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Realfoodology - Why Your Health is Under Attack – Dr. Will Cole on MAHA & Free Speech
Episode Date: March 18, 2025236: In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Will Cole to discuss the growing momentum of the MAHA movement, the pushback it’s facing, and why figures like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are playing a key role.... We explore the politicization of health and what it will take to create real change in our food system. We also cover chronic illness, the link between POTS and COVID, and the overuse of SSRIs. Dr. Cole shares insights on free speech in health science and how we can wake more people up to what’s really happening. Topics Discussed: The MAHA movement & pushback Role of RFK Jr. in the fight for change Politicization of health & food system reform Chronic illness, POTS, and COVID connection Overuse of SSRIs & suppression of free speech in health Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Introduction 00:04:39 - Catching up with Dr. Will Cole 00:06:03 - Pushback against MAHA 00:10:10 - RFK Jr. & the two-party system 00:12:31 - Why we need MAHA 00:17:40 - Health is not political 00:23:47 - Health and wellness research 00:25:23 - Staying hopeful 00:30:40 - Corruption in health science 00:33:54 - The ego of the left & COVID 00:37:51 - Suppression of free speech 00:42:14 - Waking up the average American 00:45:12 - Rise in chronic illness 00:48:01 - Declining children’s health 00:51:51 - Mold toxicity & toxic overload 00:54:17 - Overprescribing medication 00:57:28 - SSRIs 01:01:50 - Vagus nerve 01:04:20 - SSRIs side effects 01:08:50 - Birth control 01:10:53 - Possible root causes of POTS 01:17:16 - Long COVID & the jab 01:18:32 - Kellogg & food dye Show Links: 33: How Fasting Can Be Intuitive with Dr. Will Cole - Realfoodology Antidepressant Discontinuation: The Why & How of Tapering - Kelly Brogan Sponsored By: Our Place Use code REALFOODOLOGY for 10% off at fromourplace.com Graza So head to Graza.co and use REALFOODOLOGY to get 10% off of TRIO which includes Sizzle, Frizzle and Drizzle, and get to cookin’ your next chef-quality meal! Timeline Timeline is offering 10% off your order of Mitopure. Go to timeline.com/REALFOODOLOGY. SuppCo Get 100% free access today at supp.co/REALFOODOLOGY. Qualia qualialife.com/REALFOODOLOGY for up to 50% off and use code REALFOODOLOGY at checkout for an additional 15% off. Function Skip Function’s waitlist at www.functionhealth.com/realfoodology Check Out Dr. Will: Website Instagram Youtube Check Out Courtney: LEAVE US A VOICE MESSAGE Check Out My new FREE Grocery Guide! @realfoodology www.realfoodology.com My Immune Supplement by 2x4 Air Dr Air Purifier AquaTru Water Filter EWG Tap Water Database Produced By: Drake Peterson
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On today's episode of the Real Foodology podcast.
We don't agree with everything that the Trump administration does,
but we can say because this is our lane,
and they're putting, they're progressing our lane,
of course we're going to get behind that.
Hello, friends. Welcome back to the Real Foodology podcast.
As always, I am your host, Courtney Swan,
and today's guest is a repeat guest, Dr. Will Cole.
You may remember I had him on a couple years ago
to talk about one of his books that he
had just written and I have him back on today to talk about all things Maha. I have had the pleasure
of seeing Will Cole so many times recently. He has become a dear friend and we have both been
involved in a lot of the stuff that has been going on with the Make America Healthy Again movement. And I am just so grateful to be working with him. I love the work that
he's doing. We both did the Kellogg's petition together. We also were at the Make America
Healthy Again Ball in DC. And it's just really fun to be working alongside people that I
really respect. And I just love the work that he's doing so much. It's a really interesting
time y'all. Will and I have talked about how that he's doing so much. It's a really interesting time, y'all.
Will and I have talked about how we just, we never thought that we would see the day
that this would become something that was being talked about on a political stage, which
makes us very excited because we feel like we have a real chance at change.
We feel like we can hopefully change our broken food system.
So we talk a lot about that.
He shares his stance on what's going on
as far as getting all the pushback from people
and getting hate from people about the maha movement.
Why does he feel like we needed
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to come in?
Why can't we all just agree on this
and come together for the betterment of our nation
and our people and our children?
So we address a lot of that.
And then we also talk about some other things.
We talk about POTS and the COVID connection.
What is POTS?
We talk a little bit about SSRIs and so much more.
And yeah, I hope that you all love the episode.
If you could take a moment to rate and review it,
you know the drill.
It helps the show.
And I'm just so appreciative of your support.
And if you wanna share it,
if you wanna tag me at Real Foodology and also tag Dr.
Wilcoll on Instagram and we will hopefully see and repost it.
So thanks so much for the support and thanks for listening.
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Will, I'm so excited to have you on today.
Oh man, thanks for doing this and coming out and seeing me.
And that really means a lot to me.
Thank you.
I mean, it's so cool to come and see your office.
You and I have been friends for a couple of years now.
We were talking earlier about how the last time we did this
was via Zoom, because we were,
I think we were still in the high of the pandemic
when we chatted.
Yes, yes.
I think it was probably 21, maybe 20.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It was somewhere around there.
And so I was excited to be able to come out and actually do this with you in person and
come see your office.
And I just I love doing podcasts in person.
I think they-
Me too.
Especially with friends.
It's fun.
Thank you.
Exactly.
It's so much more fun. And you're traveling the world man doing this podcast
I'm traveling so you're gonna have to slow down eventually. I'm gonna have to step in and no, please
Sir, I need somebody to step in and be like you are a world to travel
I mean a nation traveler at least doing this which is a lot of work. It's a lot. It's a lot
Yeah, I pretty much I joke that my office has become my packing station. We're just like pack and repack every week
Yeah, I know every time I see you, you're somewhere else.
I know, it's nuts.
But I'm really, I'm enjoying it.
It's a blessing.
It's such a blessing.
I'm so grateful that I get to connect
with so many amazing people like yourself.
And I mean, we spoke at the Kellogg's petition together,
which I want to get into.
And I also really want to talk about all the Maha stuff.
So let's dive into that first.
I know you're getting a ton of pushback and hate right now because you came out and you
really took a stance like I did.
You and I both were like, I'm going to side with this movement regardless of the hate
that I'm going to get.
And I'm curious, what has been your experience in that?
I love that you're asking this question because I haven't had a chance to really talk about
it.
And I'm glad you're like one of the few people that knows what I'm going through.
But I told you that I must have some weird trauma response
with social media because I don't see most of the trolls
and the negative comments.
And, but I'll have friends come up to me like,
are you doing okay?
How are you doing?
Man, this guy at my church told me the other day,
man, people either love you or hate you.
I'm like, bro, thanks for telling me that. I just thought everyone loved
me. It's something not looking at it. So I'm living in my world, but it's not great for
the mental health to be like sucked into that keyboard warrior troll world. I try to limit
it really. And it helps when you're busy seeing patients and I don't want to be so immersed in that.
But to me, this wasn't a time to be quiet.
If you do what we do and see people get healthy on a daily basis, I have a very unique perspective
on that.
When you see labs improve, when you see what functional medicine can do, you know, for
people that don't know, I started the first functional medicine telehealth clinic.
So I have all 50 states a real unique perspective for 15 years of seeing all different walks
of life, no matter who you voted for or didn't vote for, no matter your religious beliefs
or no religion, just as a human being, an American, getting them healthy.
So if I could see that for 15 years and then see just even the potential chance of that
same potential of healing, being democratized to every American, not just people that have
access to functional medicine, but everybody, who would I be? Who would I be if I didn't speak up for something that I see just be such a
positive thing? And it is such a state of affairs for health to be now a pejorative
to be, and they wouldn't say it that way, but I would say our, the way we do health, they're saying,
no, that's not the right way to get healthy.
That's not the right way to heal.
No, we are the voices of healing.
We're the only ones that can be talking about public health.
You cannot talk as if they have a monopoly on human health.
So to me, it's like insanity.
And I got to the point where I wasn't going to be censored.
I wasn't going to be self-centered because I was.
I was self-censoring myself knowing, okay, I'm going to talk about something that shouldn't
be polarizing, but it is.
But who would I be if I didn't speak up now?
Because I mean, I've known Bobby, you know, spoken the same events and met him and was friendly with him for years. To see him come this far and to see how God is using him, like, prayers have been
answered for millions of moms around this country, for millions of parents who've been
medically gaslit. So to me, it was like a spiritual, a deeply spiritual thing. And look,
time will tell humans are flawed and imperfect. even the ones that I like are flawed and imperfect
But you know, I've never seen something like this
So to me it was it was knowing human knowing American history
Specifically knowing the history of the medical industrial complex and knowing actually the people that are involved in this movement personally
How could we be quiet? That's my answer. I
How could we be quiet? That's my answer. I could not agree with you more.
