good. We end up taking it.
Starting point is 00:24:32 And 45 minutes later, as he would tell the story, no back pain, tons of energy, tons of focus. He goes, why isn't everybody selling this? It actually works. And so that's what started at that point, SSV, the first iteration of our company, was anecdotal, this makes me feel great. I'm not noticing the back pain. I mean, they might have said that about like oxycontin back in like, oh, three, though, too. For sure. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:24:56 But he just started it based on that. Yeah. Interesting. I know. Okay. Right. I mean, what necessity is a mother of invention. Yeah, you're sitting over there like, no judgment.
Starting point is 00:25:06 Well, I mean, I'd love to say that it's easy to say from my position that maybe we should. should have done things differently back then, but I think of 2012 in an emerging industry, like it's easy to say a lot of what I would do differently now because we're a large company with money in the bank. When you first start, it's like, sure, what do you, what do you do? And I just think of even 2012, I mean, it's almost like I take for granted the internet AI research availability of information. And I'm justifying it because I'm an owner of the business. I'm, I'm acknowledging that. But it's still, 2012 is just feels like a lifetime ago from how I would have approach supplements overall. Yeah, and I think this is one of those like really tough gray area
Starting point is 00:25:45 type things about the system we have where, and I'm just talking about all forms of like, say legalization of certain substances right now. When that happens, it happens because there's data that says certain things are actually okay for people or for people to make their own choices on that. And that's great. But when you rip the Band-Aid off completely and leave it wide open, and this applies to all this stuff, you create business incentives for people to be like, oh, fuck it. We're just going to run right into that and figure it out. And then maybe you accidentally break shit. And when you're breaking shit this time, people get hurt as well, which is a tough thing.
Starting point is 00:26:27 So I look at it more like a system failure than like pointing at all the individuals. Yes, sometimes there's actually bad people who get involved with this stuff for sure. but like a lot of people it's like okay I see business opportunity this makes sense the government says this does fine let's go and you have it's like you ever seen the video of like
Starting point is 00:26:47 fucking Jerry World Cowboy Stadium when they open it up and everyone just fucking runs in there that's kind of what it is like you can't if they now those people are happy to go to a football game but if they were there to like burn the fucking place down you're not stopping it they're gonna burn it down you know what I mean and I worry about that with
Starting point is 00:27:05 all of this stuff, whether it's weed, whether it's fucking edibles, whether it's cratim, whether it's inserted here that the government said, okay, this isn't on a schedule, you can sell it or package it up into a supplement. Do you have that worried too? I do. And I've, fortunately, or unfortunately, throughout this year, I've spent a lot more time in D.C. I've spent a lot of time with the FDA, HHS. It's to understand the system is flawed, but I don't know the answer to solving the flawed system. Because on one side, you would want to do safety studies. Well, a safety study to do it appropriately, you're probably six months, maybe eight months. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:38 You're probably a couple hundred grand. You have to have a university that's accredited that's validated from the FDA that's willing to actually do the study. You have to do it in such a way that's essentially double blinded. And so in that- Can you explain that to people what that would look like as an example? Let's say, because we're talking about cratum, let's say we just figured out what cratim is a day.
Starting point is 00:27:59 And we would say, okay, we want to do a safety study before we bring something to market. Well, you have to essentially tell the FDA, we have this thing, we'd like to do a study on it. Are you okay with us doing a study on this? They can say yes or no. For all the different reasons, depending on who's in office, a political climate, let's assume they say yes in this moment in time. Then you have to reach out to a series of universities and get them to say, we have the resources, we have the interest, and we're willing to actually conduct the study. That group, that university has to also be accredited by the FDA. You can't just magically pick, you know, some podunk university in the middle of Kansas.
Starting point is 00:28:39 It has to be something that the FDA validates is solid and viable. Sorry, University of Phoenix. Yeah, right. It'd be great, right? We could the University of Phoenix to sign off on it. But what does it happen then is assuming that all those things happen, assuming you find the university, assuming they're willing to do it, then they have to set up their own protocols with sourcing material, understanding the requirements of the tests.
Starting point is 00:29:02 that would make the FDA happy. They're going to start with almost always in Futero study. So inside a petri distance, inside a cell dish. And they're trying to understand the mechanisms of action, like what goes on as could be good or bad for human being. Assuming that that goes through and they don't find anything significant, the next step would be some series of a rodent study. Now, rodent could be mice or rats, right?
Starting point is 00:29:23 They both have their own digestive mechanisms. I got a few rats out here for you. I saw them coming in. It's awesome. That's awesome. Well, we don't have those in the Midwest. This guy. Politician.
Starting point is 00:29:32 We got these small little mice around those places. All right. We got rats you could ride on around here. They fucking swim. That's when it gets scary. You see those motherfuckers jump in the Hudson? It's nuts. You're going to get right across.
Starting point is 00:29:46 So what ends up happening is all those things happen. The actual study itself might take four to six weeks, but then to do the scientific write up, to validate it, to then ship it to somebody else to validate the study, another university or another group of people that's where you get that double blinded so they don't know what was actually the thesis of the study to start with so just that process if everything goes the right way you're probably eight months and you're probably 100 grand well that sounds like a minute sounds like more than 100 grand too it very well could be and saying okay you think of the startup entrepreneur might not have access to 100 grand right and because you don't know if it's going to work or not
Starting point is 00:30:28 even if you went out and hustled up the $100 grand, it's a complete crapshoot because what if it doesn't work? What if it fails? Now you don't have a way to pay back the $100 grand. And so that's where this is a really interesting dynamic because of course it would make sense to validate everything before you bring it to market. But do you have the money?
Starting point is 00:30:44 Do you have the time? And can you get everybody to play the game that way? Because it only takes one rogue person to go around the outside of the system to put a product on shelf that then beat you to market. Yeah. And so it's like it's a fuck system from the start. Yes. Because in theory, that would be what we would do.
Starting point is 00:31:01 But if you do that, then it really pushes more towards a pharmaceutical pathway. And to people with the biggest checkbooks end up getting the market first, which really starts to eliminate free market capitalism to me. Yeah. Now, that's an interesting point because that's now if we're going to look at the full supplement industry and rope that in because you brought up that point. I'm glad you did because it's pretty wild. What goes on there?
Starting point is 00:31:24 This is a system that you would think, like remove business, remove business, remove, move capitalism, all of it, just look at it with common sense. You'd be like, okay, it's a substance that's created that you sell to people to ingest into their bodies that's going to do something when it goes into their bodies. You would think there would always be regulation on someone being able to sell that. I'm not even talking about cratim or anything. I'm talking about selling fucking omega-3 fatty acids if they form a new solution of it or something. I don't know if that's possible. But you know what I mean? Right? But there's not. It's a fucking free for all. It's a free for all with an asterisk of you're supposed to manufacture in a GMP compliant facility.
Starting point is 00:32:05 What is that? Right. Generally many, uh, generally accepted manufacturing principles essentially that there's a sense of quality, right? You should be manufacturing in a quality environment that's clean, that has documented protocols, but that's a should. So the Home Depot guys weren't doing that. They weren't doing that, unfortunately. Yeah. Right. But, but even saying that, then you take another step and say, well, how do you enforce that. Like the government then would have to have the funding to enforce product on shelf all the different ways. Then you get to government overreach. That's where sitting back and wanting to figure out the solution, not because of cratum. I mean, in some aspects, who cares about that?
Starting point is 00:32:41 This is a much more. Oh, it's a wide. It's a systemic issue. Yep. But there's not the clear, concise answer to me, right? Because it would be like, sure, we should be able to do X, Y, Z. So my again, we can get into it whenever, but I think using large language models, I think having a series of, you know, quantum compute, I think using the blockchain starts to become very, very relevant for this. Whoa. Because now all of a sudden you take what could take eight months and hundreds of thousands of dollars and you could do it in six or eight days and have a good sense of confidence. Then you do a chain of custody using the blockchain to verify where every source material comes from. All right, back up a second because you just said we're going to use AI, quantum, and blockchain to solve the supplement process. So like I'm a fifth grader.
Starting point is 00:33:29 Yeah. How would this look? So how would I guess this rules out my friends Juan and Carlos in the in the Home Depot Park? Man, Juan and Carlos, I might be able to hustle up some AI. Listen, I'm rooting for you. Yeah. I want them to win too.
Starting point is 00:33:41 So what I look at that, you have, I'm operating on the premise right now that kind of all, all information in the world is available, right? It's there. What happens is what we're studying in the U.S. We don't know what they're studying in Russia. We don't know what they're studying in Germany. There's language barriers and a centralized reporting platform. You don't really know what's going on.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Right. And some of that's because we all want the competitive advantage to go to market. But you take things that are published white papers that are validated studies on any material component. What would that mean the omega three? Well, for all we know, there's this one substrate of omega three that comes out of, you know, northern Alaska that the cod there have a slightly different. biology to them. And so that put into a model, AI, would be able to at least pour through it and say, oh, this, this and this, right, three different parts of the industry that nobody knows connect. AI could then help connect. Oh. So now you're taking the study that had an of three. Yes. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Three substance or three subjects in northern Alaska. You're also seeing that in Southeast Asia, there were 4,000 studies, but we don't know about it because different language, different reporting system. To me, when you start looking at quantum compute, it's just the ability to condense the data down in a much more expedient manner. If you were able to do that, you could come up with a reasonable sense of certainty on safety versus potential for harm. Wouldn't that automatically take away some level of competition, though? And here's what I mean by that. If AI solved, let's stay with the Omega 3 example, if AI solved, if AI solved, solve for the optimal omega-3, the fucking cod in Alaska, you know, the worms in Georgia and
Starting point is 00:35:29 what, sorry, Georgia, whatever, you know, these three things that you put in there. Now, if someone's like trying to reinvent the wheel, they can't beat that. So if they come out with a new supplement and say, yeah, but we threw in, you know, the sand in California, they're going to be like, Malacca, the AI doesn't want that. Like it already said, we have something better. So you would essentially be creating a monopoly for whichever person hit refresh fast enough on the AI to know that that was the answer. It just came up with. And now we're going to make the business as fast as we can. Yes, in some capacity. But I also think in a truly efficient market, we're going to get there no matter whatever long enough horizon. I think you might be right. Any commodity based product,
Starting point is 00:36:08 we're going to lose unique value propositions. You can come down to who offers the best customer support, who offers the best customer experience. At some point, we as consumers, we as concerned, I think deserve that and this whole other thing that we walk into no shade on on whole foods We walk into whole foods and because it's whole foods we have this at least I do oh it's on whole food shelf It needs it's it's safe. It's efficous It's it's there's a reasonable nature because of the environment that sits in that we think all these things have happened Right they haven't fucking happened if you have the right insurance and you have the right GMP classification You check the box
Starting point is 00:36:46 for Amazon. You check the boxes for Whole Foods. You can put that product on shelf and it's never been fucking tested. The world doesn't know that like this is a whole bigger issue. Oh, this is a huge issue across a lot of industries. 100%. I want to say I hope I'm remembering this right, but I'm pretty sure is my friend Ali Tabrizzi's documentary, C-Spiriti on Netflix. Do you remember that? So tell me if I'm remembering the right film here because it's been a few years since I saw that. Allie's great, by the way. But I believe it was in there where they were describing how the labeling that would get put on your tuna or whatever was just all bought and paid for. And it's not real.
Starting point is 00:37:30 And meaning they would catch this fish illegally. Sometimes it would be, I think, some other form of fish. Go watch the documentary. There was a lot of shit there. But I'm pretty sure it was the right documentaries in C-Spirit City. They talked about that. And yet this is something that you want to look at the supplements industry. You want to look at the fucking botanicals industry.
Starting point is 00:37:44 You want to look at the, this happens everywhere. Everywhere. Everywhere. And you're spot on. I mean, it's interesting. I have a small interest in a grass-fed, grass-finished beef operation of all things in a little rural part of Wyoming. I knew nothing about beef. I mean, I know I like to eat it, but I didn't know anything about much more than that.
Starting point is 00:38:05 And to dive in, like, what's it mean to be organic? What's it mean to be certified organic? What's it mean to be certified, grass-fed? grass fed just means that during a certain point that the cow was able to eat grass. But then you can take it to a feed lot a month before slaughter and you can pound that thing full of grain. You can load it up to get it fat, have it marble. And it still comes out on the backside as grass fed. Yeah, it's crazy.
Starting point is 00:38:33 And like you spend all this extra money at a grocery store. Well, somebody figured out who to pay to make that real. Because it's not what we think it is. And I mean, it's every industry to me. Yeah. And so it's not to me a conspiracy theory. It's the system itself is, is not wired the way that we think it is. But we kind of, I'm a sheep in some aspects, right?
Starting point is 00:38:56 I go into an environment, oh, it's grass fed, grass finished. Or grass fed at least. I look at the way it looks in a package versus the other thing in the package. Man, this one looks better. It's $2 more. It's got to make sense. It's more expensive. Yeah, it's better.
Starting point is 00:39:09 And I buy it. And then come to find out, it came from. the same fucking facility as the other one that is just grain fed all the way through it's all the same yeah i think you make a really important point there because our brains especially in the post covid era immediately go to you know there's a giant person with the president of antiontay on the string behind every fucking thing that happens and i think sometimes that's true depending on what it is other times i think it's market dynamics and things like that incentivize structures to happen that then you know people have to compete in as they continue to compete bad things happen for everyone and an
Starting point is 00:39:44 amazing or that's the wrong word but an unfortunate example of this is the the the color pattering in a grocery store right so you you know what i'm gonna say you look at the 15 middle aisles everything's red blue shiny go get it right you look at all the aisles on the outside that's fruit and stuff which still has the glyphosate on it and all that whole shit but you know what i mean like it's it's at least nicer and natural. But all the stuff in the middle is what people go by because the marketing is in front of you. They pay for spaces on the ends of the aisle. Oh, this looks so good.
Starting point is 00:40:18 And it's got all the process shitting it. All the food dies. All the stuff that the human body is not meant to process. And so I don't think it's like one evil guy. I was like, we're going to poison everyone. I think it was just market dynamics was like, well, we got to compete. Those guys, their food lasts six months. We got to last seven months.
Starting point is 00:40:36 100%. I mean, I forget the name of the, it's not a documentary, but kind of a mockumentary movie that's about the DuPont family. Oh, I think I know what you're talking about. Yeah, I haven't seen this, though. Yeah, so it basically tells a story of how
Starting point is 00:40:52 Teflon was created originally to cover tanks, right? World War II made tons of sense, water resistance, all those things. And Teflon then was deemed this miracle molecule that was going to make life better, living better through chemistry. And so it's like, oh, it worked there. Why wouldn't we spray our pans with Teflon?
Starting point is 00:41:10 Because things didn't stick to it. It made, now, I'm not saying that the DuPont family knew good or bad. Just at a cursory level, it's like, well, that makes sense. None of us wanted our shit to stick to pans in the 60s. Yeah. And we didn't want our furniture to be destroyed. We didn't want our carpet to be destroyed and spilled stuff on it. So everything got started getting sprayed with Teflon.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Well, Teflon now is a forever chemical. You can never get rid of it. And so you see after a period of time, this television show where this movie gets into starting to have a conversation around, you know, birth defects, all these things were happening in West Virginia, kind of West Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky, Southern Ohio, about then the DuPont family became complicit because they knew it and they tried to suppress it. But I don't think when they created something, just like we're saying about Cratum, you do something, you see it, you're running through whatever tests you're running through, like, oh, this is a good
Starting point is 00:42:00 this is good shit. Yeah. This makes a lot of sense. And then you launch it and then you fast forward 20 years like oh shit that genie's out of the bottle now we can't put it back in what do we do a whole industry is built around this and so i think that happens in a lot of spaces that i don't think that there's this magical nefarious source that's wanting to kill half the population all the time there could be but something like teflon it made sense of me yeah it doesn't have to be with everything is the point yeah it can be some of it is just the market dynamics like i said i i don't know which is which or where there really is that or something. But there's, you could, you could find in everything we've repeatedly as a society,
Starting point is 00:42:40 and I'll focus on America more than anything right now because I think other places are doing a better job with some of these things we're talking about. It's like we've kicked the can down the road. Like, ah, someone else will deal with that problem. Right. And then it just keeps spiraling and spiraling. And then it's so big that it's like, wait a minute, you know, now everyone's getting aware of it.
