The Matt Walsh Show - Ep. 1785 - How Healthmaxxing Is Destroying Men

Episode Date: May 26, 2026

Fitness trackers and the healthmaxxing cult are destroying men, and here's the proof. Ep. 1785 - - - Click here to join the member-exclusive portion of my show: https://dwplus.watch/MattWalsh...MemberExclusive - - - Today's Sponsor: ZipRecruiter - Post jobs FOR FREE at https://ZipRecruiter.com/WALSH - - - DailyWire+: Become a Daily Wire Member and watch all of our content ad-free: https://dwplus.watch/RealHistorySubscribe 📲 Download the free Daily Wire app today on iPhone, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Samsung, and more. 📜 Real History with Matt Walsh is available ad-free, exclusively on DailyWire+ https://dwplus.watch/RealHistory 👕 Get your Matt Walsh flannel here: https://dwplus.shop/MattWalshMerch - - - Socials:  YouTube — https://youtube.com/@mattwalsh Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/mattwalshblog Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/mattwalshblog TikTok — https://www.tiktok.com/@mattwalsh_ X — https://twitter.com/mattwalshblog - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Young men feel directionless, and one of the best answers to that problem is building something real. Start a business, learn a trade, create something new and useful. Take ownership over your own life instead of waiting around for permission from some corporation or government agency. The problem is that actually building a business is hard enough already. Then you run into the banking system. A lot of small business owners are profitable. They're growing and doing everything right. But big banks still bury them in paperwork and drag the process out for weeks or months, just to access capital they need right now.
Starting point is 00:00:29 More than 70% of small businesses need additional funding at least once a year. That's why Cardiff exists. If you want bank rates without the bank delays, go to cardiff.co slash Walsh for up to $500,000 in same-day funding. They funded more than $12 billion for businesses since 2004. The application takes less than five minutes. There's no impact on your personal credit. Businesses can get approved in minutes and funded the same day, which means instead
Starting point is 00:00:51 of wasting months fighting bureaucracy, business owners can actually focus on growing their company, hiring people, expanding operations, buying equipment and inventory. Banks try to lock out small businesses. Cardiff has the key. Big banks may not want to approve your business loan, but Cardiff does. If you've been in business for at least a year, pulling in $20,000 a month in revenue, apply now for up to $500,000 in same-day funding at cardiff.co slash Walsh. Again, that's cardiff.co.com slash Walsh, real growth, fast funding. Cardiff, borrow better. For as long as we've had a country, we've had quacks who claim that they alone understand the secrets of human longevity.
Starting point is 00:01:28 And they tell us that if we simply follow their advice, we can maximize our lifespan. Typically, the most popular quacks are the ones who demand that we sacrifice some enjoyable commonplace activity in order to supposedly improve our health. Now, in the early 1900s, for example, a man named Horace Fletcher came up with the idea that if you wanted to avoid alcoholism, appendicitis insanity, and a host of other illnesses, then you needed to chew your food obsessively. Hundreds of times to the point that it lost all of it. its taste before swallowing. He once chewed a green onion more than 700 times just to make sure
Starting point is 00:02:04 that it was totally liquefied. And appropriately enough, Fletcher became known as the Great Masticator. Not to be confused with the title claimed by Jeffrey Tubin on a Zoom call, this is Masticator. Fletcher quickly attracted hundreds of thousands of followers, including Arthur Conan Doyle, Mark Twain, John Rockefeller, and the author Upton Sinclair. In fact, Sinclair reportedly wrote to catchphrase of the movement, which was, and I quote, nature will castigate those who don't masticate. Johnny Cochran himself could not have invented a better slogan. Now, in every case, when fads like this catch on, it's a sign of a deeper sickness that needs to be addressed. Fletcher was successful because at the time the United States was transitioning from an agrarian society
Starting point is 00:02:51 to an industrial one. People began eating more processed foods and living more sedentary lifestyles, so indigestion became more common, among other health issues. There was also a widespread fixation on efficiency, and it became fashionable to see the human body as a kind of machine that could be optimized. Fletcher took advantage of the new health challenges and angst that the Industrial Revolution brought. The fact that his solution was nonsense didn't bother many people. They were terrified, and they wanted to extend their lifespans at any cost. Now, today we're seeing a very noticeable return of this kind of thinking. The health consciousness stuff, the health maxing, as it's called, has gone massively overboard, as you've probably noticed. People are walking