And I have a similar experience, not in the same that I've been seeing patients for the last 15 years,
but I've been so immersed in this world.
Yeah.
Because I think you and I probably started around the same time as like I started Real Foodology in 2011,
just as an outlet. And my audience knows this, but just as an outlet to get everything that's now being talked about
on a public stage and in the Maha movement are things that I started trying to warn people
back in 2011 about.
So I felt very similarly where I've spent the last 14 plus years looking around going,
wow, we're in a really big mess right now and there's no one at the top really talking
about this or doing anything about it.
I remember Obama said, he ran on saying that he was going to ban GMOs
and then he never really fully delivered on that.
And so, yeah, it was just really interesting
when this started to happen,
I remember I had like a conversation with myself
and then like brought it to my fiancee where I was like,
am I really going to come out and do this this because I was also a person that I lived
in LA for the longest time I was mega liberal I cried when Trump won in 2016
Wow like I was like not down and then you fast forward to now and when RFK
jr. I have been a huge fan of RFK juniors for a long time I followed his work
because he was doing the litigation against Monsanto and you know.
And so when he came out and he sided with Trump, I was like, okay, I guess we're doing
this.
I was like, okay.
And to me, isn't it weird, like seeing me this and coming, I was the same thing as you.
Like I'm a left of center guy.
I'm an independent guy.
I'm not like a super, I'm not a right wing person.
I would call myself pretty socially liberal,
fiscally conservative, kind of libertarian-esque.
I think most Americans are kind of like that.
I agree.
Where it's like there is a significant realignment
going on right now where you look at the main people
in this administration like Tulsi and Bobby and even Elon
and whether you like them, even Trump,
they were all former Democrats.
Yes. And then you have the Democratic Party being endorsed
by Dick Cheney who they called a war criminal.
And somehow like that, it's completely a brand new era
of I would say the statists and the populists
is really what it is.
It's the authoritarians and the more libertarian, meaning freedom loving people.
I really think that's what it is.
And look, I'm in the health space.
So that's my main lane.
But you look even beyond the health, what's happening here.
That's really what it is.
So you have a diverse group of people that aren't going to agree on everything.
But specifically with this maha movement, they agree on some things and their existential threats to the to the United States, which is the chronic health epidemic.
Exactly. And so I was going to ask you, why do we need a movement like Make America Healthy Again? Let's kind of lay that out. And why why do you believe that R.K.
Jr. is the man for that?
is the man for that. Well, he walks the walk.
I don't want to make this just about one man, right?
Because we have to realize this is way more than that.
To me, he's a vehicle to bring innovative thought leaders in the space.
So like, Bob is a spearhead in it.
But when you look at Jay and Marty and Mehmet and Callie and Casey
and all the other people that aren't even named, that are behind the scenes.
These are people that are not, again,
Republican or Democrat, they're just people
that get people healthy for a living
and they're largely independent
and their main motive is health.
That's what I want people to know about this.
This isn't like a sort of idolization of Bobby.
He's just the vehicle to bring a lot of eclectic group of people within science and health
and medicine and all that stuff.
So why is it important?
It's because it's bankrupting our country.
I mean, it's unsustainable the way things are as far as chronic disease.
We spend the most money on chronic disease, yet we have the shortest lifespan of all industrialized
nations and the most chronic disease.
So if we, it's like the definition of insanity is doing the thing repeatedly and expecting
a different result.
We have to have an outsider.
We have to have a disruptor to the system to reform it.
And that's really what this is about, is you have someone that is so, and I find interesting
too, is like the system, mainstream media, the people that are advertisers on there,
the entire medical industrial complex and the censorship industrial complex, they are
out for blood for him.
I mean, they did everything they could to destroy a man.
And then you wonder why, when we have the most chronic disease in the shortest lifespan,
they spend the most money on it and you see the amount of corruption, it doesn't take
a rocket scientist to know they doth protest too much.
Because it's like these are not like Maria, Mother Teresa shaming Bobby Kennedy.
These are part of the sick care system.
So that's why most Americans can see through that BS.
Because if they're not indoctrinated,
if they're free enough thinking and independent enough
minded, they may not agree on everything that Bobby and Co.
are saying, but they're enough to say,
yeah, there's something, he's onto something.
I like some of the things he's saying at the very least.
To people being very excited. I was on a call the other day with some of the things he's saying at the very least, to people being very excited. You know, I was on a call the other day
with some of the heads of Walmart,
and they want to learn about this movement
because their consumers, the average American consumer,
are wanting more informed consent
and they're voting with their dollar, the Walmart shopper.
Wow.
And that's largely due to this movement, right?
They're wanting better, they're reading labels, they're becoming literate with the foods and they're demanding better. their dollar, the Walmart shopper. Wow. And that's largely due to this movement, right?
They're wanting better.
They're reading labels.
They're becoming literate with the foods,
and they're demanding better.
This is just the beginning.
And that's part of this peaceful revolution
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Yeah, I think it's it tells a lot to me that we already said this, but the fact that RFK Jr. was a Democrat
and then came out and said,
I feel like the party left me.
And I want to be very clear,
I'm actually really trying to not make this political.
My point is that I don't think a lot of people
have realized that the party
that they have so aligned themselves with
is not the same party that it was.
Yeah.
And this was a huge learning lesson for me,
because it's funny because I think people now see me
post a lot about this Maha movement,
and I've gotten some comments on my podcast saying,
oh, this is a MAGA podcast.
And I'm like, I'm talking about Maha.
If you go back to my 200 plus episodes,
my whole thing is health.
Like this has nothing to do with politics. And this has been a huge learning
lesson for me in the sense that like, I did once really align myself with the Democratic Party,
and now I find myself in 2025 where I'm picking and choosing what I'm aligning myself with, right?
So I would not even call myself a Republican. I think I'm very similar to you where I'm a
libertarian, but honestly, I'm hesitant to call myself anything because I just want to be me.
I just want to get my message out and my message and what I believe that my soul's purpose is here on this earth
is to help people get healthier.
And whichever way that I can do that in a large way is what I'm going to align myself with,
which is why Maha is so incredibly important to me.
And I wish that more people could see
that this is not about Trump.
This is not about left or right.
This is about what will move our species along.
As you're absolutely right.
Because that's exactly how I feel.
We have always been talking about this.
Anybody that knows URI, we have not changed.
It's the convergence of politics converging with what we do that
has changed, that has amplified our mission. So why wouldn't we take the opportunity to
help more people with this increased visibility, increased light shining on what we do? So
that's not like we were in this lane moving forward with our mission. We just came in
contact with being able to democratize
this with everybody, the potential to it, for that to happen.
So time will tell again, we have to be pragmatic about this.
There's some deep corrupt systems at play that want to stop this at every chance they
can get.
But I know people at least want to.
These people want to help people.
So yeah, that's what it is.
It shouldn't be political.
We're not coming from political lane, but they have politicized us.
So they have pushed us in a corner to have to say, no, you're wrong.
You are misrepresenting what we're saying.
This is not a right or left thing.
This is a human thing.
And we're just putting people above our tribalism.
And they would rather choose the tribalism and being right and feeding their own dopamine hit ego
and being a keyboard warrior troll
and not seeing past their own bias.
And that's what we tried to do, right?
But like you said, we're picking and choosing.
We don't agree with everything
that the Trump administration does,
but we can say because this is our lane
and they're progressing our lane,
of course we're gonna get behind that.
Absolutely, I think anyone, like put yourself in the shoes
of if you're in another line of work
that you are so incredibly passionate about,
that you wanna see move forward,
and then suddenly you have this on a political stage
and you have the opportunity to create policies around
whatever it is that you're doing that could help people.
Why wouldn't you do that?
Yeah.
And the three things, I mean, the three main things that people should know about is getting
special interests out of scientific literature, out of health research.
It's like, depending on the study that you cite, it's like 50 to 90% of our research
is funded by the special interests, by Big Pharma, by big food, by big chem.
That's insane.
The second is getting, stop subsidizing food that's killing us.
And third is just having the education and empowerment of the first two.
When you have transparent science and you have education around food and you have all
these things that are needed.
This is actually, if you look at it historically, a very left thing.
Yes.
But their brains are broken and they can't see
that this left thing that the left never really did
is now being done by independence.
They're completely, the cognitive dissonance is so real.
It is.
Like, it's like, this is something
that you all said you wanted,
but now the wrong person's doing it, it's not okay.
That's the way you're the right person, the approved person.
Well, I'm seeing some people online from like an expert authority angle
going after the Maha movement right now.
And it's been really interesting to watch because a lot of these videos,
they are outlining all the issues and they are agreeing with everything that Maha stands for.