Starting point is 00:43:00 But I do, you know, fuck, when you're in college and stuff, you don't think about anything stuff. If there's fucking food in front of you, you eat it. If there's something with liquid, everybody wins, right? Correct. But then you start to, like, go through life a little bit and you're like, damn, what? What am I eating? Why do I feel better when I have that, but not that?
Starting point is 00:43:20 Yeah. And it's common sense. Like, just look, is it fresh or isn't it? And the stuff that's not, we're doing something to it. 100%. But I think even that's indicative. You take look at the work of Ray Dalio, right? Bridgewater. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:34 And just saying in our lifetimes, everything's the first time it's ever happened. Yes. You zoom out enough. It's 80 year cycles, 100 year cycles. This shit just repeats itself over and over again with a different, different lens on top of it. Yes. But we're so myopic in our vantage point because we're going to live to 80, 85. Brian Johnson, maybe we live to 200.
Starting point is 00:43:51 Who the hell knows how long we live? He's looking good, man. He's going backwards. I'm still sibon in the past couple weeks. He's looking young. Yeah, he's got girlfriend now. He does. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:00 It's great. 20 years younger too. Yeah. Fucking living the life, bro. He's winning right now. I'm happy for him. Absolutely. But in saying all those things, it's like, we don't slow down enough to consider it,
Starting point is 00:44:10 but there's almost always going to be someone that's not going to slow down. Yes. And that's where it gets challenging to me. It's, again, from where I view our industry, bring it back to Kratum, it's really easy right now to say, oh, you dumb fuck should be doing it this way. Because we're a successful business with a couple dollars in the bank. So I can say that at this point. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:30 I couldn't say it six years ago because we didn't have the money in the bank. We didn't know what we didn't know. And so to bring it back to that part of the conversation, when you get to the backside of the FDA still pushing the scheduling, the industry pivots and says there's a call to march on Capitol Hill because you have first responders, armed services that go to D.C. When the scheduling is supposed to happen and say, hold on a second. This is allowing us to function because it's not an opioid.
Starting point is 00:44:58 It's not triggering drug tests. But from jumping out of airplanes and helicopters, I don't have back pain. So I'm not prescribed opioids so I can still function inside the military. I'm not I'm not pissing dirty. Don't take this away. This is my livelihood. And you can see 2017 the industry shifts and starts calling this a replacement for opioids. Cratum.
Starting point is 00:45:19 Cratim. Now it's not, now getting into all the reasons why it's not. Let's start there actually. Can we do that? Yeah. Like why it's not? That's a good place to start. I believe the industry adapted as it needed to in that moment in time to protect the industry.
Starting point is 00:45:36 You have, it's really challenging me, no matter what the political climate is, to shit on veterans and first responders. Yes. That's a protected group of people, whether you like what they stand for or not. When they march and say, this is helping us, it's really fucking tough to get everybody to say, oh, we're going to take it away from you. And so the industry says at that point, oh, this is awesome. we found our silver bullet to stay alive, this is a replacement for opioids. Now, up until that point,
Starting point is 00:46:04 I don't see any data that I can find online where someone is saying this is a replacement for opioids because when you look at the mechanism of action, right, and I didn't know any of this stuff before getting in this industry, you have three different types of opioid receptors in your body. They all do different things for different reasons. You take something like an oxycodone or purcocet. That is a 100% agonist
Starting point is 00:46:27 to your mu opioid receptor. Think of a lock and key. Okay. Your mu opiate receptor is the lock. Oxycontin's the key. It fits in exactly. And it's like an old lock. So when it goes in, it's six. It's not going to fall out. Yeah. That is to me a hundred percent agonistic relationship. What we found with cratum is it is a partial mu opioid agonist. So same lock and key kind of mechanism. But imagine, imagine the lock's a little worn out and it's got a bunch of WD40. in it. So the key slides in, but it falls right out. Slides in falls out. Slides in falls out. Then we start to dissect the 52 components of cratum, those alkaloids, subalkaloids, all these fancy terms nobody cares about. 52 things inside of cratim, when we realize out of those 52, two of them impact the mu opioid receptor. The rest don't really. So what does that mean? It means there is a, the by weight, there's something called mitragyneen.
Starting point is 00:47:27 Some might call it matragenine, depends on where you're from. That is 60% of the weight by volume of a cratum leaf. That's the alkaloid. That alkaloid is an incredible partial mu-opioid agonist. It's easy to compare it to morphine, because morphine is kind of like the gold standard in the pharmaceutical industry for an opioid agonist. Matrageny in itself, and I could be a little off on this,
Starting point is 00:47:56 I think it's, I think it's a 20th as potent as morphine. So 120th. How do you spell metragonus? Metragonine? It's close. It's all the same. Man, people bastardize it. I'm probably bastardizing it.
Starting point is 00:48:10 You know, I'm going to have people commenting that you're not saying it the right way. All right. What do you say? 120th the potency of opium? Of morphine. Morphine. Yep. Morphine's some strong shit, bro.
Starting point is 00:48:22 It is. It is. All right. It says it's a major, wait, metragonine is a major metabolite. Metabolite. Yeah, metabolite. Seven hydroxymetrogeninin 70H is generally considered to be significantly more potent than morphine. So this is 708.
Starting point is 00:48:47 That's not what you're talking about. It's not. And this is where the whole confusion happens our industry is this exact thing. Okay. So Google AI. Bad. Well, just it's confusing as shit because you hear metragenine and then there's this other thing called seven hydroxy matragenine. Yes.
Starting point is 00:49:04 Those are two different things. All right. Before you explain that, I also want to say, because this was part of my conversation with Rocco, especially when I'm going to go to talk to someone who deals in something I know fucking nothing about like, cratim or whatever. Some of that stuff makes me nervous because I'm like, what is this? What does it mean? What's the business behind it? Is this going to be something really bad in a few years? But the fact that Rocco is in there working with you guys on this who has like dedicated his life to fighting against bad substances coming into this country and things like that was a huge bill of approval for me.
Starting point is 00:49:36 And what he really liked about you guys is exactly what you're going to talk about right now, which is that. And I guess this is I know about the 7 oh, but the lower volume thing you're talking about, you're going to explain. I don't understand that. So you're going to explain that. But like you guys could have had a chance to make a fuck ton of money. jumping in on this 70H thing, which obviously is very not good, versus staying with a simple, safe form that actually might make sense and help people like our veterans to make less money.
Starting point is 00:50:05 And you chose that and to also fight against the 70H thing. Is that a fair way of putting it? It is a very fair and accurate way of putting it. All right. So now let's explain the difference and I'll let you kind of take it from there. Yeah. Yeah. So when you look at Mitrigine and Matragetene, however you want to say it,
Starting point is 00:50:21 Whether it's a tenth as potent as morphine, a 20th as potent as morphine, it's not, it's nowhere near the same category. Okay. You could take a shitload of, of Kratum, metrageneene, and not feel anything. It's not like morphine because of the partial opioid agonist relationship versus the full agonistic relationship. Morphine's a full agonist, matragine's partial. Yes.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Where this gets confusing is if we test a live leaf on a tree in Indonesia and it's still living, there's almost 0% 7 hydroxymatrogenine present leaf. Almost 0% less than 400 parts per million, even less than that. 7.0H is a metabolite, meaning as metragene gets digested as it breaks down, whether it breaks down because of chemical oxygen, from being in the air or because you ingest it, the conversion mechanism is into seven hydroxymatrogenin, 7.0H. Okay. And so when what I've been advocating for is we've tested 10,000 plus kilos of biomass over the course of our business.
Starting point is 00:51:38 We operate in a way that when Cratum comes from Indonesia or Thailand, we require that we can see a test from over there before we agree to buy it. When it lands in our facility, it gets quarantined. We then send it out for third-party testing before it can move. We need to validate that it matches the same test. That's good. We want to make sure there's no heavy metals, that there's no salmonella, that it has ultra-low seven-hydroxymotragetine in it.
Starting point is 00:52:04 It should fit a very specific profile before it ever moves. And you have a mathematical range you put on that, obviously. We do. And the mathematical range is just the proven standards for what crateam is an in naturally occurring plant. assuming that that comes back and it's validated that the third party test it's not us gassing up a test saying oh it's good we send out to a third party they say yep it's in the range here's all the certificates of analysis then we say okay we now can decide what we want to do with that and it goes into a laugh and they call it general
Starting point is 00:52:31 population so where this starts to become interesting is in 2003 our business had grown to the point that we were looking for additional manufacturing capacity We just out kicked our coverage. We were making, the market was requiring more product than we were able to make inside of our four walls. Great problem to have. Yeah. We started scouring the country for a manufacturing facility
Starting point is 00:52:58 that would meet our standards and help us progress the science forward. We introduced to a group out of, just outside of Chicago, kind of a really strange place for this to be. I was going to say, a lot of drugs flown into Chicago. Lots of drugs. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:13 But this individual ended up having a, a research facility that had whatever level one classification to test psilocybin. And he had angel fish models that he was able to give psilocybin to and see through AI if they were impacted by psilocybin. Really crazy stuff. Angelfish models? Mm-hmm. So physical angel fish. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:38 And so what he had figured out is... Oh, they're mushrooming up the fucking fish. Yeah. They must be tripping in there. They were. were, but they really, sideways and shit. Big time, zigzagging.
Starting point is 00:53:49 But that, that was the whole thing of the AI inference, because he would have cameras set up, and he knew based off their swim patterns, what was going on inside of them. And so as we started going down the path that preyed him with this individual, this group, he started saying, hey, we can really isolate all these different alkaloids. We can pull them apart. Let's see what happens when you take the top five. Let's see what happens when we isolate those.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Independent. Awesome. Let's do it. Well, we kind of, we have a reasonable sense of basis for metragonine because it's 60% and a bunch of people have done studies on that. Then you get into seven hydroxy matragenine known as 70H. You get something called pyanthenin. All these words that don't matter. Yeah. And he starts showing us, 70H operates 13 to 30 times more potently than morphine. He's like, I can show you. I'm like, what do you mean? So this is 2003. We have. 100% we know how to isolate 7 hydroxymatrachene and we see very, very strong validated support that this shit is 13 to 30 times more potent than morphine. Now when you say 13 to 30 times more potent than morphine, I just want to make sure I also understand what this looks like when it gets to the final shelf, right? And we're going to talk more about some giving a little preview. We'll come back to this later and go into more detail.
Starting point is 00:55:15 But when a product that's not from your company, obviously, gets to a shelf in a gas station that contains 70H, what is the dosing level of 70H in it, this thing that is more potent than morphine? But like, is it a low enough dose that, you know, it's nowhere near the effect of, say, morphine, you'd give a patient who might be dying or something like that? You know what I mean? Because you're pumping them up with like a fucking horse tranquilizer when they're dying. they're not necessarily pumping them with a horse tranquilizer at the gas station of 7-0-H. Is that fair? It is not fair. It's not fair.
Starting point is 00:55:48 So you think they're fucking tripping them up. So there's been new studies of emerged. These aren't our studies. We can pull them up and find them. Yeah, let's do that. That 10 milligrams of consumption of 7-hydroxy, 70H, in rodent studies. Now, rodents are a little different because you have to go IV with rodents because they're, oral digestive pathways are really inefficient for these products.
Starting point is 00:56:14 So you have to put it in their veins. So I'm acknowledging it's a little different, but what that ultimately equates to is a blood serum level that equals 10 milligrams or more. When you get to 10 milligrams or more from this study, and might have been eight or nine, so not significant, but it's significant enough to give a little insight to it. You start to see that it triggers all the same effects of a morphine and also shows that it's now addictive, where the rodents now in stimulated models are chasing that high.
Starting point is 00:56:47 They're following the same pathway. They're searching more of the same behavior. I'm trying to like make this mathematical in my head, though, a little bit to understand. So I apologize if I'm slowing you down. Not at all. But when you say, so it's 13 to 30 times as potent, was that it? As potent as morphine. And what you were just saying there is that at this 10 milligram, Joe pulled it up, it is approximately 10 milligram it looks like. When they put it into rodents, you said it has the same effects as morphine. Well, when you put it into rodents and said that 10 milligrams, so you have not only the
Starting point is 00:57:19 analgesic effect, right, the opioid receptor effect. Right. But by the nature of opioids, I think we could all kind of unilaterally agree. There's a mechanism that we become addicted to them because people like the way it makes them feel. Yes. Right. That's the issue. And so the same things happen now with 10 milligrams of consumption, IV based.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Now I'm going to take a step back. from IV because I think this is also important. Okay. When you consume a capsule of product, so if we were to go to a gas station right now, you're going to see seven hydroxy for the most part in press tabs. It's going to be little like five to six, you probably pull it up, five to six count packages of tabs that are in in these little press them out and they fall on your hand. The industry started that each one of those tabs was 10 milligrams.
Starting point is 00:58:06 Then the industry is known for chasing the strong. and stronger and stronger. So it went from 10 milligrams per tab to 20 to 40 to now when you pull up some of the more recent tabs are in the market, you're gonna see a pack of four tabs is 200 milligrams of seven hydroxy. Now that's and how much more does the average human weigh than than a rat? There's a there's a whole science. There's a there's a conversion mechanism of what percentage goes to what and where. I don't have a committed memory. I think it's 3.6 times, it takes 3.6 times as much product to have the same effect.
Starting point is 00:58:46 We can pull up. That's less than I thought, first of all. Secondly, though, let's go back to the rat for a minute because now I'm formulating how I want to ask this question. So when you put 10 milligrams of this shit into a rat in their veins. In their veins. Yep. Introvenously. It has an effect that morphine has on them.
Starting point is 00:59:02 How much morphine would it take do you know to have to put into their veins that would have the same level of effect? I don't. It's in that study. When we pulled it up and shared the study, it's in there. That's what I want to know. I want to make sure that I'm not again. Yeah. When I don't know the answer, I'm not going to bullshit it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:18 Right. Yeah. But what I do know is the counter argument to this, which I can appreciate, you take a press tab of seven hydroxy. We'll use round numbers. We'll say it's a hundred milligram tab. Only a certain percentage of that is bioavailable, right? Because you're going to break it down through digestive pathways. So that 100 milligrams, let's say it's.
Starting point is 00:59:39 a 30% bioavailable product. So you have 100 milligrams in the tab, but as it reaches your digestive track and gets to the backside, you only have 30 milligrams that are present. Isn't that like false advertising? No, it's every product we consume. Everything is going to from the milligrams that are stated on a package that is true in theory and accurate at point of production, but by the time you digest it, less of that product's bioavailable in your bloodstream. Okay, all right. You're breaking it down. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:11 And so I know metragene very well. It's about a 30% conversion rate. So if you take one of our products, a cratum-based product, and it says for us, we believe in standard serving sizes. So a serving size of any product we have, we think is 25 milligrams of metragene. Why that matters is... Which is not 70H. It is not.