Starting point is 00:03:40 around with bracelets tracking their vital signs every second of the day like their astronauts on the ISS. They're monitoring their heart rates, getting daily reports on their sleep habits, treating alcohol or sugar like it'll kill them if they look at it. it counting their steps. It's now widely believed that it's impossible to live a healthy life without being an obsessive, paranoid lunatic. Never mind the fact that you're eventually going to die either way. Just like the great Masticator taught, people increasingly believe that they need to make life miserable in order to prolong it. Now, I feel it necessary here to issue what should be an entirely unnecessary disclaimer, which is that I'm obviously not saying that it's bad
Starting point is 00:04:26 to try to live a healthy lifestyle. Of course, that's not bad. That indeed is very good. You should generally eat healthy and exercise. I lift four or five times, four or five days a week. I run three or four days a week. Not exactly an Olympic athlete-style training regimen, and I'm not exactly an Olympic athlete. But the point is that I'm saying all this is someone who gets a considerably above average amount of exercise. So this is not an anti-fitness, anti-health message. This is more of an anti-paranoia, anti-panic, anti-fragile OCD obsessiveness message. Now, in no small part, the panic I'm talking about is driven by podcasts that are going out of their way for one reason or another to turn people into weird hypochondriacs.
Starting point is 00:05:16 And so here, for example, is footage from one of the biggest podcasts in the world. and it's a clip that you may have seen in which Stephen Bartlett, speaking to Chris Williamson, describes the allegedly catastrophic effect of drinking a few glasses of wine. Watch. It's one of those areas where you don't understand the hidden cost until you really give it up for a while. And I think about my own relationship with drinking, and I stopped drinking at 30 years old, and I'm not 33. And I had just drank because I just drank. I'd never ran the experiment of just giving it up for a while.
Starting point is 00:05:48 And then like, I don't know, maybe I was at 31. and I thought, do not, I have a drink again, because now I could really A-B test it. I had a year of not drinking, decided to have a drink again. It ruined three days of my life. I had a couple of glasses of wine. I didn't get drunk. It ruined three days of my life because of the domino effect it caused. So it meant that I got worse sleep that night.
Starting point is 00:06:06 And then because I got worse sleep that night, I ate more poorly the next day because my dopamine system or whatever. The cortisol system was all messed up. And then I podcasted worse. I didn't go to the gym the day after that day or the day after because of that. because I felt really bad. I then slept worse, and I could track all of this on my week, hashtag ad, hashtag sponsor, hashtag investor, whatever. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:26 And I was like, oh, my God, those three glasses of wine had this hidden domino effect that I must have been living with for my whole life. I drank two glasses of wine and then I podcasted worse. That might be the most pathetic sentence ever uttered by a male of the human species. And it somehow gets worse. his whole week was ruined. His little armband told him he was naughty. I mean, how do you get to the point where you voluntarily say all these things out loud without any hint of shame or self-awareness?
Starting point is 00:07:04 And more importantly, how do we get to the point where this interview has millions of views, mostly from people who appear to believe that they're getting serious, genuine advice on how to improve their lives? Now, first of all, the idea that you can't podcast effectively after having consumed alcoholic beverages the night before is belied. by, first of all, my own personal experience. And at any rate, podcasting is not the kind of thing that seems to require clear-headed sobriety anyway. Now, I've certainly never podcasted drunk, but it seems like a lot of my peers in this space
Starting point is 00:07:35 are drunk or high on something every time they turn on the camera, at least judging based on the content. If you conducted a field sobriety test on 100 podcasters in the middle of their shows, maybe five of them would pass. And you can debate whether that's a good thing or not, but let's not pretend that podcasters of all people need to be in peak physical and mental condition in order to do their jobs.