But then they shit all over it because it's
not their people that are pushing it forward.
Yeah.
And I feel like it's creating this pocket of the internet
where people are outraged about what we're doing, but care
about health.
And so there's like this weird confusion and like you said,
cognitive dissonance.
Like what also my thing is, how are you helping people?
Yeah, what are they doing on a daily basis?
I wanna know that too,
because as someone that looks at labs for a living
and see those labs improve, I always wonder,
are you just a public health pontificator in social media?
I wanna see your clients.
I wanna see your clients' labs, please show me.
Because unless you can produce what our industry produce and by our industry
I mean health coaches wellness
Functionally medicine functional medicine doctors functional medicine minded conventional doctors, whoever you are
It's a diverse group of people that are within this movement of ours
If you're not doing what we're doing and we can show you the data
We can show you and that's what I'm also excited about, talking to some of the people that are involved already
with getting this off the ground in DC, is now getting research done on what we do.
Let's show them the RCTs.
We've never been able to get access to that type of research because it's very expensive
and never be given the time of day with the way that the sick care system does.
What's an RCT?
I should probably know that.
Yeah, randomized controlled trial.
Oh, got it, okay.
So it's just a gold standard in research.
Yes.
So we want that to be done on the things that we do.
Absolutely.
So okay, now let's show everybody
and have true informed consent
and they can pick whatever they want within healthcare
and not this cherry picked pharmaceutical above all else without looking at all the potential.
What is the most effective option for you as the patient, as the person, as the American
with the least amount of side effects?
Let's really show them that.
Well, because it's interesting.
That's the type of science that will actually help people not just match somebody's symptoms
with a pill.
And then it will be really amazing to see
when this happens, my hope is that this is going to happen, because those so-called experts,
I don't want to say so-called, many of them have degrees and stuff, so I don't want to,
they will no longer be able to go online and say, well, the science actually says that,
da da da da da. And it's like, okay, well, that science that you're referencing was
paid for by Big Pharma. And now if like, okay, well, that science that you're referencing was paid for by big pharma.
And now if we can change that gold standard of science to actually do studies that benefit
Americans' health above all else, what are they going to do?
They're going to have to come back and be like, well, the new science is actually so
sick.
Will they?
I think their tribalism will trump everything.
They are so contrarian and they call it derangement syndrome,
like Trump derangement syndrome.
Anything Trump is tangentially connected to,
they are deranged about it.
Because you could say, why the cure for cancer?
And they would say, well, they'd poke holes in it
because it's not coming from the right people.
It's that level of derangement.
No, it really is.
I'm wondering what it is gonna take for people to wake up.
Because the people in the health space
that genuinely care about this,
I don't understand how they don't see
the good that's coming of it.
And what's really driving me nuts
is a lot of these videos that are being floated
around the internet, they're making all these assumptions
about things that haven't even happened yet,
where they just say, well, this is how the system works
and good luck getting it through with so-and-so.
And it's like, well, can't we at least be
a little optimistic?
I know you and I will both be the first people
to speak out if things are not moving forward.
I'm not siding with anyone.
I'm not a Trump sympathizer.
I'm not even an RFK Junior sympathizer.
If four years from now we're sitting here going,
well, nothing
really happened. I'm literally going to be the first person to call it out.
Yep. Same here. Same here. We're just about, we're hopeful about the opportunity. We're
hopeful about the potential. I am under no delusions of grandeur. I really know there
are people and the system is really messed up and their people
can get bought off. I get it. Like anything could happen. But if you look statistically,
this is the best chance we've got in 200 plus years of American history and 100 years of
the medical industrial complex. So yeah, the sort of subset of experts on social media
that are just coming hard on what we're doing,
that you're saying, you're right,
they're coming, they're agreeing, of course,
how can you deny chronic disease?
But where we kind of differ from them,
not kind of, where we differ from them,
is that they do not think there is a quote unquote
conspiracy with the sick care system.
Like they believe it is genuine,
there's no conflict of interest
is basically what they're saying.
But yet there is this corporate conflict of interest.
I'm not fully even understanding their position.
The vein that I do see from them,
and I'm talking about these experts,
RDS, mainly RDS, conventional RDS. And look,
there are many, many brilliant, loving, functionally minded, wellness minded, independent thinking
RDS. I'm not talking about them. I'm talking about the statist, authoritarian, centralized
power RDS is how I could explain it. It's like they're speaking as sort of, you know,
that the Hunger Games, I feel like they're like the capital.
It's like the capital RDS that are like here, peons,
and there's a sort of elitist, smug, arrogant hubris
to what they say, where they blame everything on capitalism.
And what I hear almost is like this sort of Marxist-like vein
is they really
don't like entrepreneurs, they really don't like independence, they want you to work for
the system, be trained by the system, be indoctrinated by the system.
That is the science read approved science, cherry pick science, right?
And you know, they're only they're the purveyors of that information and anybody that speaks in you know
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That's exactly how it feels. It feels like they're standing up on this stage with a podium and saying,
ignore what's actually happening,
ignore what you're seeing with your very eyes,
ignore what you're feeling in your body,
and just listen to what the government
and what the settled science says already.
But it is, you're so right, it's so confusing
because they'll sit up there
and say, well, you know, capitalism and these big food conglomerates are, you know, they
own a lot of the food system, like they'll name all this stuff. And I'm watching it going,
okay, okay, yeah, yeah, good, good. They're onto something. And then they end it with
like, well, but we're not going to we're not going to fix it with this. Like we need to
go back to the real science. And it's like, oh, you mean the real science that's funded
by those food corporations and funded by big science? It's incredibly,
it's like mind games.
Or the studies that they, even if they're, because I heard some of them say, well, like
we, us in the R, in the sort of capital RDS, we don't like conflict of interest in science.
We actually try to avoid it where we can. But then you look at what's being studied, like what's really being looked at. It's not these root cause mechanisms.
And to be honest with you, like, can't we have science without presupposition? Can't
we really have independent science with transparency? And if they really mean what they say, or
follow the science, trust the science and really look at when everything's being looked
at, not just the things they want to look at. What will they say then? I think that time that
will also be time will tell. But I don't know, I don't feel if I just feel like they are
where they could come together as a coalition. I really want that. Like I want them these
sort of what I would call lead us are these like like can't you find common ground with us? Like we don't want to have a war with you.
Like I hear what you're saying.
I can agree with a lot of what you're saying.
Why can't you put down arms?
Why can't you put people above your tribalism right now?
Even if you're thinking, say yes, I am the elitist.
I'm the best person to talk about this.
But yeah, these people have some truth about it.
And why can't we focus on that instead of what we have not in common?
And they are, but it's part of it's, I think, for the likes.
It's like they really getting this ego push
because all the contrarians are coming out.
And social media is great for that.
Social media, the algorithm, the confirmation bias there,
they are getting a lot of attention from celebrities,
a lot of attention from mainstream media
because they are talking the approved narratives.
Yeah, wow.
And the approved narratives are safe
because if you go with the approved narrative,
you're not gonna get, I mean, I think now
everybody's getting pushed back.
It doesn't matter what side of the aisle you're on.
But I think a lot of them were used to for a very long time,
that many of us that felt differently than the mainstream common narrative
were all silencing ourselves.
And I'm just talking about politically.
You and I have been talking about the health stuff for a long time,
and I'm used to getting pushback from that.
But now that it's become political, people have just been so used to self-censoring,
and for the longest time in our country,
it's only been okay to come out on one side of things.
So everybody on the other side of things
have just been quiet and silencing themselves.
And so it has, I think, given a lot of these people
that are on the left this false sense of,
well, everyone agrees with us,
we're on the right side of history,
because they kind of have this conflated, almost ego about it.
Yeah, they do. And I feel like COVID woke a lot of people up.
Like again, we've been talking about this for years,
but I think a lot of average Americans were like,
something doesn't add up here, right?
It's just the science is settled and then you find out,
well, they wanted to hide documents with the Pfizer vaccine for whatever, 75 years.
75 years.
75 years, when everybody was going to be dead.
Yes, right.
And it's like we can't ask questions that why did they want to hide this for 75 years
so they can push this through the Emergency Use Act?
Like there's, and again, you're talking about an industry that when you talk about Big Food,
Big Pharma, they have, Big Pharma specifically
created the opioid epidemic and many other pharmaceutical epidemics, knowingly harming
people.
But yet somehow, they've had their come to Jesus moment with the one product that they
can't be sued on because of protections.
It's so much cognitive dissonance.
And again, I'm not anti-vax.
Like, I guess another thing
too.
It's like I just want real transparent science because people can have real informed consent
because I deal with people, my telehealth patients are people with autoimmune conditions.
How am I supposed to trust the science when they're hiding things and they're suppressing
data and they're cherry picking data?