Starting point is 01:00:29 It's matrageny. It's just metragenine. So 30% of that is now bio available inside the body. So we can say 7.5 milligrams on average, depending on height, weight, metabolic rate, disease history. Like, it's not perfect, but it's 30% is a nice round number. Yeah, you'd need a couple servants. I might to have the same amount about bioavailability.
Starting point is 01:00:51 But you say that, and then that same metraginein, 30% bioavailable, but then 50% of the bioavailable converts to seven hydroxy inside your body because you're breaking it down. That's where this gets so confusing for people. But I got to zoom out one layer. Yeah, let's zoom out. When you consume what we'll call full spectrum cratum. Now, that's not really a term.
Starting point is 01:01:18 It's a term in the CBD world. Yeah, it'll be spectrum. You got to be careful with that. So we'll look at a complete alkaloid profile cratim, right? So it has all 52 alkaloids present. Okay. You have somewhere between two and four that might have, we know the two for certain have a partial mu-opioid agonistic relationship.
Starting point is 01:01:38 meaning it has a slight bonding effect. You have another six that are antagonistic to the muipoid receptor. So that's that whole premise of, are you spraying the lock with WD40 or not? So when you're consuming complete spectrum cratum, complete alkaloid spectrum cratum, you have six or more components that are actually the buffer that's making it so the trace amounts of seven hydroxy
Starting point is 01:02:02 don't bond with the muopoid receptor. They can't do it. What happens when you isolate, just seven hydroxy, all of those things are now gone. You only have the agonistic relationship to the myopoid receptor. Okay. Now like I'm a fifth grader. Yeah, yep, no problem. So fifth grade basis. Yes, think about that. Well, no, I want to make sure I'm making this relevant because this is it's been challenging. I'll start with the example of an apple. Okay. We get home from school. Our mom slices up an apple. It's on a plate in front of us.
Starting point is 01:02:39 No peanut butter, any of that shit, just an apple. It's before the days of glycophosphate and all the bad shit that's in it. It's just a nice, natural apple. And we have, we eat the apple and we might swallow a seed or two. Right. No big deal. No, I'm from the age where my mom said, don't swallow the seeds because you're going to grow an apple tree in your stomach and all the dumb bullshit. But it was, it was a joke.
Starting point is 01:02:59 So you swallow the seeds, nothing happens. However, if somebody else took all the seeds out of a series of apples, and then soak them for a while in a specific product, those seeds turn into something very different. Those seeds turn into cyanide. And so you could take just the seeds that have been soaked and consume them and you've now consumed cyanide. But when you have an apple, you don't think twice about if you eat a seed or two.
Starting point is 01:03:33 You're not worried about cyanide consumption. It doesn't register. That is the difference in full spectrum cratum versus seven hydroxy. Seven hydroxy is the seed. Now by itself, in very small quantities, 7.08 could be fine because you're having one seed. But when you're taking all the seeds and putting them together and giving people endless amounts of the seeds, you're now giving them, you're not because it's not killing people, which is a whole other conversation. you're not giving them the same product as Gratum. And that's where there's so much confusion in the market.
Starting point is 01:04:12 Because you see the news reports that pop up, people are dying, there's all these things happening. I got to tell you from someone that's been a huge proponent of 70H, 7-hydroxy, I don't think you can overdose on it. You don't think you can overdose on it? I do not think you can overdose on 7-hydroxy. On what basis? So the counter-argument, the other side of the, aisle if you would would tell you that it has a ceiling effect what that would
Starting point is 01:04:38 basically state is as you consume more and more of something your body reaches saturation point and you just excrete the rest of it there's a lot of science that shows that's actually not true there isn't a ceiling effect for seven oh age there is a ceiling effect for cratum what happens on the seven oh eight side the reason why people OD the mechanism of action why people OD on game day Pain can hit hard and fast, like the headache you get when your favorite team and your fantasy team both lose. When pain comes to play, call an audible with Advil plus acetaminopin and get long-lasting dual-action pain relief for up to eight hours.
Starting point is 01:05:18 Tackle your tough pain two ways with Advil plus acetaminephim. Advil, the official pain relief partner of the NFL. Ask your pharmacist at this product's rate for you. Always read and follow the label. Is it experiencing respiratory suppression? They can't breathe. Right. Their heart rate slows down. Their breathing slows down. And they essentially suffocate is what happens. Yes. Unfortunately. Those things aren't true in the same capacity with 70H. There's people we could hop on Reddit right now and go to 70H or seven, seven matrageny or there's Reddit forums. And you will see endless people saying they're taking three, four, 500 milligrams a day. And they're fine. And they're fine. They're not fine, but they're they're not. They're not dying.
Starting point is 01:06:06 This is where I don't want to say I have it all figured out because what I started this year was saying my whole crusade to get this stuff off of shelf came from our customer base reaching out to us saying, can you help us get off of this product? And I'm like, what are you talking about? What's this product? I mean, I know what it is, but why are you calling me? We don't sell this. Well, we started our Kratum journey by consuming one of your products.
Starting point is 01:06:32 We went to our local convenience store or gas station or smoke shop. shop, they were out of your product. They told me that this was the next best Kratum product. And they gave me this. And now I can't stop taking it. What do you recommend that I do? And so I'm seeing this. I'm like, okay, is this a one off?
Starting point is 01:06:50 Is it? And so I personally start calling these people and interviewing them. I'm like, I got to understand more. And there's an individual from Indiana who tells me a story, very comparable. His wife is an RN. Yeah. His wife says. you're addicted, we have to check you into outpatient rehab.
Starting point is 01:07:10 You can't stop taking this. So we go to outpatient rehab for 10 days to try to get clean. They put them on Suboxin. They recommend methadone because he can't stop consuming the product. At that point, this is March of this year. I'm like, okay, something has to change now. What did he describe as, did you talk to his wife as well? I just spoke to both them.
Starting point is 01:07:31 Okay. What did they describe about his behaviors and what happens to him when he takes the product? A euphoric, great feeling. Now, how did she see it, though? It's euphoric for him, but like, what did she think? Like, oh, he's useless right now or? No, not quite.
Starting point is 01:07:50 I mean, she said that he was more in like a Zen-like state, so he's not couch-locked, right? He's not, you know, drooling out of the side of his mouth. But what she would notice is it started with, Cratum has a half-life of 22 to 20, four hours. 7.0.H has a half life of four hours. So what started with him consuming one of our products a day, when he got introduced to 70H, he took his one product. He made it six or eight hours.
Starting point is 01:08:22 He's like, the feeling's got to need more. So he takes one in the morning, then one right before bed. The next day, maybe five days later, but sometime in a very short period of time. He's like, I need a third serving. another handful of days. I can't make it through the night without waking up in cold sweats. So I have to have more when I go to bed and have to have some next to the nightstand. So now he's spending hundreds of dollars a day on this.
Starting point is 01:08:49 His wife seeing the bank out deplete. He's not being sketchy because he's like he's needing this to now function to be at a baseline. I mean, he's a full blown act. And he wasn't like that when he was on Kratom. So they tell me he was not like that when he was consuming Kratum. Now, I don't know him personally. I only know the interview. I'm not saying Craim's a perfect product either.
Starting point is 01:09:08 No problem sharing all that as well. I'm sharing this one story. There were five stories like this in a week's long period. And I'm like, okay, this is fucked. Because we knew it existed in 23 and we knew it was stronger than more potent than morphine. There's a difference between strong and potent. And you guys were tempted to go to it because of. We weren't.
Starting point is 01:09:30 You weren't ever. So the beginning. The first time I went to. a trade show in our industry. The trade show for this really obscure counterculture world is something called. Fucking trade show. Oh, yeah. Oh, it's nuts.
Starting point is 01:09:44 It's in Vegas, of course. Right. It's a place called champs. And it's the counterculture world, right? It's everything you'd imagine in a smoke shop. Yeah. So whatever you can conjure up in your mind, that's exactly what it's like. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:58 And the first time I go there, right, I'm not from this industry. I don't know anything about it. Like I said, I love the art and science of business. and I'm walking around at the founder and we're in Orlando there's one in Orlando and there's one in Vegas and I'm looking
Starting point is 01:10:09 I'm like this is this little incestuous sandbox that everybody's fighting for the same thing why don't we look at the entire blue ocean of the rest of the world because inside the smoke shop world
Starting point is 01:10:21 people are chasing a feeling I don't say they're chasing a high I think that's a little mischaracteristic or classification but they could be that you're going to a smoke shop looking for a specific experience
Starting point is 01:10:32 Yeah. I myself, when I consume Kratum, I'm using a very small amount as a caffeine replacement. I'm using it for energy, focus, and mental clarity. I own a company. I can swim in the shit every day. If I take three servings a month, I'd be shocked. Because it doesn't function the way that this broad brush statement of it's hyper addictive. No, no, no, it's not. There's a whole bunch of science to support this. So when I'm consuming it this way, and I'm seeing the science that we're starting to fund, because now we have the money and we're funding, I want to know what the fuck's going on with the plant. I'm like, this deserves a spot on Whole Food Shelf.
Starting point is 01:11:09 This should be on sprouts one day. We have to get out of the 15,000 smoke shops in the country where any good business goes to die. And we have to get mass market. We have to retool our packaging. We need to standardize our serving sizes. We need to have metered serving sizes. We need to have clear and transparent warning labels. We need to do all the stuff so we can go play in the Big Boy Arena.
Starting point is 01:11:29 Because I'm walking through this trade show. It's no disrespect for the trade show. But the only mechanism of uniqueness is to make stronger and stronger products to fuck people up more. Yeah. And I'm like, we're not going to do that guys. And my partners agree.
Starting point is 01:11:41 Like, hold on, we don't want to do that. We don't want to get people high. Like, that's not why Sean started taking the product. He wasn't taking it to escape reality. He was taking it because he had back pain. And he was taking that and he felt better. It wasn't like ibuprofen. It wasn't like Advil.
Starting point is 01:11:58 Yeah, he wasn't getting like autism from it or something. You know? No. And he wasn't getting liver. disease and all the shit yeah of course and so you look at all those things I'm like let's stop focusing on this little sandbox and let's go focus on how we take this mass market I know it's lofty I know it's ambitious because you still you pull up google right now and you say what the fuck is cratim you see the first three paid the first four five things on google addictive death
Starting point is 01:12:23 schedules because cratim is still deemed a new food ingredient from the FDA that's where the FDA puts product they don't know how to classify it a new food ingredient you can't make a structure functional claim what does that mean i can't tell you it's going to solve something for you okay i also can't tell you there's an implied benefit from consuming it from a from a business standpoint i can't say if you take this one of these three things would happen right why that matters is when you move into a supplement category you can now start to promote that it could solve some different ailments In order to do that, we have to get out of this dirty sandbox of people looking to get high all the time, bad classification, and we have to start approaching it through a different lens of how do we take a mass market. But you also have in that dirty sandbox that people trying to get high off the time all the time, a lot of other companies now using 70H to pump up their cratim or whatever you want to say. Yeah. that you're then forced to compete with where you're like, well, I have a safe product that I use myself sparsely when I want to. No problem. But I know if I use their product over there, that probably wouldn't be the case. And I might get addicted to it. But my business says that people are starting
Starting point is 01:13:46 to buy that more than this because it's, you know, they find something that's potent and then they unfortunately get addicted. It's a very strange place to be. It is. And the choices that we have made as a business have almost bankrupted us twice in the past 18 months because we have as a as a business decided that no matter what would ever happen we'd never go on that pathway period full stop good for you guys yeah um our business has been cut in half this year over last year that's okay i'm we're not for sale like my morals aren't for sale in this i appreciate that a lot yeah and so it's it's not i started this year by saying this is the devil's work Like this is horrible.
Starting point is 01:14:27 We got to get it off shelf. And now I'm looking at it through a slightly different lens, not because we're going to make it, not because we're going to manufacture it. When you start to study, when I start to look at more objectively, I don't see people going and overdosing on it. Okay. So if people aren't dying from it, I do believe in free market capitalism. I do believe that as human beings we should get to choose what we want to put in our body.
Starting point is 01:14:53 Okay. So if they're not dying, they don't really, really have to worry about the harm side. You have a large subset of people that's... Wait, if they're not dying, you don't have to worry about the harm side? Even if they're getting crazy addicted? Well, that's where this gets interesting. Okay.
Starting point is 01:15:07 I don't have to worry about the extreme side of harm reduction. Okay. It's not on shelf and it's like, gosh, if you take 400 milligrams, you could die. Right. I then start to look at how are people consuming it? There's a lot of people online that state that they don't have access to opioids, that they were prescribed at one point. for whatever the reasons would be,
Starting point is 01:15:28 and they found this to be a health or replacement to an opioid. 7-0-H. And I'm like, okay, that's interesting. Where's the truth in that? Because I'm like, bullshit to start with, you're addicted. Of course you're going to say that. They start looking, it's like, that actually can make sense somewhere.
Starting point is 01:15:44 Now, let's assume that that does make sense. That product still shouldn't be sold in gas stations, convenience stores, and smoke shops to me because it's still addictive. There's no question it's addictive. Meaning you think it should be something that's prescribed from a doctor? I think there's a classification somewhere in the middle that the FDA needs to come up with. And I think cannabis falls into this.
Starting point is 01:16:04 I think solacebin falls into this. I think there's a lot of things. I think from some of my conversations with HHS and FDA, they kind of acknowledge this. But there's no easy way to do it. All right. Let's take a big step back for a minute. And we'll come back to this because this is just, this is like the, you know, the 500 pound elephant in the room the whole day, which is the FDA and like how it works. it's you already laid out the two ways you get through the FDA earlier I put the third way on it which unfortunately is probably true as well and it's like they don't have a set system it's like a relationship business it's not like they operate I don't mean this literally but figuratively it's like an AI that says do you have these 10 things for these two things right here yes no if it's yes you go through if no you don't fucking go through don't care who you are like we're we're dealing with something that's supposed to
Starting point is 01:16:55 regulate all food and drugs and they may be really scrupulous with some drugs, but then when it comes to supplements or random shit that people are selling on the free market, not even the black market, they're like, yeah, all right, whatever. I mean, it seems to me like it's such a broken system. How do we even fix it? That's a great fucking question. Thank you. Of course. Why? I I say it through that lens because I'm not, I don't have delusions of grandeur of wanting to be in politics. Our industry had ran in fear of the FDA since I'd been involved in it. My counterparts in the industry blackballed me because I started going to DC. So like you're going to bring the whole industry down.
Starting point is 01:17:43 Like we operate, I'm going to say above her approach, but our facility is as clean and nice. I mean, nothing to hide. We have 24 seven 365 video feeds you can pull up right now and you could show everybody else producing all the time. We don't hide fucking anything. Wait, can we pull that up? That's kind of cool. Yeah, what, I don't have the website committed to memory. It's going to be diverse by Botanics,
Starting point is 01:18:02 forwards.com forward slash maybe transparency. Maybe is, that's kind of cool that you have that. Oh, I don't want to hide from anything. So if like Cindy in the back corners like sprinkling all nicotine and something, I can catch her. You're going to see it.
Starting point is 01:18:15 Snitch. Yep. I wouldn't snitch Cindy. Yeah. Right. So those are real. Those are live right now. This is live in your facility.