Starting point is 00:07:55 The more inebrated and insane they are, the more popular they seem to become. And yet, all that aside, you know, it's the podcasting industry that's driving a lot of this, in particular the anti-alcohol hysteria, which has now spiraled out of control. I mean, it's the worst and the gayest of the 90s anti-smoking propaganda all over again. Okay. Give up alcohol if you want. I'm not trying to stop you, but the stuff is not battery acid. A sip will not send you to the hospital.
Starting point is 00:08:31 A glass of wine ruined three days of your life. When did it become normal and acceptable for men to brag about their weak constitutions? It's very strange. And I have no problem with anyone giving up alcohol. I don't care. Drink it or don't. Who cares? that's entirely up to you.
Starting point is 00:08:53 But many in the health conscious health-maxing community now talk about a glass of wine like it's literally cyanide. Which is strange because that means that all of our grandparents were drinking cyanide basically every day of their lives and their life expectancy as adults, taking out child mortality, which was higher back then,
Starting point is 00:09:12 was not that much lower than ours is today. Certainly not as low as you would expect for people who consumed a regular diet of poison, Okay, it's the hysteria and the gross exaggerations. That's the issue. You want to make a health choice for yourself, fine. But it's poison. It will ruin your life. One sip. Calm down. Now, in any case, to be clear, I'm not accusing Stephen Bartlett of lying. Actually, I think he's making a very important point, although he clearly doesn't realize it. What he's really acknowledging is that if you obsessively try to optimize and calibrate your health every second of the day,
Starting point is 00:09:53 then your body will be hit extremely hard whenever you find yourself in a less than optimal situation. You know, it's like washing your hands is obviously a good idea, but if you wash your hands a hundred times a day, then you'll never expose yourself to any germs and your immune system will suffer as a result. And something similar has obviously happened to Stephen Bartlett. I mean, his preoccupation with optimization has made him so, fragile that he physically can't handle a drink that your 85-year-old grandmother could metabolize without any problem whatsoever. How is that an improvement? Even if you don't want to drink, how has your health improved if something as mild and innocuous as a glass of wine can destroy you?
Starting point is 00:10:42 Being healthy should not be synonymous with fragility and brittleness, and yet that's what's happened. The wearable health trackers are, of course, a big part of the problem. Hundreds of millions of adults wear these things now. And in a vacuum, wearing a bracelet that gives you second by second data on your health doesn't seem to be necessarily a bad thing. It's a little weird, but not necessarily a bad thing. Certainly if you have a specific health condition that needs to be monitored that closely, then technology can literally be a lifesaver.
Starting point is 00:11:14 But for a young and healthy person, I think there's good, reason to believe that they do more harm than good. And just take Bartlett's story as a case study. He claims that he was nearly incapacitated for half the week after consuming a very moderate amount of alcohol. How did he know he was incapacitated? Well, because he was monitoring it on his whoop, which I guess is one of the bracelets. So was he really that bad off? Or did he convince himself that his health had been ruined because the bracelet told himself? And then it became a self-fulfilling prophecy. I mean, how many people wake up every day,
Starting point is 00:11:53 particularly when it comes to sleep tracking, how many people wake up every day feeling relatively rested and refreshed and then feel suddenly worse when their sleep tracker informs them that, in fact, their sleep was suboptimal? Like, if you wake up feeling fine, then what's the point of checking your sleep score? These people that check a sleep score every day, do you feel fine when you wake up?
Starting point is 00:12:16 Why check it? Oh, I feel fine, but it feels like everything's fine. But should I check? Oh, no, it's not fine. And then what do you do with that information? Okay, anxiously obsessing over the quality of your sleep seems to be the number one best way to guarantee that you don't get quality sleep. And that even when you do get quality sleep, you still feel like you didn't. But if you want a popular podcast, then you're not supposed to point this out.