So my people, my telehealth patients can make the decision that's right for them. and their cherry picking data.
can look up, it's very tangible, digestible. There were internal emails going on saying that they knew that it was going
to cause heart issues in people and then it caused something like, I think it was
like 50,000 heart attacks in people.
They knew before they put it on the market that this was going to be an issue,
but they knew that their fines for that were going to be less than the profit
they were going to make.
So they put it out anyways.
And if anybody thinks that if that's happening in that one space with Vioxx,
that it's not happening in other pharmaceutical spaces,
especially when you brought up the, there's the 1986 liability act
that leaves the vaccine companies not liable if something happens.
So how is that not happening across the board, especially when they have immunity?
Especially the potential to it.
And then you know things like the Pfizer paper, like it's just all we are is being curious
enough to say, well, yeah, all of these things add up.
We need to at least shine a light on it and say, what is going on here?
Especially when you put things on a schedule and you're mandating it.
And you can't enter a building, but not now, right?
But during COVID.
You couldn't enter a building without a dang card.
What the heck are we talking about?
Without any true science.
Or you'd lose your job when you can't even
have informed consent.
I mean, this is absolutely Orwellian, draconian,
that they would think this is okay.
Especially when you look at the data of it, it didn't decrease spread.
You couldn't even make a public health statement
on like you're harming your neighbor,
which they tried to do.
Like you're a bad American
because you're gonna harm grandma
and kill grandpa by not getting this.
But now we know at the very least it's decreased
the severity, which that's a personal choice.
Exactly.
And what are your risk factors?
If you're old and sick,
maybe make the decision to have the vaccine. If you're a baby, which there's a personal choice. Exactly. And what are your risk factors if you're old and sick, maybe make the decision to have
the vaccine.
If you're a baby, which there's no child that did the healthy trial, there's no healthy
child that died from COVID, none.
But they want to put that on the schedule.
I mean, I think it is on the schedule right now.
Right.
Well, yeah, now more and more people are pushing back and there's different legislations of
reevaluating these vaccines
to have medical freedom.
But it's just absolutely insane because I was just thinking about as you're saying all
this that there are going to be people that will probably leave comments and probably
going to get DMs and it's fine.
But just the fact that we just are asking questions and we're just having a conversation about it
and we're talking about the potential
for there being a lot of fraud happening,
just simply raising that is already gonna ruffle feathers,
get people mad at us, they're gonna call us names,
they're gonna call us anti-vax,
just for saying, hey guys, maybe we should look at this.
Yeah, well, asking questions is an offensive radical act
to a system that thinks that they're the
sole mouthpiece for every information, health or otherwise.
So it is authoritarianism is really what it is because they want to self-censor, they
want to censor people.
And then they did for years.
I mean, we know with Zuckerberg, we know it started from the top down, them shutting down
actually true information but inconvenient
to the system.
And that's really what they still want.
They still want that free speech is inconvenient.
Even if the free speech is wrong speech, can't you have a free forum of information so people
can push down the negative, push down the false one because people are smart.
People can figure things out.
Exactly.
This is what our country is predicated on.
So yeah, this is very much the whole concept of free speech and speech online is intimately
connected to health because we saw the destruction of that in 2020.
We saw so many people being canceled and deplatformed and good information being suppressed because
it was inconvenient information.
So this is why there's another convergence with politics because we need to be able to
speak our minds and speak truth to power even when it's inconvenient.
Absolutely.
It's interesting because you and I have been in this space for so long.
And actually, you and I talked about this, I think it was at the Maha Ball or somewhere
around like the inauguration, where we couldn't believe that we were in this time and space
because we're so used to for so long being a part of the minority when it comes to the
health space.
Because a lot of largely of what we're saying, you could say like that it goes
against the mainstream, but it should be the mainstream.
And so it was interesting to see like during COVID because it was such a
validation for me of like, oh, I'm really onto something because what I'm talking
about is now being silenced and suppressed because it really is In attack on what the mainstream narrative narrative is and to me that was such a
Profound like truth in the sense that this is that what the truth is
Yeah, well and when you say mainstream or yeah, like the conventionally approved, but you then you look at the majority of Americans, right and
Actually, what's mainstream
amongst the people. Like the movement, the maha movement is popular, but could you imagine how
much more popular it would be if you didn't get 98% negative press? You actually had true free press
that showed actually what we're talking about, not the smear campaigns, not the hyperbole, not the
lies, but just state the facts for what it is. What is already popular would be almost
every American, I believe.
I agree.
This would be, I mean, Bobby alone is more popular than most presidents that have ever
ran in modern history.
People love him.
And then that's what 98% negative press.
Could you imagine if it was just fair, just fair, just fair press, just accurate press,
just unbiased neutral press?
Could you imagine?
And it's like to me, it's like, whatever they accuse people of, like the system, they actually
are guilty of.
Yeah.
Like this whole like censoring, they're afraid of, you know, they're afraid of democracy going away.
They're afraid, like they have been the biggest destroyers of
basic civil liberties.
Like please, please.
But it's like the Orwellian upside down.
It's double think, it's double speak.
Because it's like they will call somebody something.
But I saw a meme the other day, like people worried about RFK being anti-science,
but well, Fauci needed to be a pardon for his science.
That I know.
And the fact that some people still don't see that,
it's just mind blowing to me.
I just wonder, do you have any thoughts
on what you think it will take for some people to wake up?
I think to me, I think the average person that's maybe on the fence, it's just fair
and accurate information.
Yeah, because I think the average American out there has really heard a lot of twisted
things like you see it in the comments.
When I do look at the comments, they will just regurgitate the approved talking points
that are just the weird.
They'll talk about his
cutting off a whale's head they'll think the most random things up as if that or the other main thing is like oh he's bobby's not a medical doctor as if they didn't know the head of nia
of hhs was a lawyer just like he was exactly were they ever up in arms with all the other lawyers
that were ahead of HHS before him?
They didn't even know.
But because the media told them he's not a medical doctor, that's what they repeat.
So I think if you get fair and accurate information, I think more and more Americans can make true
just choice on what they think.
And again, they may not align on everything that he's doing.
Do we align on everything that most people in politics are doing?
No.
But you can have, I think, a net positive when you get fair and accurate information.
So I think that's what we need.
We need to actually, you know, sunlight's the best disinfectant.
That starts with media and like public channels and how people get information,
like truly getting sunlight.
But then also sunlight in the medical research too.
Like truly getting sunlight, but then also sunlight in the medical research too. Like truly getting that, all right, here's all the information America, home of the free,
you know, home of the brave, land of the free, can we make decisions for ourselves?
So that's what I'm hopeful that this can do.
It's just a lot of sunlight.
Yeah.
So you're in a really unique position where you have been seeing patients, like you said,
and you've been seeing blood work for the last 15 years.
What have you been seeing in your practice?
One that people are really struggling with and then two, by implementing all the stuff
that you're doing, how are you seeing people getting better?
Well, I mean, it starts with the foods.
It starts with really empowering the person to being mindful.
So if they haven't done that, of course, this is something you talk about at length on your
podcast.
But it's, you know, most of the people that I see are really beyond the basic stuff.
Like they're people that have seen all the doctors, they've exhausted conventional medicine,
they've exhausted alternative routes.
So that's the, not every patient, but I would say 80% of our telehealth patients are that
sort of difficult, they're not difficult, but their health challenges can be difficult.
And they have exhausted all options and we are what they feel is like their last resort
many times.
So I'm used to that sort of my lane, that's not the average American's problem, I don't
think.
Increasingly, it is more and more Americans. I think more and more health problems are becoming more complex
because of this environmental food problem that we're seeing
that we need to fix.
It's unsustainable.
Well, are you seeing, because, you know, we're seeing a lot of headlines, right?
And I'll get pushback from people saying,
okay, it's not that bad in the US.
People aren't that sick.
In your clinical experience, are you seeing people that sick?
Oh, I'm seeing people that sick. They, seeing people that sick they for people to say that they're not talking they don't
they're not looking at American they're they're not talking to the sea of people
that have autoimmune conditions yeah because I can tell you 15 years of
experience it's getting more complex it just is and that's just me and my 15 one
person in 15 years.
And I'm hearing that time and time again from other functional medicine doctors,
other health coaches, other nutritionists, other RDS, the free-thinking ones,
they're all seeing the same thing.
This is not, there's a lot of what we would say anecdotal just experience
that we see on a day-to-day basis that we want RCTs for.
Like I want the randomized control trial, please.
Because we're seeing it on the front lines.
Please do studies on this because there's something going on
and we're helping people on an individual grassroots,
like patient by patient basis.
But this is a national problem when you look at some statistics
that 50 million Americans have an autoimmune disease.
And people will say, you're right, the pushback will be,
there's always a contrarian view.