Starting point is 01:18:21 Yeah. What's you using a vacuum cleaner? It cooks some crate them right there? Yeah. Yeah, no. So that room that you're seeing right there, that's our powder production room. And so-I-Hope ICE isn't watching this. Yeah, it's all right. They're all, they're all I-9 validated. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:18:33 They are. They are. We take great pride in this stuff. But you see, I would think that the supplement industry needs this. And so. Yes, this is, I've never, I've never seen this before. This is awesome. Nobody does this. And so we take- Can we get some close-up shots too? Yeah. No, no, I'm saying. Like, can we, can we work that in? You got to get some FX-3s. like right on there while they're like packaging it we we have that coming we're updating all right good i'm gonna hold you to it 100 percent okay so what what started out with last year um without any and without any of the without any of seven oh h stuff i said hold on well i mean fuck where did those all started from is we got served a wrongful death lawsuit
Starting point is 01:19:16 in 2022 and i myself and my partners kind of lost our mind because i don't want to be responsible for causing harm for somebody it's not what we stand for it's not what we want to do and we got served this lawsuit and we sit around the table and we said if we've if we're killing people we got to stop the entire business yeah what was the what was the nature obviously it's a death but like what was the claim what was the whole thing that the consumption of credom was responsible for the individual's death and so we get served the lawsuit first time we'd been sued in this business right I mean um first time we'd ever been in a wrongful death lawsuit and still an ongoing case so I'll share as much as I possibly can.
Starting point is 01:19:56 And saying, okay, we get served this and it's saying the deceased name, whatever it was, consumed these three products, your product was found in his residence. And so it's your fault. Highest level. Okay. I'm like, what? And so the first thing we do, right, we retain a lawyer. And they then pool an autopsy.
Starting point is 01:20:18 And that autopsy shows somewhere around 250, nanograms for a milliter of cratum in somebody's body. Everybody's like, what the fuck does that mean? Yeah. If you consume 25 milligrams of cratum, that converts to about 53 nanograms for a millimeter in your bloodstream. Okay. So this individual at, at the time in which he passed away, had about five
Starting point is 01:20:43 servings of cratum in his body. I'm like, that's interesting. I mean, a third of our company takes seven or eight servings. a day and it's very reasonable like that that's not crazy to me but then we start poking around a little bit deeper in the toxicology report and this individual has i think 22 or 2300 nanograms from a milliliter of amphetamines in the system and you start to see that the cause of death is tachycardia officially yeah heart attack and they were trying to blame this on cratum so it still is it's ongoing yeah and saying, okay, this is interesting.
Starting point is 01:21:23 That had me start looking at Kratum through a different lens. What's going on when you consume Kratum? Is it making other things more bio available? Because this individual had had a history of drug abuse. He'd been out of rehab. This individual, the way I recall, and I could be a little off on this, but he was at home with his mother, living in his mother's house. He had his child there.
Starting point is 01:21:48 He came out of the bedroom one morning and then kind of fell out. over and had a heart attack in front of them. A horrible thing. I mean, that's that's horrible for anybody to experience. A mother and a daughter having to see that. Don't wish it upon anybody. But in seeing that, I'm like, here's an individual that had had a history of various things that he battled with over the course of his life, had went to rehab and kicked his habit. So it was said. But then he's consuming a little bit of cratum and we're being blamed for the death. And so I started chasing the digestive pathways that we all have. So you have a series of SIP digestive enzyme, CYP.
Starting point is 01:22:25 And so there's a SIP 4A pathway or SIP 4YA pathway. Doesn't mean anything. It's just numbers. But that pathway is what's required to digest Kratum. But when you start looking at the molecular weight of Kratum and you start looking at the specific gravity of the molecules of Kratum, it's got a higher specific gravity and molecular weight than almost anything else. Why I think that ends up mattering is if you're consuming other products that need the same
Starting point is 01:22:56 digestive enzymes, they're all being pooled to digest cratum first, and it's having everything else become more bioavailable. At the same time, I'm playing around, could that be the case? We're in the process of manufacturing pre-workout product because I'm like, oh, I'm a fitness guy. Why wouldn't we create a pre-workout? And so we put, I think, five milligrams or 10 milligrams of matragetine in this pre-workout. And we put arginine and citroline and... Good stuff.
Starting point is 01:23:22 Yeah. Just stuff for blood flow, stuff for pump. And we give out samples to our sales staff, primarily men, younger, fitness enthusiast. And they're walking around with erections. They're walking around with bloodshot eyes. And they think I've fucked with them. They think I've swiked the product with Cialis or Viagra. And I'm like, no.
Starting point is 01:23:42 Like, here's all the certificates analysis. Like, I wouldn't, it'd be funny. I mean, kind of, but I would never do that. Like, that's just not. And so we pulled the shipwitz analysis and we then send the product out for testing. There's no to dalafil or Cialis or anything in the product. And that's happening simultaneously. I'm like, holy shit, you have cratum that by itself is probably incredibly benign.
Starting point is 01:24:02 But when consumed with alcohol, we can consume with caffeine, when consumed with arginine, citrone. There's a whole series of things that need the same digestive enzymes. now of a sudden those things are way more bio available in your bloodstream, and it's ramping up the effective nature of all these things. I mean, it's awesome that you're also like curious in your seat where your job is to run the business to like go look into things and where it can go wrong. That's in an ideal world.
Starting point is 01:24:27 That's what you should do. So I commend you for that. But like when you start to find out these things because you're making one product, right? A series of products. All creditem based. Right. But I'm saying like just to keep it simple, like you're cratim. Yep.
Starting point is 01:24:39 When you start to figure out that other. other things that you don't have any control over, meaning someone could buy your product and then buy perfectly harmless other things that they put into their body. But when put in a cocktail of that could potentially cause a problem, you know, like downstream effects. Is that like scary for you? Because I mean, I'm the farthest thing from a doctor, obviously, but shit can go wrong in a lot of different mathematical permutations here, no?
Starting point is 01:25:09 It can. It can. And why this starts to become important is I see these things. I'm like, okay, we have to, we have to change where our product is packaged. We have to get this information out into the industry. We have to sit in front of our counterparts and explain what we're seeing because there's an owns of responsibility. Now, if someone wants to take methamphetamines, that's their choice.
Starting point is 01:25:32 I don't know how to defend against those sort of things. That's different. Yes, that's abusing it. Yeah. Yeah. But I can say, okay. Okay, now there's contraindications that we need to make sure people are aware of when they're at the store that they could buy a product. Yeah, what I'm saying, let me be a little more fair and clear.
Starting point is 01:25:49 If someone like goes and buys street drugs or something like that and they happen to take cratim and that causes a bigger problem, I mean, that's horrible. I'm sorry, but it's not your problem. I'm going to make one up. That's stupid. But if someone consumes Cheerios, then it's got, I don't know, some type of grain in it. And that grain happens to combine with cratim in like the wrong way in the digestive track. and it goes, who, you know, then it's an issue because they're not doing anything wrong or surreptitious or anything like that in that situation. They're doing something perfectly normal and
Starting point is 01:26:19 they got fucked. 100%. Okay. And so what that started to do is inform all the changes we started making the business as quickly as we could. We went from an old glass bottle you could probably find online that we said it had three or four servings in it and it did, but it's not so easy to see through the side of a glass bottle. Yeah. And I said, okay, we got to change that. We got to put stuff. We got to have metered servings. We got to have droppers in all of our products. Okay, well, that's cute, but that's not a big deal. I said, okay, well, what's the lowest amount of cratum, matragenene that someone could consume or the highest amount that wouldn't trigger those effects? And it's roughly 25 milligrams of metrageny. Oh, so you were able to, okay, get pretty close to it. And so now we say,
Starting point is 01:27:01 okay, we're going to standardize a serving size across every product comes out of our facility. Anything comes out, a serving is 25 milligrams. A serving has to have a dropper on it, so you can physically meter out what one serving is. Then we put it in a box, so it's not just a bottle, because the box has a QR code. The QR code, I said, well, shit, there's so much sign changing all the time. If I keep printing labels and say contraindication warnings, I'm going to be fucked. Because every six weeks, there's a new study that comes out that's informing something new. So if we do a QR code, you can scan the QR code, you can end up on a website, and we can keep showing you all the new studies, all the new research. I said, okay, well, that's cute, but then
Starting point is 01:27:38 why don't we stop running from what we do and why don't we start posting 24-7 365 live video feeds and my lawyers loses this shit he goes you're opening yourself up for a ton of liability I said only if we do stuff wrong that's right if you don't do stuff wrong I don't think we do nothing to hide nothing in that show 100% I love that and then I say well what about certificates of analysis why wouldn't we have a beat that you could scan that same QR code and you could see every material component that's in your hand and you can see all the test and so we build that out I said, well, fuck, that's cute, but someone could completely bullshit that. You could little use graphic design and just tell everybody the shipwits analysis don't mean anything.
Starting point is 01:28:15 Like, why don't we design a blockchain that you have to physically give people nodes all the way through the supply chain to validate it? Yeah. And so we do that. Then I start meeting with the government early this year and say, look, all of us inside the Craven sisters are not assholes. We're all not trying to kill people. I can't speak for our counterparts. No, nobody's our counterparts are trying to kill people either. But that was the premise that they were meeting with you.
Starting point is 01:28:38 You can only control who you are and what you do. Correct. Yes. And I started showing stuff like this. And I started showing the blockchain. And I started showing the certificates analysis. And I get in meetings with individuals that are worried about glycoposphate. Is that the shit they're spraying on the.
Starting point is 01:28:55 That's the stuff when you're looking at apples and the food supply and all that stuff. I thought it was glyphosate. Have I been saying that wrong? Glyphosate glyphosate. He says it in such a fucked up poison. I can never tell you. Well, but. That's a good representation.
Starting point is 01:29:09 Damn it. And so I start showing certain people this blockchain. They said, this is exactly what we need to validate the food supply. Could you make it more mass market? Because then we would hold people accountable their testing protocols. So now of a sudden people couldn't bullshit us and say it wasn't sprayed on their product because there'd be soil retains and there'd be nodes to show every time something moves who holds it. And so how do you, all right, take me inside that.
Starting point is 01:29:34 How do you build that out? Because I remember back in 2017, people were just like, stop a blockchain on it. And that was like the thing. And it's like, no one knows what it means. You're not supposed to know what it means. It's provocative. It gets the people going. Shout out Will Ferrell.
Starting point is 01:29:48 But like when you say we're going to stick it on the blockchain so the people know, let's stay with your product, even before we get the regular products, what does it actually look like for my grandma who might actually listen to this? She does listen to some podcasts. How could she understand it? Your grandmother could understand it that the blockchain would be the computer program behind what you see on a website. Okay. We don't understand the code most of us on a website. We just know when you look at it, it works or it doesn't work.
Starting point is 01:30:17 To start with, we are starting to show we bought our glass bottles from supplier A. Supplier A in order for them to supply our glass bottles, they're saying that their testing protocol is at food grade levels. and they have to post their testing protocols to the blockchain. Now what that means inside the blockchain is it's just a digital footprint that has something called nodes to it. I'm not a blockchain aficionado, so if I fuck this up, so be it. Comments have at it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:51 But these nodes, now of a sudden you get to say from a community aspect, is that real and valid or not? And so someone says they're doing the testing, but are they really doing the testing? Yeah, how do we know that from the node? Because before it can post or be validated to the blockchain, the conglomerate, the groups of people that have nodes have to say, yes, that's true and real. But what if they weren't there? So that goes into the validation of the data that gets entered and people understanding how that works.
Starting point is 01:31:25 So in order for the blockchain to be validated, the FDA has a series of nodes. Their competitors have a series of nodes. Our banks have a series of nodes. So now all of a sudden, everybody with a vested interest to say, is this real or not? They don't know each other. There's all just numbers. Right. So they get to look and say, yeah, that makes sense. The protocol makes sense. The sign off makes sense. The time of day makes sense. The classification makes sense. All the things that they say they're doing because they're posting,
Starting point is 01:31:55 posting their testing like inside of our facility you see it right now I keep pointing out like someone can see it you'll see at some point us doing swabs to test for microbials on every piece of equipment you'll see it putting on a clipboard you'll see all these things go on and then that gets entered into the computer system right as it has time stamp with the person it's proven it's proven right now you can see it you can see what I'm saying but from that every supplement manufacturer every food supplier is should be doing this I agree 100%. With the example we're, I want to go back to the blockchain though.
Starting point is 01:32:30 With the example we're giving, we have to, I've never even heard of this before. I've talked about everyone doing this for shit and you're actually doing it. That's crazy. But like with the camera feed and everything. But assuming that other people aren't doing that and you have the banks, the FDA, all these different parties who have a node or nodes on the blockchain and they have to validate that this company uploaded this test right here on the glass bottles. Yeah. if they weren't there and didn't see it and they're like, well, the time looks good, what they said did looks good, therefore it looks good. How does that solve the problem? I'll go back to the
Starting point is 01:33:04 C-Spiracy example where like they were putting the label on the tune, whatever it was. I'm going to say it was tuna. I don't think it was. But they're putting the label on the tuna is like it was clean and caught clean. Well, let's say that people catch tuna clean in the Mediterranean, like legally, I'm going to make something up at 12 p.m. And so it was uploaded at 12 p.m. And let's say, that people catch it on at, you know, reporting it at this location, whatever ex location is. And on the other end, I actually catch my tuna in one of the illegal locations. I catch it at 9 a.m. illegally. But I just decide to put on the upload.
Starting point is 01:33:41 I caught it at 12 and I caught it here. And now people validated. It's like, oh, it's validated because it's blockchain. But to me, it's not, I hope that's making sense for people out there. But to me, that's not validated. Very true. But that operates on the premise that you would know all the very. components at the same time.
Starting point is 01:33:56 What I mean by that is the sense of anonymity actually starts to create the protective mechanism. Okay. Because if you bought, if you got it at nine o'clock, you have no idea when the noon upload is because it's not always going to be the same. All right, you lost me there. So you're saying you caught your tuna hypothetically at 9 a. 9. It's supposed to be caught at 12.
Starting point is 01:34:17 Unless you know for certain it's supposed to be caught at 12. When you go to post it, it's got a timestamp, it's got all the things, and someone's going to look and say, hold on. This doesn't make sense. This isn't, this isn't, this isn't validated. So part of this ends up being you, the manufacturers have to have a sense of buy into this that this is where the industry is going. Because the first time you fuck up and you lie and you get caught, you're almost kicked off. Yeah, you're kicked off. But I'm saying it would be very easy to lie. I'm trying to keep the example very literal here. Most examples would not be this cut and dry. But if I catch fish offline,
Starting point is 01:34:56 no pun intended at 9 a.m. in an illegal place. Now look at my watch. I say, all right, Captain, in case someone's actually tracking our location data, I need you to drive to this point by 12. So I would say I'll stop you right there. Okay. The way I would solve that is to say, in order to be able to post anything in the blockchain,
Starting point is 01:35:16 you have to have a GPS locator on your boat to even be validated to be able to host something on the blockchain. At all times. At all times. Okay. All right. So you can see. see they were in a legal place. Well, I figured out a way to bounce things across GPS and create a
Starting point is 01:35:30 spoofing mechanism. And so I know how to gamify that. Cool. There's going to be able to do that. 100% is going to people, bad people are always going to do bad shit. Yeah. And say, okay, let's say that happens. Well, you still then have the, anytime those fish change hands, those people have a validation checkpoint. They have to approve the transaction. It moved. So you, you figured out how to gamify your GPS. You figure how to spoof it. You're only in the right place. You even figure out how to alter the time stamp. Then you're going to give the fish to somebody to say it's processed. You'd have to have that entire group of people in on it as well. Every one of them in on it because they not only have to validate the transaction, but they're on the hook for the chain of custody.
Starting point is 01:36:16 So if they lie, they're fucked. But it's not a single point node. It's not just them saying, oh yeah it's noon click right it's oh yeah it's noon hold on where'd you go where'd you go and the other 700 people with a node can we all prove it it's your responsibility to make sure we can that you're proving it to us it's not the way around because if you want to conduct business in the transparent ecosystem it's on you you got to give me everything we need to show that it's validated okay so question why do we need the blockchain for this if everything else for requires physical world validation like that, like cameras and GPS location services and stuff. For me, it's the transfer of data.
Starting point is 01:37:03 I think we're in an emerging age where AI specifically is making it harder and harder and harder to know what's real and what's not. And so the physical cameras, in theory, I guess someone could use AI and completely bullshit all this. Yeah, Joe, can you pull up that tweet we had the other day on the Jake DeMont account? You know what I'm talking about with the chick? Yeah, this. It's getting scary day by day. It's horrible.
Starting point is 01:37:30 And that's where I think the blockchain starts to finally make sense to people. If you have to have your own unique identifier and any time you post content, your physical video content, it had to come through your entry point into the blockchain and other people had to validate it. People are going to start needing to know that it was really your content. Because right, you have enough content online right now. I could rip 10 videos of years and have a stand-l. It looks just like you. It sounds just like you. And that's happening all the time around.
Starting point is 01:37:56 Yeah, of course. That's scary. It's horrible. But to me, that is the evolution that we're starting to trap, you know, step into. And I think this scary, weird thing about blockchain of like it, the other thing with blockchain, I think it's a really bad name. We're not trying to make money with a blockchain. There's no magic fucking alt coin that's going to come out.
Starting point is 01:38:16 There's no magic rug. You don't have a crate of coin? We don't have any of that shit. Come on. We just want to validate. Are you even trying? We're not yet. Okay.
Starting point is 01:38:24 We're not. But I think that's where this gets such a bad name is that the technology behind it makes a lot of sense. I mean, your time on Wall Street, there was a digital layer of transaction for everything you guys did. Yes. Right? Money changes hands.
Starting point is 01:38:38 Somebody stamping it somewhere. Yes. That's available to someone somewhere to review if they wanted to. Internally. Yeah. It's not on a public ledger. 100% for all the reasons that would be. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:50 that couldn't be hacked, altered, edited. We can start to look at Enron, Arthur Anderson, a number of different places. Well, we could say that's actually not true. People will do whatever they need to do. If that's on a blockchain and you have external people that have to validate it, you would have to have a whole conspiracy of thousands of people in on the same thing at the same time.
Starting point is 01:39:12 Yes. And because it's all anonymous, you don't know what the, you don't know all the details behind it. You just know what you need to know to validate or not. validate it. And so when you take out the alt coins, you take out the rug pools, you take out the ICOs and you use it for the core technology of showing that when you said you did something, you actually fucking did it.
Starting point is 01:39:33 Right, right. Yes, of course. That's it. And is it perfect? Fuck, no. We're still figuring out on the fly. Yeah. Like, I'm not professing to have it all figured out, but I know that you see the use case
Starting point is 01:39:43 for it. I see the use case and I see the fact that the average ERP, the average tech platform that all of us are posting our shit to, it's only as good as data you put into it and the overwatch that we put in front of it. Yeah. And so you bring anonymous overwatch from the outside to look at it. And now of a sudden's like, oh, yeah, this, this passes the smell test or it doesn't. Right. And if it doesn't, it just stays in the pending status that requires us to go look at it. And it could still pass. Like, for all I know in the fish example, you actually didn't go somewhere you shouldn't have went. And somebody fat figured one of the, the test results. They transpose two numbers. Yeah. And all,
Starting point is 01:40:18 all of a sudden, normally that would just post somewhere, and then you don't catch it for an audit 45 days later. But because the blockchain has guardrails, it's going to flag it before a post and say, hold on, this doesn't match. So you could prefix, yeah, yeah, you could solve it. It's getting scary, though, with the AI stuff, man. You see this? So, Dief's got this account. It's, wow, Dief. I just found out this was you the other day.
Starting point is 01:40:42 I was like, we do Patreon episodes. Yeah. So Dief was like retweeting this Jake DeMont guy. I'm like, all right, I was about to say, let's get it. him in for a Patreon. Turns out it's just deep under an alter fucking ego because he's like a writer and shit. But this so this is one iteration
Starting point is 01:40:56 of the nanobanana AI. Can we blow that up so people can see this? Steve. This is from Google. So the one on the left is very, this first one is very realistic. But if you look at that close enough, you're like uncanny Valley ever so
Starting point is 01:41:12 slightly, that's AI. Now let's go to the next one. That girl's a fucking angel, bro. Yeah. Look at her. Yep. That's real, but it's not. It's not. Like that girl is perfect. Imagine where this is going to be in two years.
Starting point is 01:41:28 That's one iteration. Oh, we can do the whole conversation around Moore's Law and compute power. And the 18 months is no longer 18 months. It's like eight months. The doubling of compute power and the half of expense associated with it. I mean, to me, if anybody's not paying attention to that on global security, on everything across the board, you're just missing it. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:41:49 Like it's it is crazy. What do you think DARPA has? They're fucking 40 years ahead. Yeah. They've probably been engineering the weather since 92. Just saying. At least. They were trying to talk to dolphins telepathically in 91.
Starting point is 01:42:00 Okay. That's all I'm saying. That means I figured out by 93. That's right. You know what I mean? So where else are they? Uh-huh. Is any of this real?
Starting point is 01:42:09 Probably not. Yeah, maybe you're a figment of my imagination. I don't know. Elon would say it's a simulation. It's, do you ever think it is? I question that more and more. I question you start to really, to me, backtrack some of the origins of religion and what that looks like. And the fact that, you know, the dogma that we all attach ourselves to that it has to be one certain way, but then you look at all the religious scriptures and they're all kind of a version of each other through a specific lens.
Starting point is 01:42:34 Well, where do that all that come from? Why is it there? It could make sense to me that it's all some sort of massive computer simulation that somebody way smarter than we are, way more maybe benevolent hopefully than we are, is. is playing a game to see how we we play itself out. That's not without possibility to me at this point. And why do we live on a planet that's so perfectly distant from the sun with the, you know, 9.8 meters per second gravity, every temperature just right enough to exist every 6,000 years before we wipe ourselves out and have to redo it again.
Starting point is 01:43:11 Like, why, whatever, you know what I mean. Yeah. Like, why is that? I'm with it. You know? I'm with it. I just had David Kipping in here who's, he's the head of the cool world's lab at Columbia, one of the coolest dudes have ever talked to, no pun intended.
Starting point is 01:43:25 But he, his whole life is studying and like, among other things, is studying and trying to find exoplanets. Okay. You know, across the galaxy, if you will, the universe. And, you know, like, he'll see these places and he's like, yeah, no one could live there though over and over and over again. And then there's sight, like he thinks there could be places where people could live or life could live, but it just goes to show you the more and more we find, a guy like him finds,
Starting point is 01:43:53 the more and more rare we are to be able to be here, which you wonder, like, I've always cited this, but that last scene in Men in Black, where they're playing with the marbles that turn into a marble that turn, you know, it's like, yeah. It's possible. It could be. It could be. I also had Riz Verkan here. You ever hear that guy? I haven't. He's cool as shit. He's like the godfather of simulation theory. One of them. I shouldn't call him the godfather. I mean, I love Riz. I think he's a genius.
Starting point is 01:44:20 I know people came up with it before him, but he's really run with it. He's an MIT scientist. I've had him in here twice for episodes 274, and then I think I had him back for like 329. But he or 3.30, but he basically has gone through like all the mathematical probabilities that we could be in a simulation and what that would mean. And what scares me about is it's like, does that mean there's no free will? And it's all just predetermined. And like when I do a good thing or when I do a bad thing, that wasn't my decision,
Starting point is 01:44:56 that's where I start to get a little freak the fuck out. Yeah. Use Russia them real quick. Oh, yeah, yeah. We'll be right back. All right. We're back. So let's get back into some of the 708 stuff that's been helpful for you to draw all the
Starting point is 01:45:10 differences today as well. And I appreciate your candor with all this as well because this is a new frontier. And you're in a business. You're supposed to go make money. But you're also trying to be transparent about it and make a product that's not going to fucking hurt people and stuff like that. But I had Steve Robinson in here a couple months ago. And Steve's great.
Starting point is 01:45:31 He's like been on a crusade up in, up in Maine and particularly where he's from, where he's uncovered all kinds of abuses of just the overall legalized industry, which I do want to help exposed because I don't want us to blow this. You know what I mean? And there's people who push back on a lot of shit, Steve says, but I don't think Steve's 100% right about everything. I think he's on to a lot of things that he has really good evidence for though. And so just like we shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater on, you know, the direction of legalization, we also shouldn't throw it out on the people who are trying to say, hey, let's pull back a little bit here and make sure we're doing it the right way, which is what he's doing. Now, he's uncovered a whole Chinese thing going on there with
Starting point is 01:46:20 the triads. And I mean, he has it down to the addresses of places they're buying up to do illegal grows and all kinds of shit. However, he also came upon the whole 70H thing. And this was a shock to him. He didn't know anything about this. And he raised the point about the people buying this up in gas stations and getting addicted. Now, I believe there were a couple people who they were saying maybe were traced to death with 70H, but to be fair, there's probably other underlying causes there as well. I'm not sure. Everyone out there arguing in the comment section, you know, when you see reporters starting to go in and dig at this kind of thing, though, like Steve, and find a lot of stories of people who are having horror stories to where they have to go into rehab and it's ruining
Starting point is 01:47:09 their family life and everything like that, even if you believe that 7ohH may be. has a ceiling to not be able to kill people on its own. Do you not think it's a, maybe a similar category towards other opioids and stuff like that that we actually should regulate and not have on the market if we can see that it's causing people to have to go to rehab? Man, what a... It's a loaded question. I'm sorry. No, it's not. It's not. I think the, the, I think anytime I hear someone speaking absolutes, there's a sense of bullshit in it. Yeah. And what I mean by that is, when I started, I'll say my crusade in March or April going to D.C.,
Starting point is 01:47:46 I was convinced the world looked one way, and here we are in December, and I think the world looks a little bit different. And what I mean by that is we'd have to, I want to zoom out and look and say, how many times have we tried to abolish something? And what has been the outcome of doing that? Prohibition's great example. Has it worked before? The genie is already out of the bottle.
Starting point is 01:48:10 Now, whether I think it should go back in the bottle or should never came out of the bottle, almost doesn't, it's irrelevant, it's out. And so saying, if that is in fact true, how do we, how do we structured in a way that minimizes harm unilaterally? To me, that starts with transparency. I mean, it's what we believe in. Actually, you care less to quote unquote talk about our business. I care more about the industry and what I think we should start focusing on as a society.
Starting point is 01:48:37 It just happens to be I get amused that's our business of saying, here's everything we are, here's everything we fuck up. I think that's a better way to live personally. But when I look at the confusion that started with 70H was because it was sold in convenience stores, gas station, smoke shops, and it was originally labeled as an advanced cratum alkaloid. So you had a customer that walked through the front door that up until mid-24 had only ever been exposed to cratum. Now, they walk in for whatever the reason and are told, this is a better version of cratum.
Starting point is 01:49:10 And because they've got a sense of trust or rapport building with the place they bought their product from, they say sure. Now, simultaneously, we can pull up and you can see, I'll make sure to share it. It's going to be on X somewhere. Eric Finnaman would be the one to look at. You're going to see that some of our counterparts in the 70H world were taking out billboards on the side of highways. that it said free 70H.com and a QR code. And they knew that they would physically say, it wasn't like a free plus shipping model.
Starting point is 01:49:45 Like they would send you free product because they knew if you took the product, they knew you're going to buy more. Like the quintessential drug dealing 101, give you a sample, not charge you anything for it. It's coming to you for free. And they know you're going to buy more. That to me is where like, hold on,
Starting point is 01:50:01 people knew at that moment they were doing something that was addictive. You just don't do that unless you know it's going to back out on the backside. And so part of it to me starts with whether it's good or bad, I'm not the ultimate judge. I think we need labeling that very clearly states this is addictive because all the science shows it's addictive. I think it should be like a cigarette type of addiction. Now, does that kind of stop people from consuming it? Probably not.
Starting point is 01:50:30 Could it stop the 18 year old that walked into the gas station? that one of his friends said something. He sees like, man, my mom was addicted to something. I don't think I should do this. Maybe. Maybe not. I don't know. I originally would have started and said,
Starting point is 01:50:49 I think it should be a Schedule 1. So when you look at July 29th, you see a press conference that I was a part of with RFK, with Marty McCarrie, with Jim O'Neill in D.C. Oh, you're up on the dais with them? I was not on the physical stage with them, but I'll just say I played a role and I was invited to be in the press conference as well. Got it.
Starting point is 01:51:10 And you'll see them start to discuss just the harmful nature of what's going on. The fact that it's the fourth wave of the opioid crisis. The fact that the fourth wave of the opioid crisis. Yep. I mean, you look at like the first wave would have been, what maybe the heroin, how things started. Then I think it switched to oxycotton. Then it went to fentanyl. They were saying, 7.O.H.
Starting point is 01:51:34 is a fourth wave. Interesting. I would say that's true. With the asterisk that now over the past nine months, with how much of this is being consumed, so this industry didn't exist in 23. From 24 until now, it's somewhere between nine and 10 billion dollars a year in revenue.
Starting point is 01:51:55 And so when you look at a unit of consumption, if we walk to a gas station, you're gonna buy a package, we'll say $20. There's been a lot of people consuming a lot of product. If it would, was as harmful as I would like it to be, not as I might have made it out to be, you would have seen people dying left, right, and center. I understand what you're saying.
Starting point is 01:52:14 Right. There's so much that's been consumed. It's like, okay, hold on. I want to be right, but I might not be right. And so if it's not killing people, which is a fucked up basis for base level, I'm acknowledging that. It's still addictive. Yes.
Starting point is 01:52:28 But there's a handful of people that are consuming it, that it's physically helping them exist. They're business owners. their mother, their fathers that are using it to get through their day. That's a small subset. I'm a numeric guy. So I look at the fact that if you look at the average gas station convenience or in the U.S., you're going to get somewhere around,
Starting point is 01:52:47 by the time that the water finds the level, you have about 20 million potential people that are going to buy something inside of a gas station at point of sale that could be easily converted to try something new. It's about how the math breaks out. When you look at the number of people that are in active recovery right now, say to the U.S., it's about two and a half million. So if I look at who am I going to look to protect more, the two and a half million people that could completely get off of fentanyl, could completely get off of methamphetamines, could completely get off of Suboxin methadone, and switch to a natural botanic based product, maybe two or three million people. Those people do matter. But I look at the 20 million people that are walking new gas station. We need to protect those people from making a mistake and becoming addicted. So the challenging part is,
Starting point is 01:53:34 the genie's out of the bottle. You look at what's happened in the CBD world, Steve, cannabis, CBD. So from Steve's time on Steve's show, we became connected to Steve from Maine, right? And started sharing all the information that we had as well. Yeah, I knew Rocco knew him, so I figured you did too. Yeah, yep, great guy. I mean, when you start to look at it, it's saying the, the CBD, world where you had originally CBD like I had a CBD company from 16 to 18 it was just CBD then you
Starting point is 01:54:10 have Delta 8 Delta 9 Delta 10 THCa THC BD all the things I'm not familiar with the chemists figured out all these crazy things to do with the same molecular structure those chemists that that has become a true commodity there's no revenue there's no profit left in that industry many of those scientists and chemists vacated and came to our industry now and so you have the seven hydroxy well now there's 16 different very seven hydroxy is not the biggest issue seven hydroxy converts to something called pseudo endoxone So if you can if you consume seven hydroxy a tab of seven hydroxy And you metabolize that and you test your blood serum levels post liver You see something in your bloodstream called pseudoindoxinal. Okay
Starting point is 01:54:57 That's 20 times more potent than seven oh h That's in market right now you can pull up pseudoindoxinal you can pull it up on the screen you're gonna see 70H and pseudo, it kind of goes by the name pseudo, that product's already in market. There's another further synthetic derivative. So you metabolize 70H into pseudo. You metabolize pseudo into something called MGM 16. MGM 16. MGM 16 is now, that could be wrong, 10 to 20 times more potent than pseudo.