But oh, that's just better diagnostics.
That's why that's a part of it, of course.
But better diagnostics happened because more and more people were sick, and they had to
figure out what the heck is going on.
So the need, the demand created better diagnostics. Like they didn't just start better
diagnostics because nobody had it and then all of a sudden just happened. The medicine,
albeit slow, is getting better at diagnosing these complex, what the world would call mystery
illnesses because more people are demanding and doctors are needing to look at these areas
that they didn't need to look at before. Someone said to me online the other day, and I thought, this is astute observation,
anybody that's been in, when you look at behavioral problems, and the statistics is one in five American kids,
like 15 million kids have a diagnosable mental, emotional, or behavioral disorder.
And then people say, well, it's better diagnostics. Tell anybody in education for the past couple of decades, they will tell you there's more
behavioral, emotional, mental issues amongst kids and adults.
So I think that's a good way of putting it.
Talk to the teachers.
They'll tell you about, talk to the schools, the amount of food allergies.
Talk to them.
Anybody that's been in the system since the 70s, 80s, they'll tell you that.
It's growing.
It's just not better diagnostics.
They're just, the teachers are seeing it on the front line and we're seeing it on the
front line.
So please, I would say sit down, respectfully sit down because you can pontificate about
your public health all day long, but we're seeing it on the front lines.
You know, I've had many teachers actually reach out to me and DM me and say, Courtney, this is getting insane. long, but we're seeing it on the front lines.
disorders, behavioral disorders like ADHD diagnosis, diagnoses, food allergies. I mean, I can just speak to this anecdotally to myself and I hear people say this all the time. When
I was a kid, we didn't know a single person that had a peanut allergy. And then I started
as a nanny, like when was I a nanny? Probably like 10 or 15 years ago now. It was right,
it was actually, I was right when I was studying nutrition. And I remember I was making the
lunches for the daughters every day. And I remember I was making the lunches
for the daughters every day.
And the mom said the first day of the job,
she said, they are not allowed to have anything
with almonds and anything with peanuts.
And I said, why?
She said, because so many kids have allergies now
that they have to outlaw them from the schools.
And that to me was insane because when I was a kid,
I didn't know a single person that had one.
Yeah, no, yeah.
I mean, my kids, when they were in school, like, my daughter's home school now,
but when she was in traditional school, same thing,
there was a peanut-free zone, and this was a small little country school.
Yeah, so it is a significant problem,
and that's just scratching the surface, let alone all the unspoken, unseen things
that are going on behind closed doors.
Like, people really struggling with, again, these mystery illnesses that we typically see.
So we have to look at, like to answer your question, we have to look at environmental toxins.
We have to look at their gut health.
We have to look at nutrient deficiencies.
We have to look at biotoxins like mold, bacteria, viruses.
And I have kind of conflicting views on that because I look at genetic variants.
Almost 100% of our patients have specific HLA genes, human leukocyte antigens, And I have kind of conflicting views on that because I look at genetic variants, almost
100% of our patients have specific HLA genes, human leukocyte antigens, which makes them
more sensitive to things like mold and different methylation gene variants which are in the
sensitive to tend to be an increased likelihood of sensitivity to these things.
But then my mind goes to, okay, mold has been never, toxic mold has never been healthy for
human race.
But you're talking about average to moderate levels of mold.
It's flaring people up.
So is it the mold alone?
I don't think it is.
I think it's the, that may be the straw that broke the camel's back.
I think it could be the tipping point.
It could be the gasoline on the fire, if you will, the mold.
But mold and human have a long existence together.
So there's a certain level of, yeah, mold is everywhere. Why is the resilience so low
that the person can't is having a reaction to pretty much everything, low to moderate
amounts of mold included, including foods and including other things too, right? They
have these multiple chemical sensitivities. To me, it's not the mold. The mold is a piece
of the puzzle, but certainly should not be only looked at. And same with viruses, same
with bacteria. Humans had a symbiotic relationship with these things for eons. The new variable
is the microplastics, the PFAS, the heavy metals, the herbicides, the pesticides, the
soil microbiome destruction, the nutrient density of the foods we're eating, that's
the biggest thing and that's why policy is so important.
Because these people are going in the grocery store, they're thinking they're doing the
good thing, but there's so much confusion out there and there's no transparency on
the foods that they're having.
So that's why my work is helped by, would be helped by real good food policy change.
Absolutely.
Well, because there's the invisible insidious things happening like the glyphosate on the
food, like you said, the PFASs that are not regulated, the plastics that are not being
regulated at all.
The industry is regulating all of those on their own.
And this is where we need the government to intervene because those are all the invisible
things that people largely don't know about.
People are waking up to them now, but largely don't know that they're being poisoned.
So the mold thing is interesting to me because I'm curious, so do you think more people are
being affected by it because they're, I've heard you talk about the buckets before and
we can kind of go into that where people's buckets are just overflowing because they're
just, they're being exposed to, it's like we're under attack. Yeah. From every angle.
Too much. So yeah, that bio individuality like some people have big buckets, some people
smaller buckets and that's those HLA gene variants, methylation gene variants, detox
gene variants, and no cannabinoid gene variants. We all have a different, you know, configuration
of these genetic variants. And that means that can affect the way your
body detoxes things, correct?
Yeah.
The way we detox, the way they methylate, the way that we handle inflammation.
Yeah.
Because human leukocyte antigens, they're just, if they get exposed to a bacteria virus
multotoxin, the immune system doesn't know how to calm down as much.
So there's this confluence of genetic and epigenetic factors that we see very very high correlated and the read and not just in ours
telehealth clinic but
Studies are now looking at this stuff. They're beginning to look at it. And again, I want more studies. I want more
Data out there so we can understand these mechanisms and what's at play here. But yeah, it's
You can't change your bucket size. You can't change your genetic tolerance for stressors,
but you can change what you put in the bucket.
So mold is a piece of it for some people, not everybody.
Bacteria, like opportunistic pathogenic bacteria can be,
viruses can be, stress, unresolved trauma,
environmental toxins, foods that don't love us back.
All these things are what fill up that bucket.
So if we can take out broad swaths of like these contributing factors, the human body
can handle some stress.
But right now, we have an epidemic of people that their buckets are overflowing.
They've hit their tipping point of symptoms.
And they're going to their doctor and the doctors are like, you're just depressed, like
here's an antidepressant or it looks autoimmune.
Here's a steroid, here's a prednisone. Here's a pain pill
Here's an immunosuppressant or I mean whatever is the training is to diagnose the disease and match it with a medication
These people are not sick from a pharmaceutical deficiency. Yeah, so why the heck are they sick?
Let's ask the questions. Let's truly look at what's going on here and studies already are looking but we want more
I want more information. I want to help people better
with better science and more transparent science.
Same. Yeah, I mean, it's unfortunate that the current reality is if you go to your standard
GP, allopathic doctor, conventional doctor, they have been trained to match your symptoms
with a pill. And I'm not knocking doctors. Thank God we have them. A lot of
people have talked about this before and said this, but America is amazing for if you are
in an accident or you need a surgery. It's incredible. We really have that down.
But if you're dealing with something like we're talking about right now and you go in
and you say, oh, I have X, Y and Z and it's actually coming from the mold that they're
being exposed to and the glyphosate that they're eating and the
microplastics and the PFAS's but instead their doctor just says oh you just have anxiety and then they put you on an SSRI Which I would love to talk about yeah
This is why what we were saying in the beginning is why we need more studies
We need to look at this from a different angle
We need what we're called what what has been said in the executive order
Which is a gold standard of science.
Because we need to be studying all this and then we need to get it out to all of our doctors
so that they can better treat people with the things that they're dealing with now
instead of just matching them with a pill.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
I think that it's, I think that it's a testament to it,
and this precedes Maha and Bobby and all that stuff.
I've seen a trend over 15 years of more and more conventional physicians referring their
patients to me.
I've never met these doctors.
I don't know who they are.
But I never thought there'd be a day where I would say the last four or five years, it
really has ramped up of people saying, yeah, I heard about functional medicine.
I don't know a lot about it, or I'm reading about it,
I'm interested in it, go see this guy.
I heard good things about this guy, go see this guy.
All right, that's significant,
because those doctors that aren't,
they're not bread-pilled,
they're not like drinking the Kool-Aid,
the wellness Kool-Aid, the stevia sweetened Kool-Aid.
Exactly, die free.
They are just your average doctor who's guess what?
On the front line and they're seeing
these more complicated cases and they're like,
bro, I don't know what to do.
They wouldn't say bro.
They would say, I don't know what to do.
And they're sending them to people like me.
So that is going on, believe me,
that was not happening 10, 15 years ago.
It wasn't, if it was, it was a small amount.
Now it's more and more people.