Starting point is 01:55:33 And so you have this game of whackamol that's starting to get played. where say, okay, can we learn from the CBD world? Can we learn from the cannabis world? Can we do things that are different? Because right now, one of the differences is Cratum is legal federally. It's not illegal. Right.
Starting point is 01:55:50 Like it is allowed to be sold and consumed. In all 50 states, too? No. So there are six states that it's now currently illegal in and another 8, 10, 12 counties across the U.S. Interesting. So that's even its own nuanced issue. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:08 And so for me, what I'm starting to look at is say, how do we regulate it? Regulate it being if you decide as an informed consumer that you want to buy this stuff, how do we know it's manufactured the right way? How do we know what a serving size is? How do we know what's in it is clean? How can we backtrack all the things? Because then if you're making the decision because you want to experience that, that's up to you yeah this is where um all right this is a wider conversation when it comes to let me go to the
Starting point is 01:56:46 highest level when it comes to just legalization of substances sometimes it feels like you're stuck between a shit and a fart right because on the one hand if you legalize everything you legalize heroin you legalize blow like you are going to have in the free market with especially when you enter drugs that we know can be deadly you are going to have deaths and you are going to have, you know, the, I don't want to state this the wrong way, but, you know, like the tragedy of the, of every anecdotal time that happens, which will not be once or twice, it'll be a very uncomfortable number to where you then will have movements for him to push it all the way back in the other direction. Now let me bring it down to 15,000 feet in the air. The legalization we have chosen to do with CBD, marijuana, all the, you know, crazy. them, all these different things. Yeah, maybe people can't end up under these procedures making things that are tantamount to like fentanyl or something that can kill you.
Starting point is 01:57:48 But if they start doing things that on an anecdotal level builds into a lot of different anecdotals, like a 70H, that then leads to serious social upheaval from a group of society saying, wait a minute, let's put this genie all the way back in the bottle. we can't have nice things, you're going to go all the way back. You know, society is a pendulum. How hard do you want that pendulum to swing, though? And what it feels like is that this whole industry was set up in a way where they're like, people, they fought it for the longest time.
Starting point is 01:58:24 You go all the way back to the 30s when they fucking outlawed weed. They made a schedule one drug and shit and all this. And it's like, they fought it, they fought it, they fought it, they fought it, they said, fuck it. Open up the doors here. Everything goes. and it's like the people that did that are like, watch what happens now, bitch, because you're going to have an uncontrollable free market flowing into this and problems are going to arise
Starting point is 01:58:46 and you're going to end up building a movement from the other side to, like I said, push it back. And sometimes it feels like that's exactly what's happening. It's the same example with the NCAA in paying athletes. I've supported that my whole life. I absolutely think those athletes should be able to go make money on their name. It's crazy that everyone made billions of dollars except the people who did it. right but the guys like mark emmer the old fucking wigs in the room who fought it forever i really think they were like okay fuck it you guys want it we'll give you all of it watch what happens
Starting point is 01:59:17 and they set up a system that's built to fail now you got kids transferring on a tuesday because they feel a little differently than they did on friday you know you got legendary coaches retiring because they can't even keep up with it you know so do you worry we're going to head in that direction with this industry yes I think, I think, again, over a long enough rise and everything's cyclical. Yeah. I think it's great that some people might want to try to learn from the indiscretion to the, the misgivings of the past. But is enough people that would want to do it for the right reasons?
Starting point is 01:59:50 Right. The counterargument to this on my side, it's what gets thrown around against me online all the time. It's the only reason that we want to ban this is because it hurt our dollars. It hurt our bottom line. That's, we could pull up 100 people online that are saying that's the only reason I want to gone. It's like, hold on. I can literally show you evidence that I knew how to do this before any of you. And I could go do it right now. And I could do it right now.
Starting point is 02:00:11 But I choose not to. I choose not to. Now, it's not that my way is right and your way is wrong or vice versa. But it's not because of the dollars and cents. It's because to me, I want to make sure this doesn't turn into a false, a false idol crusade. Yes. I happen to have lost my best friend to an accidental overdose in 2018. Now, that's not why I'm in the industry.
Starting point is 02:00:33 That's not some sort of heroes. journey of now I'm here to save the day. I didn't know this industry existed. My best friend ended up breaking his leg playing high school football. Went to the hospital, was put on a lot of drip, was in there, getting it reset, was in there for a week, 10 days, whatever it was, was discharged to go home, was given if I could in Perkissette, whatever would have been, had maybe a month supply that to wean off the pain. But then that was it. There was no, there was nothing else. And so then he turned to black market pills when he's, couldn't have the money for the black market pills, switch to heroin.
Starting point is 02:01:08 And here's a guy that, you know, upper middle class, white guy from suburb Ohio, like, doesn't really, I mean, it checks of boxes, but he, he had a lot going for him. Yeah. Was in and out of rehab from, you know, 19 until, you know, 23, 24, kicked it, beat it. In his mind, he became a, a large advocate for sobriety inside of, you know,
Starting point is 02:01:31 the little world of suburb, uh, Columbus, Ohio. And then one thing leads to another and he starts to do better for himself. He starts to sign a lease on a new apartment in downtown Columbus and decides for whatever the reason to buy some Coke goes to his new condo that's unfurnished. He just got the keys puts a line of Coke on a sink and it happens at fentanyl in it. And it kills on. And it was one of the most horrible catastrophic things that ever happened to me. I mean, it just shattered my sense of reality because here's this guy that is part of
Starting point is 02:02:03 CBD company. Here's all these things. Oh, he was in your company too. Oh, yeah, yeah. And he started to do better for himself with the success of the business. So moved out of his parents. Like all these things, parents ended up blaming me for a while. It was a challenging time in life. And so I sit there and say, okay, from where I'm at now, if this product existed back then,
Starting point is 02:02:25 would I want him to take it or not? And I don't know how to answer the question. Back when specifically? 2018 when he when he accidentally overdosed when he was chasing a feeling when that when that thing tapped him on the shoulder and said you need to do something different but okay not to get too literalist here but no we can coax coke's different yeah it's i mean that's going out to party and fucking i mean i never tried it because it looked fucking amazing and very expensive i work for seven 25 an hour in college and all these fucking kids were spending a hundred bucks for three hours to do fucking blow and then spending it. I'm like, I don't know where you get the money. Number one, it looks expensive. But number two, like never saw someone on Coke who wasn't having a good time. Totally different than when you see someone on fucking oxycontin. Yeah. You know what? Like,
Starting point is 02:03:14 these are different. Very different. To me, I believe in his side, he was chasing feelings. Like, he was chasing to escape reality. He wanted to feel a different way. And so in his mind, he thought that I don't know, I never am going to have the chance to have this conversation. But he, I don't, He had never shared with me. He'd done Coke before. And so it wasn't like this was this monkey that was in the background. It's like, oh, well, I want to do something different. I'm going to go do this.
Starting point is 02:03:43 I don't know if that's true or not. I could be completely making this story up. But if we pull up anecdotal conversations on a Reddit forum or things like that, you're going to have people that say, 7.0.8 gives me tons of energy. Makes me feel great. I can just zip through my day. I see what you're saying. It's a tough.
Starting point is 02:03:58 Yeah, I don't know if I'd. And so that's where I said. It's a tough one. When I started in March and April, it was this needs to be a Schedule 1. This is going to be the bane of our existence. I'm the far end of the pendulum. And then as time's progressing, I'm somewhere more towards the middle of saying, okay, if we ban it, it's just going to cascade in something else, somewhere else.
Starting point is 02:04:18 But you still have no temptation to make it at your company. Absolutely not. Okay. Absolutely not. That's interesting. So you're not to be, and this is like a compliment. You're not technically in the middle on it. You're in the middle on the legislation of it.
Starting point is 02:04:32 if you're going to be a part of that conversation, which you are. But it sounds, it's just, I don't know, it's a tough one because it sounds like, it sounds like a little bit of double speak because you're like, no, we're never, it is. It is. But I think that that to me is, who knows, I'm going to be on a soapbox for just a second. I think the individuals that get locked into one perspective that refuse to consider other opportunities or other perspectives miss out on a whole bunch of what the world has to offer. And so when I start in March and say, like, I know it's hurt these five people.
Starting point is 02:05:08 I know like our revenue hadn't changed as of March. If I like, if I were to pull up our our our revenue and look at Q1 of this year versus Q4 of the previous year, our trend lines are still in the same direction. Our revenue is not fucked at all. Zero percent of changed. But I see these people that unknowingly got introduced to a product and became addicted. Right. I'm like, somebody's got to do something about that. I understand why.
Starting point is 02:05:30 Because we knew the science back in 23. So I understand what's going on. And fortunately or unfortunately, as I massively categorize our industry, a lot of the owners of other businesses in the Creightum space, because they might have come from the spice days, because they might have had different pass, I don't know they'd be as comfortable going to D.C. having conversations. I think, you know, if you pull up, you know, I know that if I want to, as I will say, get into Capitol Hill, if somebody has a background check on me, I'm going to pass. I don't know. There's not a couple speaking tickets. Like, not the end of the world. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:06:02 No drug trafficking, no criminal convictions, no felonies, no things like that. Yeah, that's what we said. We weren't that told me. I know. Well, whatever. I'm sharing it now. I'm just trying to help you. I appreciate it.
Starting point is 02:06:12 I appreciate watching out for me. And I need to watch out for. But in sharing those things, it's saying, okay, somebody need to do something. And I felt comfortable at least going and open in the conversation. And when I started in D.C. in March or April, whatever it was, I'm sitting down with congressmen, senators, HHS, FDA. Like, what the fuck. are you talking about? You're talking about
Starting point is 02:06:34 Kratum. We tried to, we tried to schedule that in 2016. I'm not talking about Kratum. There's this other thing you don't even know about and it's everywhere. It sounds like you've had some direct conversations with RFK about this or more of the people around them. Some of all of it. Okay. Whether it's directly with him or some of the people around them in the, in the combination of all the conversations, where is the current departments head at? this. I mean, you said they were calling it the fourth wave and everything, but I don't know if you want to like reveal this, but behind closed doors, how are they looking at it? Is that like some
Starting point is 02:07:13 public marketing that they're saying it that way? And maybe they feel a little more nuanced on it, or do they actually feel that strongly about it? So I didn't know these things prior to this whole year. When I start bringing to the attention of everyone I brought it to attention to, they said, we need to do what's called an eight factor analysis. There are eight factors that are required by the FDA to deem if something's harmful or not. We hear you, Ryan. We understand the science you're showing us, but we need to do our own analysis to it. And so they start in, I'll make it up, March or April doing this.
Starting point is 02:07:48 And the eight factor takes time. And the end of the eight factor, they say unequivocally, this should be a schedule one. It checks all the boxes for what should be a Schedule I narcotic. And so that's the press conference. And from July 29, he pulled it up on YouTube. It's there. They say very clearly, a fourth wave of the opioid crisis needs to be a Schedule 1.
Starting point is 02:08:05 It's our recommendation. Yes, yes, yes. That's the public. That's the public. They meant that all the way up to that point. And I think they still mean that. Then it goes to the DEA. The DEA now has to also do their own eight-factor analysis
Starting point is 02:08:19 to prove that the FDA wasn't foolish yet. And then the DEA is the only one that can actually, other than the president, invoke a scheduling of a product. And so I know from ongoing conversations with HHS and FDA, they're still saying this is horrible and pseudoindoxonell is horrible and MGM's horrible. And everything you're sharing, yes, yes, yes, yes, we see it. We're still on the same page.
Starting point is 02:08:43 As so much so, they're asking the DA like, can you get off your ass and do something? The challenge is, of course, during that time period, the government shutdown. We have a current administration who has wanted to, I think, have some level of a surplus, hypothetically. So they started pulling back on any level of additional support. So the FDA is at an all-time low from a staffing standpoint. The DEA is at an all-time low from a staffing standpoint. DEA, too.
Starting point is 02:09:09 But you also have to look at, this is, again, things I didn't know. The FDA, I'm going to make up the numbers. Who knows what the fuck it is? Let's say they have 20,000 employees. That's for everything, food and drug in the entire U.S. Yeah, it's not enough. And so you look at the little tiny department that supplements, let's call it 20 people. So these 20 people, I don't care if it's 200 people.
Starting point is 02:09:30 They have to go and inspect every facility. Oh my God. Cool labels. Do testing. There's not enough manpower to do it. Oh my God. And so the fact that they even didn't eight factor and they really did it. And they're really like, yes, thank you.
Starting point is 02:09:43 You're exactly right. Like awesome. Thank you. Press conference, yes. Handed over the DA. And DA is like, well, hold on. We're worried about the Sunilowan cartel and blowing them up as they're trying to bring fentanyl into the country.
Starting point is 02:09:55 worried about the CCP and their connection. We're worried about all this stuff. And you want us to fuck with Cratum. 70H. I see what you're saying. And so I say, hold on a second. From the first time I went to D.C., not the first time, but this year.
Starting point is 02:10:13 I'm with my lobbyist off of Capitol Hill. He's got some people around him and says, one of the people says, I think you're being followed. What are you talking about? Nobody's following me. I'm literally a nobody. No, I think you're being followed. And I'm like, okay, maybe this is some sort of hustle.
Starting point is 02:10:31 They're going to shake me down for some money for protect. Like, I'm instantly getting into the way the world could work. I see, that's fine. Whatever. Another day passes. We have another meeting off. I feel like, no, we're pretty positive being followed. I said, of course, you go to Capitol Hill.
Starting point is 02:10:45 You got to have the background chest. Yeah, you get followed. Right? I mean, sure. So I go back home, all the pieces and parts. And the lobbyist team calls me and says, no, we, we, we know you're being followed. And we kind of have a sense of who it is. We are taking some pictures, run it through some intelligence.
Starting point is 02:11:05 And it's a similar own cartel. Following you. I say it. Bullshit. Like, where is the ask for you to then offer me protection? They said, we don't offer protection services. I said, hold on. You mean to tell me the cartel's involved in this somehow?
Starting point is 02:11:22 They said, I don't know. They're just the ones that we think. think we're falling. We have a pretty good reason to believe they're falling you. All right. On a scale of one to ten, ten being like I should hunker down on a bunker and never come out and one being I should just walk around the target on my back. Where do you rate this risk? So maybe four and a half, five. I'm like, thanks, right down the middle. I'm like, well, what the fuck am I going to do? So just continue. You look like you could take them. Yeah. Might be all right.
Starting point is 02:11:50 And so one thing leads to another and, and I'm out and about in the world. And, and I see an individual walking around doesn't really fit the environment. I'm in Latin American individual and in a place where Latin Americans wouldn't normally be. How dare you? I know. I'm sorry. Just the nature of some places, they're just not a large Latin American population. This individual has a face tattoo, a shaved head.
Starting point is 02:12:14 Like, doesn't, like which one of these doesn't belong? He didn't belong. And he eventually walks up and he literally sits at a table adjacent to me and starts taking pictures and video and laughing. Okay. this is really weird maybe food on my like whatever so I shake it off this is three weeks afterwards fast forward to another week or two so I'm back and forth to DC a couple times a month and I have a trip plan to go to DC on a Monday and I'm at a shopping center don't know what I'm buying don't don't really remember the details but an individual walks past
Starting point is 02:12:48 like I tried before store closed walks past me goes and looks at some things comes back and walks in front of me and says, have fun in D.C. tomorrow. I don't think you should go. Now, no one knows I'm going to D.C. This isn't like public. I'm not posting some magic place. Like, I've got an itinerary that I booked an hour before.
Starting point is 02:13:09 Like, there's nothing. Oh, okay. And this is the same time I, that Rocco joins us. And so I'm like, this is, this is really uncomfortable now. This is really uncomfortable. And so I bring it up to,
Starting point is 02:13:24 to my my lobbyist the guy that helps is helping us with this stuff he said look i've had you know from lobbying for 20 years i've had some things going on in my life because i'll introduce you to somebody that can at least do a deeper sense of background if you needed some protection they could do that and so they do what they do and they share what they share which then eventually has me saying to roco hey but i know this is really weird i don't know who to tell this to because everything's i'm fucking crazy but i've had two or three interactions with somebody that doesn't really fit like it wouldn't be anywhere normal. People somehow know I'm going places that there's no record of me going.
Starting point is 02:14:00 So it feels like our systems have been hacked. Do you know anything about that? Do you have anybody? He goes, oh yeah, I used to do that. I'm like, I'm like, wait, what? And it's like Pandora's box opens his eyes light up. Oh, yeah, brother. I got you.
Starting point is 02:14:16 A hundred percent. That's exactly what it was. And I'm like, what do you mean? And he, you know, shares what he shares. And that then introduces me to a whole, whole new way of being where you know have have up armored vehicles and have security team and yeah you got some are you allowed to talk about that thing with your guy and your friend and yeah yeah so you got like a heavy hitter now helping you well you know to to have i think anytime
Starting point is 02:14:39 there's a lot of money involved in situations that sometimes money clouds people's judgment and so whether it's a cartel or the chinese communist party or the russian brapah which we'll get into the thing is all of them in different ways. I think anytime you have a chance to impact people's pocket books significantly, some people might not want that to happen. And so I think originally things were more of a scare tactic. Right? Like if somebody wanted me dead, I would have been dead.
Starting point is 02:15:08 That's not a big deal. Yes. But what does end up happening is as Rocco has helped us assemble a security team, not only for our business, but for me as a person and just life in general. some of those people have a background that I'm not, hadn't been familiar with, right, that had done things inside of three letter agencies that had done things
Starting point is 02:15:31 inside of the Marines that had been part of, you know, assisting some elite level operating crews. Like whacking people and shit. You know, whatever they've done, they've done. Right.
Starting point is 02:15:42 And then, you know, it has worked inside of Marines and in the CIA. And why that ends up being interesting is it exposed me to a whole different level of intel that I'd never considered before. You know, every one of our phones has, you know, not only a tracking device on it, but if you're interacting with social media and you happen to open up the app that drops a pin somewhere that someone can easily see where you're at and what they're doing.
Starting point is 02:16:04 They're marking that for you. They're marking it. I mean, it's happening all the time, nonstop, no matter what all of us are doing. And I wasn't aware of all this. And so I start taking social off my devices and I don't care about the stuff anyways. But then as I'm exposing the security team to more and more and more of what's going on and how it's all interacted. They say, well, we'll just do a, you know, a deep dive analyzation of all this. We have access to some software and then we'll, we'll interact with.
Starting point is 02:16:32 We'll actually pay a company that can go even deeper than we can go. And they do a really in-depth deep dive on the industry, the bills of lading, the shipping, the wire confirmations, what's happening where. And unequivocally, with no shadow of a doubt, you have the Chinese communist party that is sending a series of extract solutions and solvents and things to a handful of very specific people in the u.s they are absolutely on the the naughty list and it's a it's a company that's on the do not fly list that is directly sending product to us wait wait not do not fly the right right no i understand what you're saying it's a company you're saying the company in china the company actually sending they're not sending it like through the cartels coming across the
Starting point is 02:17:17 board they're directly sending it to the u.s directly sending to the u.s yeah You have the cartel that's the Sinalone cartel that's involved with some aspect of what it looks like originally money laundering, but I think it's more than that now. And then you have, same thing with the Russian Brappa, that there's a direct connection to some of the industry that what looks like, speculative, I don't know this to be true. It looks like one of the individuals probably took a loan out from somebody to get a business off the ground and maybe didn't know that it was someone you wouldn't want to loan from. Yeah, when you say Russian Bratfa, you were referring to their mafia. I am. Yeah. And so you have this, I'll call it as much as dead to rights, this whole intelligent package that we put together that we've turned over to the FBI, to the DIA. That's not so promising these days.
Starting point is 02:18:04 Right now, we're looking for something as, we'll be conscientious of this. When this has been brought up to the FBI, they say we're aware of it. and it's part of a bigger ongoing investigation. Great. So what should I do? Just protect yourself. Okay. Cool.
Starting point is 02:18:30 Thank you. I'll see you in Valhalla, brother. Cool. Right? So it's just, it's been an interesting year with saying, you know, I started out on something that I had no idea
Starting point is 02:18:42 any of that shit was behind the scenes. It was just people looking to make money, but it's a lot more than that. Yeah. And then having conversations with Steve and starting to see kind of the underbelly, that's where that conspiracy thing, conspiracy theory, like so much that is a conspiracy theory, it's not. In this case, I mean, he's got addresses, bro.
Starting point is 02:19:03 And we go as far as we have addresses of businesses external from the states, right? It's only external, right? That's important to state. But we've got addresses. We've got pictures. We've got bills of lading. We've got wire receipts. We've got we've got entire packages to show what's actually happening.
Starting point is 02:19:19 Yep. So this isn't like, well, it could be maybe happening. And this is using some pretty advanced tech that we paid somebody else to do, right? It's not our tech. And it's like, holy shit, like this is real, that this is really happening. And then I said back like, why would anybody want to fuck with this? Like, why? How creative do you want me to get on that, on the answer to that?
Starting point is 02:19:42 Well, I'll share my speculation. I want to know your side. Well, let's get yours first. Yeah, because when I started looking at it. I started looking at is originally thinking it was just a cartel, just a synalone cartel. Just, but starting there. I started on the path of, hold on, if fentanyl is being squeezed out and you have this drug that's really inexpensive to manufacture that you're not going to overdose on, but it is hyper
Starting point is 02:20:07 addictive, you've now built a customer for life in your ecosystem. That's right. And saying, okay, but then I see the combination, the connection from CCP. to the cartel and more of a destabilization of the American society and what's going on there. You can see not only are they is a CCP shipping product, not product, but solvents and things like that directly, but they are now doing things with the cartel as well. That just wasn't where it started. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 02:20:32 They've been doing that for a while. Yeah. Right. In our industry, we can see that. And so I'm saying, okay, they're looking to destabilize our life, our society as a whole. I'm a little lost on the Russian side of things other than. the natural sense of money laundering and back and forth. Could it be destabilization as well?
Starting point is 02:20:50 You would know a lot more than I would in that sense. Because here I look at, I'm just laughingly, I'm a guy that didn't inherently care about a business that loves business that then comes in and says, man, there's a big problem over here. Why don't we solve the big problem collectively? Why don't we watch out for people? Why don't we take a product mainstream that then in doing all this, there's this whole other Pandora's box that gets opened and saying,
Starting point is 02:21:10 there's a lot of fucked up stuff that goes on in the world. I can see not we have sex trafficking evidence we've got child trafficking evidence it's all the same and we have it all it's like I'm seeing how all these pieces go you're getting it too what do you mean I'm not getting I'm not no no you're getting no not you but I'm saying like in your security team going through things that relate to your industry they're also bumping into this stuff they are and and yeah now I've heard this from fucking 40 million people from all different angles reporting on the same thing. It's obviously completely true. Yeah. And just seeing that knowing, and again, these aren't, this isn't me. Originally it was how do we just create a perimeter, right? How do we
Starting point is 02:21:51 protect just the, just a business itself? To me, when you have an industry that went from zero to $9 billion in 18 months, all of a sudden, there's a lot of extra cash holding around and it caused a lot of havoc. So it was originally, let's just button up our four walls and make sure nobody could come in and spike our product. That's what started. If I was going to fuck with somebody and I had the inroads, I would put a plant in, I would put somebody inside your facility, I would drop some stuff. I would then, you know, leak it. And all of a sudden, poof, you're out of business. And so we started protecting that. And then it was, well, holy shit, I'm being tracked. I'm being traced. I got to essentially start to become a ghost. I got to start using Faraday bags.
Starting point is 02:22:26 I got to start figuring out how to divert where I'm going and people don't know where I'm going all the time. I need different cell phones. Do you get scared? For a long time, I was for the first four months i wasn't sleeping much at all i mean this is so far out like i didn't sign up for all this shit i mean to have a guy walk up to you in the store and say have fun in dc an essay yeah it was one of those when i heard it it i'm like what the fuck did i just hear and the guy walks out the door and i'm like was this real yeah and then it is real and then we i land in dc that's the other part i land in dc and and start getting um hop in a car and a pilot calls me and says he keeps calling him on a phone call and then some maybe 15 minutes towards downtown and you finally pick up the phone
Starting point is 02:23:12 he goes hey ryan he said yeah he goes you're being followed like what do you mean he goes there's a brown whatever it was kea sportage is there one behind you i'd look sure shit three cars back a brown kea sportage falls me all the way to downtown and here's there's no itinerary there's no i'm like this is fucking wild to me and so it's during those times i'm not sleeping i'm not eating you think of all like it's so wild to me with how much i travel you check into a hotel yeah you're vulnerable everywhere absolutely i don't have an idea who has come in before me and spoken to the clerk behind the counter and says i'm ryan's insert x insert y has already went to the room has already put stuff down is already waiting for me there like all of a sudden it's just everything
Starting point is 02:24:00 that is normal is not normal they um god damn it's where all this shit is dirty no matter where you turn your head. They, I'm guessing, you know, if they saw you as a guy that was trying to actively lobby against this, which you would think, oh, that creates a total dark black market for them. Maybe they'd like that better. But obviously, there's something so good about the legal market that they're able to use as their own fucking black market right now, that they're like, no, we want that. And that probably has a lot to do with China.
Starting point is 02:24:32 I'm talking about the cartel is getting involved, obviously, too. But, no, it's interesting because this is where my head goes. with this stuff, you bring in the security, three-letter agency, high-level, X ground branch type people, X, you know, I could see, I'm not implicating my boy Rocco in this. I'm not saying he would know this, but I could see how Rocco through his connections, the people look at Rocco, and they're like, oh, wait, Rocco's connected to that guy. We're still working over here. We can kind of use this as a back channel to get in there. And I don't say this from, you know, some fucking tinfoil hat place. I mean, I had a pretty surreal moment back in March. I had Ed Calderon sitting in that chair right there. He's obviously been, you know, he was a cartel cop in Mexico. He's been the guy reporting on this for decades at this point. And, you know, he's just cooking. And why he was sitting here for like six hours. We did two episodes. He's cooking at one point. And he's like, you know, going through all these different things. And he's like, so are we going
Starting point is 02:25:34 to talk about like the CIA getting two of these big banks and, you know, getting top 10 and then laundering money for the cartel. Are we going to talk about that? And I'm like, Ed, as a matter of fact, seven days ago, I shit you not. I had the guy who was the knock from the CIA who was that dude who did flip that guy at the bank to launder money for the cartels on behalf of the CIA as a part of the mission. So yeah, we are going to talk about that. We actually did just talk about that on the show as well, but please continue. And he didn't even skip a beat. He wasn't like, He was like, yeah, exactly. And just kept going.
Starting point is 02:26:07 And it's like, the world is this really fucked up place. And all these dark underground organizations, including the worst criminal organizations that exist, are actually cover battlefields for people on both sides of the coin, be it foreign governments, our own government, espionage agencies, obviously, whatever, to use as a tool for access, for whatever means they're going to do that for.
Starting point is 02:26:34 some cases, it's not actually to stop it, by the way. Maybe for just pure intelligence purposes. In other cases, I'd like to think it be to help to try to curb some of this stuff or stop it. But it gets really fucking weird. So that's what I was saying, like where my head goes to with some of this. I'm not saying that's what it is. But I do wonder sometimes if like that's where the eye is on the ball. I agree. It's been it was one of those things that physically made me sick the first time I started putting together what I thought could be pieces. And what I mean by that is, of course, to me, I have this romanticized version of the CIA that they're, you know, out inside the world doing, you know, inherent good. I know. I know. Right. I'm sorry. But, you know, they're out protecting us or doing whatever. They're destabilizing governments for our best ability. Uh-huh. And let's even, I'll even operate in a sense for just a moment. Let's say that's unequivocally true.
Starting point is 02:27:29 I'll put on rose card glasses that it has to be true. I know. I know. But then how foolish am I to think that other countries haven't done the same thing with their version and take them into our ecosystem? That's right. That we're so advanced and we're so sophisticated that no one could come on our turf. And as I start going to D.C. and start having these meetings and start seeing which ones work and which ones don't work. And saying like, hold on, at the highest level, you have a product that you know is addictive that's being sold in gas stations. And we've got kids as young as 15 being sold. That should not be allowed in any circumstances.
Starting point is 02:28:04 It's labeled 18 and over, but it's still happening. And we've got video and evidence and all these things. That's nuts. And so I show it to a senator or congressman and say, like this is your, this is your state. This is the exact address. This is happening. Like, oh. And nothing.
Starting point is 02:28:22 I'm like, hold on. This isn't one business owner being mad at another type of business owner that wants to put the business owner out of business. And I get that that's what you deal with a lot of times in your chair. I get that. I get it. But as I'm looking at that, looking at, you know, agencies and the way the world works and hadn't considered that maybe somebody's putting people inside of our government,
Starting point is 02:28:41 inside of foolish, like I'm acknowledging the moronic nature of what I'm saying. I had never considered it before. I'm living in this bubble of like, oh, no. Well, welcome the reality. We're doing it everywhere else in the world. No one's coming here fucking with us. And I don't have direct evidence of any of this, but it stands within reason that, of course, it would be happening. Yes.
Starting point is 02:28:59 And, of course, we can see CCP buying up land. And we can see all the things that go on that side. Have you ever seen that map? Oh, it's next to nuclear sites. Oh, my God, bro. Potential, you know, deep underground bases, all the fun stuff. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:29:11 It's wild. And, you know, the CCP thing with the reverse opium war has been well documented at this point. There was a guy, Ben Westoff, who I hope to get on the show at some point, who wrote a book called Fentanyl, Inc. Back in like 2018, 2019, you know what I'm talking about? So really cool guy. I remember he did a podcast with Joe Rogan back. in 2019 where he talked about all this and sorry for people who've heard this on the podcast before
Starting point is 02:29:36 I've told this story a few times but you know he was telling Joe he was a he was like a culture reporter report on like music and shit so he got to sign his story something in the music industry and he was interviewing some source in the story and the guy as an offhand mentioned this fentanyl thing this maybe back in 2014 he's like what the fuck is that starts pulling on this phrase he's like holy shit this is crazy turns into his whole project that turns into this book and this dude savage he's like you know what well and i just fly over to china and see how easy this is flies his ass over to china alone this is just like a fucking reporter author right goes to one of these labs and and very easily like walked into a fucking walmart procures all the all the shit you need
Starting point is 02:30:19 for fentanyl and like realizes where it's going how they're sending it in this case there was a lot of stuff going through the cartels getting directly to our country and it's like of course like If you're an enemy country, if it's this easy, this is what you're going to do. And this is my point with capitalism. Like, capitalism is the best system. I'm the farthest thing from a socialist. Let's be very honest. But it's not like anything.