And if you look at the Institute for Functional Medicine,
almost all the physicians being trained with post-doctor education in functional medicine
are all conventionally trained physicians every single year.
These are people that got into medicine to help people.
They realized because that's their lived experience,
man, I can't help people the way that I want to.
I need to go get trained in this,
go to a school for another few years
through the Institute for Functional Medicine
to learn how to help people.
This is happening every year,
and now it's really ramping up
because of the amount of chronic health problems.
So people actually knew the people involved here,
like all this hyperbole and controversy would really be dispelled.
Because these are just, most of them are just average doctors
that are seeing something and they want to figure out how to help people.
Yeah, exactly.
Because doctors get into this world because they want to genuinely help people.
And I think what's happening is that there has been such an explosion in chronic disease
that a lot of these doctors, you know, that trained 20, 30 years ago,
they weren't trained on what we're seeing now.
And so they're kind of going, I don't really know how to deal with this.
So then they're sending them to you.
Or I interviewed an allopathically trained doctor who's now a functional doctor because she went back
to study functional medicine because she realized that she wasn't able to help her patients
in the way that she had been classically trained.
Well, yeah.
I mean, there's a study.
It was a pediatric residency, study looking at pediatric residency and looking at most
conventional doctors would fail a basic nutrition test.
Why?
Why did most doctors receive little to no nutrition training when the most of the chronic
health problems that they're seeing on an hourly basis are driven by an epigenetic lifestyle
things including food and stress and then why?
That's what we're talking about here is that these people are falling through the cracks
and the doctors want to help,
but they're not equipped to help people.
They're equipped to give out pharmaceuticals.
So you talk about trust the science,
that's the science that's happening right now.
That's why the system is the way that it is.
But it's obviously the statistics speak for themselves.
If what we were doing is working,
why aren't we having better outcomes?
I'd be all for doing what we're doing if we had the best health in the world
We're not so it is the height of hubris to say
We're failing but let's keep doing it because we're the right ones
I mean is insane but like you brought up SSRIs. That's the other thing is like so many
like
the a lot of my job is educating people on the fact that mental health is physical
health.
Our brain is a part of our body just as much as anything else is.
And psychiatry is, and psychology is very behind in this, of like, not even looking
at the organ they're treating.
They're not even observing what the science is showing.
What does the science show right now?
Or there's things like the cytokine model of cognitive function,
how does cytokine's pro-inflammatory cells, how does that impact all the brain works?
So yet we're just giving people, kids, adults, these SSRIs without looking at
what's driving this neuroinflammation if that's a piece of their puzzle.
I'm not saying that's everyone's piece of the puzzle,
but shouldn't it be looked at if it's being studied?
And I would say that I see inflammatory components to most people that have anxiety, depression,
brain fog and fatigue.
And this science also shows that SSRIs work about the same as placebos.
And that's not a knock on SSRIs, because I think there's power and beauty in placebo.
It's mind over matter. It's the mind beauty in placebo. It's mind over matter.
It's the mind-body connection.
It's the power of suggestion.
So if anything, it's like, yeah, wow, you're telling me that with a shift of I believe
this is going to work for me, it helps somebody.
The problem is SSRIs have side effects.
So is there a more effective option that doesn't have the potential side effects?
And I'm not saying people should come up with SSRIs I'm not saying I'm not saying it
doesn't help people I think it does help people but you don't have depression
because of an SSRI deficiency so maybe you need to be on that SSRI for a time
or maybe indefinitely to get your head above water maybe the mechanism is
placebo who cares if it's helping you it's helping you yeah I want you to have
that choice to choose that if you want to but if it's helping you? If it's helping you, yeah. I want you to have that choice to choose that if you want to.
But if it's not working for you or if it does come with side effects or if you want to know
why do I have this problem in the first place, shouldn't you be able to have agency on your
health to ask these questions?
And that's where there's the disconnect because they're not looking at it.
But when you look at things like gut health and the research around the microbiome and
how 95% of serotonin is made in the gut, 50% of dopamine is made in the gut.
It works upon the vagus nerve.
Why aren't we looking at vagal nerve toning?
Why aren't we looking at vagus nerve health and the gut-brain axis?
Why aren't we looking at neuroinflammation and what the researchers call the leaky brain
syndrome like the increased blood-brain barrier permeability and neuroinflammation and the
impact of inflammation on the microglial cells of the brain?
This is all science that's being looked at, but it's not being given the light of day.
It's not trickling down to the average PCP or psychiatrist office yet.
So this is the type of stuff and that's just one example.
There's so much, there is actually exciting science being done,
but it's not given any attention, very little
attention other than our pockets of weird wellness people.
I know exactly quote unquote weird.
Yeah, I mean it is.
It's fascinating.
You brought up the vagus nerve for people listening that don't know.
So the vagus nerve goes from your gut to your brain.
Yeah.
It is the direct connection.
It's the largest nerve in the body.
It gets, I believe it's a Latin origin.
It's from the word wonderer, it translates
like the wandering nerve, right?
And it's yeah, it's the largest cranial nerve in the body, it's responsible for that resting,
digesting.
So we say that so flippantly, but if you think about it, that parasympathetic aspect of the
autonomic nervous system, resting, calming, grounding, anti-anxiety, hormone balanced,
I would add to that, digestion,
healthy digestion.
How many people are having dysregulation in that area?
They're wired and tired, they feel dysregulated, they're hypervigilant and or they have digestive
problems.
There's going to be a problem oftentimes with what's called the neuro-immunoendocrine
axis, which is the intersection between the
nervous system, the immune system, i.e. inflammation, which is a product of the immune system, and
your endocrine system, your hormones.
So you can run labs on these people and you will see things like, it could be a collection
of things you don't know, that's why we're running the labs, but dysbiosis, leaky gut
syndrome, a lot of gut-centric drivers of inflammation, a lot
of opportunistic and pathogenic bacteria, a lot of SIBO, which is type of dysbiosis,
small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
There's a lot of inflammation markers that's high and a lot of hormone dysregulation.
So this is happening all the time and it's showing up as mental health issues or these
other things that we're talking about here, inflammatory problems.
So yeah, this is stuff that can be quantified on labs today.
Like we run labs for people around the country and you have to know what you're dealing with
to do something about it.
Like this is empowerment.
This is not about fear mongering.
This isn't about looking for problems where there isn't, which is another critique from
the capital.
But we're actually getting people better and they can see their labs improve.
So District 13 says it's a good thing.
District 13.
I think that's a district, right?
Katniss?
Yeah, is that hers?
I can't remember.
I think it is though.
We should look it up.
I should know it.
Katniss's district.
That's actually where we're at right now is Western Pennsylvania, Appalachia, which I
find very apropos.
I love that.
Okay, so we're in district 13.
Hopefully it's 13 that we're trying to get right here.
But I did want to say one thing about the SSRIs and then we can move on from it.
So I've been learning some things more recently about SSRIs that I've been a little bit horrified
by.
One, I just saw a post about this like a week ago, a girl claiming that she has lost the ability to have like sexual desire and have orgasms.
And apparently this is a side effect with the SSRIs and sometimes even if you just take it for a little bit of time.
And I had never heard that before. Thank God I never went on an SSRI,
but if I had been, and then I heard about this later,
I would have been so mad.
And I hate that this is not being talked about more
because I think we've gotten to this place in society
where we are so used to just medicating everything
that we don't really think about the potential complications that could come along with them.
And this is why I love so much what you do.
And this is why I love so much about the functional medicine space and the
integrative space is that what we try to do in that space is we try to turn over
every single rock, we shine light in every corner and area of the body before
we go to medication and it's not to vilify medication,
it's not to say that we shouldn't ever use it,
it's not to say that we hate medication,
thank God that we have it.
There's been certain advances, like for example,
antibiotics, we wouldn't be here anymore without them.
So thank God, right?
But if there's things that we could do,
like for example, if your gut is messed up
and it's presenting as anxiety and know, anxiety and depression symptoms,
why can't we clean that up first without having to do this extreme medical intervention when
especially do you know who Kelly Bickle is? Or is no, no, no, it wasn't Kelly Bickle.
Who was it? Kelly something I'll leave it in the show notes. Years ago, I listened to
her on this podcast and she said that she was a conventionally trained psychiatrist.
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started…
And she started… And she started… And she started… And she started… And she started… the pharmaceutical companies were never actually able to prove in their studies that it worked. Yeah, right.
Which is insane.
Which is insane.
And they're still pushing them and now there's data to actually show this and she was on this really early.
Oh, years ago and she got vilified for that.
She got really vilified for it.
Again, don't dare ask questions.
Right?
Don't dare ask questions.
I mean, there is an orthodoxy to this.