Starting point is 02:30:46 It's not a perfect system. And unfortunately, when you combine elements of capitalism and, you know, democracy and republicanism and these beautiful things, places that don't have to play by those rules can use those forces against you. It creates the ultimate place for a Trojan horse. Because if you are a place that lets in all horses, regardless of what color they are or how big they are, you can get in something fake and you can let all the fucking people come out and pillage the whole place. And we are seeing that to an extent that I'm not sure we've ever seen it at this point in our country. Oh, absolutely. Look, what's coming out right now and what is Minnesota about the Somalians? Oh, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:31:29 just recently what at 2735 bucks per Somalian that comes and it's a government funded program and it's not or because of the the the communist dictator they were trying to put in like it's a whole back channel of things and whether it's unequivocally true or partially true it's so wild yes it's just like in the number of people to me that and i have been one of them just bury my head in the sand yeah and then the number of people then don't bury their head in the sand that will hop on a microphone and feel free to talk about it and then do fucking nothing about it other than that. Now, I'm not, I'm not saying that on your side. I'm saying, oh, no, I know what you're saying.
Starting point is 02:32:08 Like there are so many people that will gladly post online and say whatever, but then push comes to shove, then what the fuck are you going to do about it? That's right. There's a lot of, it's not even the keyboard warrior side. It's like if you stand for something, stand for something. Yeah. Like this thing like, not being melodramatic, putting my life on the line going to D.C., I don't know if that's fucking real or not, but I stand for something.
Starting point is 02:32:25 So I'm going to keep going because of what you do. yeah it seems it does seem to me and i don't want to understate it at all that's scary and you're getting you've been followed now at least that you know of repeatedly which means probably happened more times you didn't know you know so they're monitoring you hope they're not fucking outside my place right now by the way but that's neither here nor they are you know so joe you want to go out there and give it a gander good in spanish that's not promising they're security outside the guys those guys They know it. The dude's working, trolling over there. They can help out. But, you know, it's like, it sounds to me like it's more a scare tactic. But what happens when you get the one, whatever it is, and you only know what it is, you get the one good outcome that they decide is a bad outcome for them. And they're like, wouldn't be the worst thing if this guy went. I mean, that's, that's terrifying. Yeah. And that's where I was for a while. Um, but I look at at this point, if there was a, like, talk about the simulation.
Starting point is 02:33:35 Mm-hmm. If this is the way to go out, I look at all the different ways I could go out. Like when it really comes down to it, die of old age, die of cancer, die of a heart attack, die in a random fucking car accident that somebody runs a red light that I've done nothing wrong. Or if I was to be eliminated for doing something that I believe in, that's okay to me. I don't want that. I'm not wishing for that. And it's not to say, like, what a noble cause.
Starting point is 02:33:59 because it's fucking cratum at the end of the day like this isn't the most noble cause in the world right but saying if you don't believe what is it that what's that saying if you you don't stand for something you fall for everything right yeah at least stand for this right now i don't want to go out i think there's a lot of good still to do in the world i think that all this stuff hopefully you know platforms like yours shine light on hold on that there's number one the media is presenting this in an entirely bastardized version number two because it's an because cratum to start with is a new food and green when you go to Google, I know SEO really, really well. Because you can't talk about structure, functional claims, or implied benefits of consumption,
Starting point is 02:34:37 we can't get anything to rank in Google anywhere. So the first fucking eight things in Google say how bad cratim is. You can't you can't unseed that right now because if you did, you're breaking the law. You're going to get in trouble for that. So okay, that's there. Then you have this plant that people don't understand that's confusing a ship because it has 52 alkaloids. What's an alkaloid?
Starting point is 02:34:56 What's a subalcoholic? What's a metabolite? What's metragene? What's 708? I don't understand the difference. None of it's simple. None of it's easy. But there's still people that benefit from consumption.
Starting point is 02:35:07 There's people that have a lot of harm from consumption, including Kratum. All right. So let me ask it like this. And this is a little bit simplified. So it might not be the easiest answer. But five years from now, what does a perfect market look like within your realm of the market? Don't give me weed and all that. But like within Kratum and 7.0.H from a regulation standpoint, what's allowed, what's not allowed?
Starting point is 02:35:29 You have a magic wand. What would it look like? I believe that everything should be allowed. I believe things should be sold in certain channels based off a harm reduction model. In English. Taking cratum, leaf cratum that's had an established basis for consumption since 1880. For that to be sold in whole foods, for that to be sold in sprouts, for that to be sold anywhere in powders and capsules,
Starting point is 02:36:03 there is almost no chance. The FDA did what's called a single ascending dose study all the way up to 12 grams of consumption. That'd be like a salad bowl. You'd have to eat of Kratum. And it was supposed to be the FDA's smoking gun that said Kratom is a worst thing in the world. And what came out of the study is no significant adverse effects.
Starting point is 02:36:21 People weren't addicted to it. They didn't go through withdrawal. They didn't want more. They had some nausea, but so did the placebo because 12 grams of anything is a lot of consumption. And so because that's true, I think that should be sold. I think it should be an 18 and over product. I would even say, let's ramp it up and say 21 and over.
Starting point is 02:36:37 If you're going to do alcohol, yeah. Yeah, no big deal to all to me. Called a 21 and over product. I think as you start to get into an extract based world, which is what we're actually known for, we extract our products. It's actually when you extract, you're able to tighten up the tolerances because natural biomass has a 20% swing in what's in it. Our challenges are a half percentage point.
Starting point is 02:36:57 But that also means it's more pure. It's more potent. you can consume a lot more and a lot less time. I think that should end up finding its way into more of a dispensary type of model where the entire environment is 21 and over. I think you still have to have certain labels on package. I think it still has to be metered servings.
Starting point is 02:37:12 I still think we should cap the amount of total availability of product in a bottle so that if you, you'd have to buy multiple bottles to cause harm to yourself. I think as you get into some of the more strong derivatives, i.e. 7 hydroxy, pseudoindoxinol and MGM. And who knows the other. 65 things that are come out.
Starting point is 02:37:31 I think those end up needing to be in a compound pharmacy type of environment that you could use a teledoc to gain access to it. They could be shipped to your house overnight. I think there should be another step that goes in between you and be able to walk in and buy way too much too quickly. And because it's a naturally occurring product, it should always be in market and naturally occurring. Like it doesn't need to be eradicated.
Starting point is 02:37:51 It doesn't need to be a monopolized by putting inside of Pfizer's hands. Lord knows that's a fucking horrible thing to do. Yeah. But it's saying how do you ensure that the quality is always. maintained because in the true commodity market, then the only way to increase your margin is to cut corners. Right. And so how do you protect that because the consumers are going to consume it? And so I would have label requirements, metered serving size requirements, standard serving sizes across the industry. I would have certain product being able to be sold in certain verticals to watch out for people,
Starting point is 02:38:18 certain certain sales environments. I would have the digital side of things would have to have a really true way to validate someone's driver's license to purchase for shipment that it, you you we'd have to both bolster that up i think we'd have some sort of i mean this this gets a little polyanish but i like inside of our business if you wanted to buy if you came online and try to buy a bunch of product every day for five days by the time you get to day three we're stopping your order and we're calling you yeah because doesn't make sense us like all of a sudden automatically yeah hold on like wait wait why are you buying 24 bottles of this stuff right some wait i think i think we should do that as an industry and I think we should do that to watch out for people.
Starting point is 02:39:01 I think we should have a secondary side that's a true harm reduction model where if you've developed an unhealthy relationship with any of our products, I think we have an owner's of responsibility to help you get off the products. I think that should be something we do. That would be the idealistic world in five years would be creating that ecosystem. Okay. If you found out, because again, this is still a new, create of itself is still a very new phenomenon.
Starting point is 02:39:23 It's something they're learning a lot more about. You outlined earlier all the different things that still need to. you go into that. If you found out at any given day moving forward that you could sit back alone after reviewing a bunch of data that you were able to get a hold of and sit in your room and realize in your subconscious and conscious that there were more damage to this existing than not existing. Would you get out? 100%. Could you see why people might be cynical out there and not believe you on that?
Starting point is 02:39:54 I do. We have built a mechanism that. it's unique, which is our distribution channels and our manufacturing prowess. And what that means, GMP compliance is kind of the base level standard for manufacturing supplements. When you want to get into the fray and be the best of the best, the one of one, you start going after an NSF certification. It's something that's, you know, as much as three times more stringent than the FDA. And so a year ago, I told our team, we're going to file for an NSF. We're going to go through this. figure this out. And I looked at me like I was fucking crazy because most supplement manufacturers
Starting point is 02:40:34 can't get NSF and no fucking creative companies being considered. Like we're like the scum of the earth. I said after the first court, I said, we're paying for it. So it's going to, you know, we're putting a contraign on it. Like I'm already going to pay for it. They're going to show up. Let's build towards it. Well, the, the audit was scheduled for the first week in March and we get a call Thursday before Thanksgiving. And they said, well, we had some of Cancel? We're going to be out on Monday. Oh, you're going to come to the most stringent inspection in the world on Monday. Four months ahead of schedule.
Starting point is 02:41:07 Yep. Great. We'll see on Monday. They show up on Monday. By the end of the second day, they come and sit down and say, look, we literally thought this was a joke. We thought we're going to come in and like, you're just a asshole trying to make crate them.
Starting point is 02:41:21 Like, we're just going to fail you right away. Like, we're just going to take your money. We have tried and we can't find anything material that's wrong with your business. business. You're going to be the not so if you look at NSF NSF it's a what 455-2 not that that matters but the supplement classification less than 50% of the companies that ever apply get approved for any level of NSF less than 30% of the companies that apply ever get an A rating and less than 2% get an A rating on their first try. You got all of them. We got an A on our first try. We're the only
Starting point is 02:41:53 cratom based company in the country that has NSF and so what I'm saying is yeah I understand it's cynical, but we've been in business since 2012. We've got very, very, very solid distribution partners across the country. And we've got a world-class manufacturing facility that's able to ratchet up and ratchet down in any consumer package good at any moment in time. So would it be hard? Absolutely. Would it be painful? 100%. We also have ran our business that we like to keep three to four months of operating capital floating around at all times. I've said to our company from the day I say I was, you know, anointed CEO. If and when the creative ministry got eradicated,
Starting point is 02:42:32 I want enough money sitting aside so nobody would be, everybody would solve a job. It would take us 90 days to spool up something new. And we should always have two or three new products that are in not this vertical, ready to come to market in case that day happens. So we actually have the products. Would they be as lucrative? Probably not.
Starting point is 02:42:48 Would they have the same sales velocity? Probably not. But we'd be able to continue forward in the people that look to us to earn a living would still have would solve a way to make a living it wouldn't be the same it wouldn't be easy and it's easy to say that because i haven't been faced with it so i some of it's all bullshit too it's easy for me to say this because it's hypothetical i know when we got that when we got that first wrongful death lawsuit partners i said down said we're done we're just going to fold shop it's not all the money in the world like we've been successful as a business and we've had
Starting point is 02:43:24 hard times as a business, it's not worth knowing you're causing harm to me. Great. Like there's so many other things I'm involved with. You'll appreciate this. Somehow through the luck of the way the world works, I can introduce to a scientific researcher out of Maryland that has been working on a 5D amino acid peptide. What is in English? Naturally occurring amino acid string that has a five dimethylated
Starting point is 02:43:55 it's science shit okay it's it's it's some molecules it's the molecules it's the molecules it's the molecules it get put together
Starting point is 02:44:03 to do some fancy shit and this individual this peptide has reversed Alzheimer's and dementia in 1,200 people reversed it reversed it
Starting point is 02:44:18 not late stage pre late stage it's reversed it interesting and so I have a meeting with him and I have a great conversation and he said
Starting point is 02:44:28 I'm looking for a partner, right? They're already through the whole series of one, you know, 1A, one A, clinical trials. They're stepping into 2A. And so, okay, I said, you know, I have a sense of how much that investment is. I'm not independently well through the fact of being able to, you know, take us all the way through a, you know, a pharmaceutical offering. But I think it could help figure out 2A. The only way I'd be willing to do that is if we unequivocally would never sell it to a pharmaceutical company, ever. And I want you to put it in, writing that we'd never do that. And if that was the case, I'd be interested.
Starting point is 02:45:02 And he sits back and smiled and said, that's the only reason why I would do it. Ever the person that sat here said, how quickly could we get cash out? Right. And so we passed 2A pretty quickly. In passing 2A, we start to progress towards 2B. And from NDAs, I can't exactly get into the specifics details, but let's say a large pharmaceutical manufacturer comes and visits us and offers two of us. There's three of us on the cap table.
Starting point is 02:45:30 A dollar amount that's more money than I physically would know how to spend. Like a real dollar amount. And I look at him, said, you're the brains behind this. The other group sitting across table from us and says, yeah. No, I'm good. I don't do it the right way. Slides a contract, slides a check back over, says thanks. No thanks.
Starting point is 02:45:55 And steps away. So this five do you mean, Acid peptide, we've also figured out, he's figured out, not anything, that it's also a prophylactic. And a 30-day serving right now if we manufacture in our facility would cost us $2.60 to make. So you have this product that in theory would reverse Alzheimer's dementia that we could make for $2.30 and then retail for $30 to make it available to everybody. Nice margins. Well, nice margins, but you look at what, I mean, if you do any level of research on Mark Cuban and his work inside of the pharmaceutical industry, most things cost two to five bucks to make.
Starting point is 02:46:39 We just all pay hundreds of dollars for them because of the markup through insurance and all the things that go on. That's right. And so I share all this because what we've built is way bigger than something that's just about Kratum, the transparency, the blockchain, the chain of custody, the way that all the ecosystems built. it's built for something that's a hellful lot bigger than crate them i just inadvertently chose the hardest fucking industry in the world to do it in because nobody else is playing the game that way yeah it's the hardest one to play because nobody wants to play that game well it's it's it's some of it's cool man some of the way you're doing is is floats my boat in the sense that it does seem like you're really trying with the transparency which is this is an industry
Starting point is 02:47:21 that has none of that so like the bar is low but that's really cool the camera thing i can't really get that out of my head that's yeah that's fucking awesome but yeah it's also it's also i'm going to jump in it's also saying everybody shouldn't take cratum yeah it's saying the same 10 milligrams of seven hydroxy matragen in your bloodstream you can consume enough cratum to have the same amount of seven hydroxia in your bloodstream as if you just took seven hydroxy because it converts mitriginine metabolizes the seven hydroxy which still can cause the same issue so you have to you have to go to the base level and say we need to make sure that people can't consume too much right and so that's where like this whole thing is like it's not an easy conversation to have it's easy to necessarily
Starting point is 02:48:09 understand no i know what you mean man and it's you know like like we were saying the whole time we're really at the dawn of a brand new era and there's painful growing pains with it but you'd like to see that there's some people out there who seem to have like a good head on their shoulders about it. I just met you today, but you seem to have that and Rocco vouches for that, which went a long way with me. But I really appreciate you going through all this, Ryan. It's a whole new world for me. I really knew nothing about anything in this industry.
Starting point is 02:48:42 I hope people out there, I'm sure they're going to argue in the comments over this and everything, but, you know, have out it. Say whatever you want to say. And, you know, I'm curious to see where this develops over the next. for years. So thanks so much for coming in. Yeah. Thanks for it. I appreciate it. All right. Everybody else, you know what it is? Give it a thought. Get back to me. Peace. Thank you guys for watching the episode. If you haven't already, please hit that subscribe button and smash that like button on the video. They're both a huge huge help. And if you would like
Starting point is 02:49:06 to follow me on Instagram and X, those links are in my description below.

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