It is like, it's the best thing I can start for interrupting
the best thing I can equate this to and you know human history is
Religious a religion. There's a religion religious authoritarianism to it and you can have secular religions
This is secular religion like almost like communist China. It's that sort of energy
I'm not saying we're communist China, but it's that sort of like shut down don't talk shut them down like
Delegitimize them make them sound like they're crazy. And if they could throw these people in jail, they would they would
That's what we're talking about here. Exactly. And so I'm just using this specifically specifically as an example
I'm not trying to personally attack SSRs
I believe in everything that you said.
If somebody is utilizing them and it's helping them and it's making their life better,
I love this.
At the end of the day, I want everybody to do whatever's best for them, truly.
I just want informed consent around all of this.
Informed consent, that's all we're asking.
So people can have a choice.
SSRIs are one of them.
You have this, this, and this option.
What would you like?
These are the pros and cons of both. This is the true transparent science of the relative risks.
Maybe it's way more pros to take it versus the potential negative, like rare side effects.
There's actually with the data we have right now, even if there's with the data, we know
the side effects of these drugs, but how many times are people given the medications without
any conversation?
And these are people that are desperate.
And with the person with the white coats
telling them to do it,
and they're going to do because they trust them.
Exactly.
So it's like, okay, maybe if a certain percentage
of people heard with the already messed up signs
we have right now, we still know these side effects exist.
Maybe they would want another option.
Maybe they want to start with something
a little bit more conservative
and then maybe wait if they could.
So yeah, that's what we want across the board for any medication,
is just informed consent.
And what is the most effective option that causes the least amount of side effects?
And science to show that. True science, transparent science to show that.
Well, you know, another example of this happening,
and then we can move on from the medications,
but my generation, I believe, was the most affected by this,
was I feel like we were the first generation
that started getting put on birth control
when we were like 12, 13 years old.
Thankfully, my mom didn't allow me to go on it,
but all of my girlfriends were put on it at 12, 13, 14,
and then they were given no, there was no conversation around what the
potential side effects could be, what the risks were, and then a lot of them were on
it for 10, 15 years, and now they're my age trying to get pregnant, and there's a whole
other conversation about that with the infertility, but I do think that it's a piece of that if
you're suppressing your natural hormones for 10, 15 years.
Nobody is having conversations with these people and putting them on medications outlining
the risks.
So many of my girlfriends had to figure that out on their own later and then went, why
the heck didn't my doctor tell me this?
Or why didn't they tell my mom?
Because I was 12 years old and she's putting me on this and then now I'm dealing with all
these side effects.
And so I just, again, it's another example of there needs to be more conversation around
this people.
Yeah.
I mean, the drug commercial say it, talk with your doctor, but yet the doctor's not giving
the full information because probably the doctor doesn't even know.
Exactly.
Because it's like they're being sold from the pharmaceutical reps and it's like all
completely fluffed up, filtered and like this is the magic drug that we want to sell.
It is, again, profit over people. And yeah, that's what's going
on. And we just want basic things. I think people, what we're saying right now, if every
American heard this conversation, I would assume almost 100% of our country would be
for it, no matter where their background is. So to me, this is the insanity of it all because
it's like, wait, what?
Are we living in like a parallel universe?
This should be everybody should be demanding this.
Well, because all we're saying is that we want a high quality of life for everybody.
That's literally it.
That's all I'm saying.
I want people to be left to their own choices to make the best decisions for themselves
with the most information so that they can make the best decision for themselves, so that they can thrive.
At the end of the day, I just want to see humans healthy.
That's literally it.
Yeah, exactly.
It is so crazy.
Okay, so talking about, I guess this could be about pharmaceuticals kind of, but POTS.
I want to talk about this because I feel like POTS was a side effect of the COVID vaccine.
I know that.
But where are people getting like, how do you get POTS?
What is it?
POTS is preceded COVID.
It's postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome.
So it's a dysautonomic problem, right?
It is a dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system.
So some symptoms of POTS can be dizziness, vertigo, fatigue, brain fog, histamine intolerance,
heart palpitations, anxiety, I think I mentioned all the main ones.
So we've seen POTS for 15 plus years.
So POTS can be triggered by lots of different things.
Viruses like Epstein-Barr virus can trigger POTS.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Mold can trigger POTS.
Trauma like emotional trauma can trigger POTS. Chr Mold can trigger POTS, trauma, like emotional trauma can trigger POTS, chronic stress can
trigger POTS.
So it has an autoimmune component in many cases, not all cases, but that's what the
science shows now.
But certainly, I would say a high correlation with autoimmune issues and potentially other
autoimmune problems too.
And it's just one manifestation of that larger poly autoimmunity. But since the since
COVID, we saw an uptick in pots, where more and more people were getting pots triggered
by COVID. And for some people, the COVID vaccine. So and that's, you know, I want more studies
on that is the virus and the vaccine the same or the potential triggering of pots and other
autoimmune problems the same
for both?
We don't have that science.
I would be curious on it.
I would say I've definitely seen POTS be triggered by COVID itself.
And I've seen POTS being triggered by the COVID vaccine.
So I want to know the data.
I don't know the data.
I know both are potentiality for people that have these different genetic variants and
different health issues that are going on.
And that can be, again, that straw that broke the camel's back, whether it's the virus itself
or the vaccine or any other, you know, modulator of the immune system is really what's happening.
When you're modulating the immune system one way or the other, it can be the tipping point
for people.
But it's a complex problem when you're dealing with really debilitating fatigue, brain fog, digestive problems, anxiety,
racing, you know, racing thoughts, they can't calm down.
Their autonomic nervous system is dysregulated back to that vagus nerve issue.
Like their sympathetic fight or flight or freeze response is off, they're feeling dizzy,
lightheaded.
But we really are able to deal with these mechanisms, these inflammatory mechanisms, sort of gut
brain vagus nerve mechanisms, the histamine intolerance mechanism.
Histamine is a part of our immune system.
The mast cells of the body release histamine.
The brain is rich with these histamine receptor sites.
So calming down the histamine response is a big component for those people.
So we have a lot of success with it, but a lot of people since the pandemic
have had these mystery illnesses being triggered
by either virus or the vaccine.
And we just need more science.
I want more transparent science.
Because again, I'm seeing it on the front lines.
I'm not a researcher, I'm a clinician.
So I would love, because we're getting people healthier,
but we're only, we're basing it on just anecdotal experience
and the science that's out there. But this is the type of stuff that I want more We're getting people healthier, but we're basing it on just anecdotal experience and
the science that's out there.
But this is the type of stuff that I want more and more transparent science to really
look at and not have any conflict of interest to say, well, we can't look at this because
this is profitable.
We don't want people to see this for 75 years.
Like come on here.
Like this is the people deserve true free information here.
Yeah, exactly.
Because a lot of people are suffering.
Well, there is, so I actually sent this to you yesterday
and I know you've talked about long COVID.
So I want to talk about that for a second
if you're okay to talk about it.
Of course.
Because I know sometimes people are like,
oh, I don't want to touch that.
Oh, we can touch it.
Okay, cool.
Because there was a study that just came out saying
that long COVID is just a vaccine injury.
And I want to know your thoughts on that
because I will be honest for years I have said I thought long COVID was just actually somebody
dealing with a vaccine injury and then there was a study that came out saying that but then I've
heard you saying that people have gotten long COVID from COVID itself. Oh yeah for sure I have
again this broad diverse swath of telehealth patients.
I would say, like a lot of people that had autoimmune conditions didn't get the vaccine.
And I saw a long COVID from them.
And I saw people that did get the vaccine and had symptoms after from that too.
So it's a bit of both.
Again, I want to know, okay, is one or the other more likely to get these symptoms than others?
I don't know that answer.
I've seen some reports say that the vaccine was significantly higher.
So I have seen data out there.
So that may be the case.
And when you think of, and this is elementary for me to say, but I think if you think about
it on this basic level of whether it's nature, even if no, it was a novel virus, you have sort of nature and the body's long
time relationship with viruses versus something that is manmade, that's engineered.
That was genetically modified.
Right.
That may have a bit of a more of a tempestuous interaction with the human immune system.
I don't have any science to show that, I'm just saying I could Think mechanistically that could be the case is a more of a hyper inflammatory immunomodulating response with the vaccine versus the virus in some people
Again, there's a genetic component to these things
I think I think if people have these HLA gene variants they may and other methylation and detox gene variants
Maybe it's these people genetically, there aren't everybody, that for them, their immune system is going to respond and not calm down the way that most
people do.
Yeah.
So that's why I don't want to fear monger around something where we don't have a lot
of compelling data, but I want that compelling data one way or the other with no precept
positions.
Exactly.
Like that's all that I want.
It's like, well, whatever it is, let's discover what it is.
But I could tell you that I've seen it trigger it in both.
I've seen POTS and other autoimmune issues.
And I would tie long COVID into POTS really.
I think a lot of long COVID is a form of some, it's somewhere on the dysautonomic spectrum.
So they may not be diagnosable as POTS, but it's like there's components,
there's histamine inflammatory dysautonomic components
to neuroinflammatory components
to what the world would call long COVID.
Okay, that's fascinating.
Well, and I would just think from,
again, this is just me just thinking
about the mechanism of it.
We know autoimmunity is when your body starts attacking
things that it sees as foreign.
And I'm talking specifically about like the injection. It was a foreign entity that your body doesn't recognize.
And so it could have caused some sort of autoimmunity.
But again, no like data or I think there might be a little bit of data out there about that.
There's certainly more and more data coming out.
And it's so much so that there's certain bills and legislation at the time
of recording this where they're trying to put a pause on mRNA vaccines until we get
better data.
Because we need it.
Because we're enough reports like we're talking about tens of thousands of reports coming
out of people saying they have interactions from the vaccine.
Can we pause here, especially when there's mandates or schedules involved, can we just
pause here and really look at the data with full transparency and not suppressing things
for 75 years?
Yeah, so I think that is, that certainly is happening and they're going to find things
because there's enough, like where the smoke goes fire.
There's enough smoke to know there's a fire going on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We just want to limit the harm a fire going on.
Yeah.
And I wanted to ask you because I know that we've gotten a lot of pushback from people saying,
okay, well, if you take the dyes out, it's still going to be GMO, sugary corn.
Why are you so focused on the dyes? Why is this such a big deal?
It's still going to be unhealthy food.
What would you say to somebody like that?
And why are we fighting for this cause?
Yeah, well, I think it's, for me, it was a emblematic,
artificial dyes was emblematic of something
that should have been and still is,
and to some degree, bipartisan.
It was something that anybody who you are, it doesn't
change the taste, has no nutritional value, there's not, I mean, there's always going
to be some pontification, some contrarian with different views on seed oils or saturated
fats or anything with a nutrition. But artificial dyes? Isn't that the kumbaya of ingredients?
Like can't we just all come together?
I mean, look, I mean, if Canada is using fruit and vegetable
extracts to dye their cereal, why can't, doesn't that seem
like erring on the side of caution?
Makes the most sense.
So I think that's where people like Vani Hari and Jason Carve and Callie Means,
like these guys, that I believe was their intention behind spearheading it.
And we've talked about the neurobehavioral inflammatory autoimmune data that's in the
science when it comes to artificial diets for years. But I do feel like from a food activist standpoint, and I would put you in that group too, I think
that this, you all brought this up as a poster child for something of like no matter who
you are as America, let's look at this because talk about where the smoke goes fire.
Like this is just the tip of the iceberg.
Exactly.
And, and, and there's a different layer with artificial food diets because it has nutritional talk about where the smoke is fired, like this is just the tip of the iceberg.
And there's a different layer with artificial food dyes because it has nutritional value
and it's easy swap.
And there is data where I mean the FDA's equivalents in these other countries put regulations on
it.
So this isn't some woo woo caucus thing where we're just making shit up.
This is no, the FDA's equivalents in the EU, in Australia, in New Zealand. Yes,
there may be artificial food dyes, but it's more regulated. So, okay, if it requires a
warning label or they're using fruit and vegetable extracts as alternatives, shouldn't we just
follow the science? I thought they loved that.
Exactly.
I thought they loved that. But again, it's only the approved science, I think. So, to
me, I think this should have been a Kumbaya moment,
but it wasn't because they have derangement syndrome.
Yes.
Oh, Maha, Bobby's tangentially connected to this,
which it wasn't, and we were there on our own volition.
Exactly.
We were there as independent Americans.
Yeah.
But even though, because like, okay, we knew Bobby,
or Bobby was coming on along, Yeah, he agreed with us.
Okay, well, we're going to die on the die hill now.
It's okay.
The dose makes the poison.
We want it.
We want to sip that red die 40.
I mean, they are, that's the level of derangement that's going on.
It's like, oh, wait, we tried to put an olive branch for every American, but you literally
going to burn
that. Okay. All right. That's where we're at. That's the level of your tribalism.
And it's very sad because you're right. This should be something that would bring all of
us together. And what makes me so sad about just the whole conversation around dyes is,
you know, I'll get all these comments from people saying, well, just don't buy it. Just
don't even put it in your cart.
They're discounting the fact that companies like Kellogg's
have contracts with schools around this country.
And these kids are getting this no matter what
every day in their schools.
And a lot of these kids,
this is the only meals that they're getting.
Yeah, well, from a public health standpoint,
that's without a doubt the biggest issue for me.
It's like, okay, yeah, you're right.
I'm not gonna buy Froot Loops, even the Canadian version.
But there's a lot of marginalized,
I mean, talk about poor people,
disenfranchised people, low income people.
This is disproportionately preying on them
because there's no informed consent again
and they're being marketed to
with a very colorful two can like thing.
And then this isn't just Froot Loops,
this is the service industry as a whole.
And they don't have a choice
when you talk about the public school system
and the SNAP program, the food assistance.
Like they are subsidizing through the public school system
and the SNAP program, food that is killing them,
hurting poor people, hurting disproportionately
people of color.
This is, if you talk about, I mean,
the judgment of wellness is that we're elitist.
The judgment of wellness is that we're white, too white.
And the judgment of wellness is that we're not accessible, we're not affordable.
But yet when we come into a policy that could help the disenfranchised people, even that
is shut down.
And that's sort of the, again, the cognitive distance that's going on right now.
It's so maddening and I'm so glad that you brought that up.
Because yeah, it's affecting not only in the schools,
but I was thinking about this the other day,
it's also in hospitals.
Yeah, good point.
In nursing homes.
Our military personnel, they oftentimes don't have access to anything
outside of what the contracts are with those certain food companies.
So this is affecting actually a lot of people.
Yeah.
And when you look at the level of obesity and diabetes and autoimmune conditions amongst
these groups, why?
Why?
And then the public health elitist will say, well, they're not getting like, it's about
this sort of, they're really coming against capitalism.
And I would say, well, is it capitalism
or is it crony capitalism?
Is it sort of corporatocracy?
Is it sort of an incestuous relationship
between corporations and government?
I would agree with that.
Again, there's overlap in there between our messages,
but I don't think you throw the baby out with a bathwater.
I don't think that you need to become a communist nation
to have healthy people.
Because again, I see people healthy all the time
on a daily basis and we don't live in Cuba
or China or North Korea.
So to me, it's like they want to sort of propel
this chronic disease epidemic into sort of this weird
Marxist place that that motivates, I think a lot of them,
not all of them, but it does motivate a lot of them,
which I find interesting because at that point,
okay, we're talking about Froot Loops over here
They're talking about just disassembling
American economy. Yeah, really is really what they want to do exactly. Yeah, my gosh
Well in the essence of time, I have so many other things I want to talk to you about but I think we should wrap it
Up so we can also record another podcast. Yes. Yeah, that's good too. Thanks for having me, friend. I appreciate it.
Well, thank you so much.
I really enjoyed this conversation.
Honestly, this is one of my favorite ones I've recorded in a while.
This is really awesome.
That means a lot to me, seriously.
It was great.
It was really good.
And I just want to say I appreciate you being so involved in this movement.
I also really appreciate your voice.
I know that it hasn't been easy.
I know that you're getting a lot of pushback and I mean, it's great you're not seeing a lot of hate
which is amazing.
I'm like, wow, okay.
I haven't even seen hate on you.
I'm just speaking for myself
and I'm seeing all the hate I'm getting
and I can just imagine it's happening on your end too.
I'm sure it's happening
but the Lord has spared me my eyes.
I need to pray for that too.
Just don't look at it.
It's like, just live in La La Land.
Okay, yeah, they love it.
I'm not pissing anybody off.
Exactly.
Everyone loves it.
That's why I choose to believe.
But truly, I'm so grateful for your voice in this.
It's so needed.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
And I'm sure everybody already knows where to find you, but just in case, let them know
where they can find you.
Thank you.
DrWillCole.com. all the telehealth information is there, tons of free resources, like thousands
of articles are written over the years of just free all research to the science so they
can follow it.
And my podcast is The Art of Being Well.
My books, I have four books, so they can check it all out there.
Yeah, I love your books.
They're great.
Thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Thanks. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Thanks.
Thank you so much for listening to the Real Foodology podcast.
This is a Wellness Loud production produced by Drake Peterson and mixed by Mike Fry.
Theme song is by Georgie.
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The content of this show is for educational and informational purposes only.
It is not a substitute for individual medical and mental health advice and doesn't constitute
a provider-patient relationship.
I am a nutritionist, but I am not your nutritionist.
As always, talk to your doctor or your health team first.