Starting point is 00:12:48 Instead, you're supposed to do what Brian Johnson is doing. Again, he's a popular influencer. And here's one of his recent takes, quote, friends, stop drinking alcohol, not cut back, eliminate. Alcohol increases cortisol, disrupts REM sleep, accelerates epigenetic aging, shrinks hippocampal volume, elevates resting heart rate, raises inflammatory markers, impairs glucose metabolism for 16 hours. One drink does that. Now, not that anyone cares anymore, but what he's saying here is mostly not true.
Starting point is 00:13:23 One drink does not, in fact, accelerate aging or shrink hippocampal volume. He's taking studies that look at the effects of long-term drinking, and he's implying that one drink has the same effect. There is no reliable data showing that one drink does most of the things that he just mentioned there in any kind of permanent, measurable, meaningful way. Okay, the idea that one beer, one single solitary beer can accelerate aging is ridiculous on its face and not supported by any reliable studies whatsoever. So it's a lie, in other words, but it's the kind of lie that people feel justified in telling because it's for a good cause. Anybody who points out that it is a
Starting point is 00:14:09 lie, like I'm doing right now, can simply be disregarded as someone encouraging out. alcoholism or some such nonsense, as I surely will be. And people have been using health hysteria to push lies and propaganda for a long time. And even though they all have something to sell, by the way, that's the other part of this. Every single one of these people, they all are selling things to you. All, I mean, the clip with Bartlett was the most, I mean, he literally holds the thing up. He's selling that to you. So it's not that, it's not much of the propaganda is not that hard to understand.
Starting point is 00:14:45 They're selling you something. And, you know, when it comes to people lying about health-related issues, we lived through the most extreme example of it a few years ago. You'd think we have become more generally skeptical of this kind of thing. But for a lot of people, the opposite has happened. I mean, you'd think we'd be at a point now where everybody just naturally, when you hear a claim like one beer accelerates aging measurably, you'd think everyone. is now just programmed to go like, well, wait a second, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a second. That's not what's happened. In fact, a lot of people are more susceptible to absurd health-related lies than ever. But the bigger issue here is that, as Brian Johnson himself would probably concede,
Starting point is 00:15:33 everything you do could have some negative effect on your body, right? Or could at least put you, could carry some kind of risk going outside means that you're exposed to the sun. means that you could get skin cancer. Does that mean everybody should stay inside? Does it mean that everyone should carry a canopy wherever they go to ensure that no UV rays touch their skin? Well, apparently that is indeed what Brian Johnson believes. And here's Brian Johnson doing everything you can
Starting point is 00:16:04 to avoid exposure to any possible hazards at all. Watch. Why are you holding an umbrella? 90% of visible skin aging is from the sun. So this is a UV umbrella protecting me from the sun. on UVL UV index is 2. That's right. You got it.
Starting point is 00:16:20 So. I may need to get an umbrella. Oh, my goodness. Now, not to be too technical here, but when you're using an umbrella that's designed to shield you from the sun, it's technically called a parasol. And I know that because whenever I leave my house for any reason, I always bring my parasol with me, along with my pastel pink Stanley, my Ebola-proof hazmat suit, my Hello Kitty fanny pack. Might seem extreme, but then again, you know, I wouldn't want to expose my body to anything
Starting point is 00:16:50 that might reduce my lifespan by a fraction of a second. Now, actually, in reality, and I don't mean to, I'm saying that we shouldn't engage in exaggeration hyperbole. So I don't mean this as an exaggeration. I would rather die a thousand times than walk around like that, hiding away from the sun with your little umbrella, like a scrawny, gay vampire. Now, what we're seeing from these podcasters and many others like them is the product of two independent problems that are now an epidemic in this country. The first problem is that people have no idea how to interpret data or statistics anymore. Second problem is much more serious than this, and we'll come back to that later. Consider this claim by Andrew Huberman,
Starting point is 00:17:35 who also hosts one of the most popular podcasts on the planet. This is from a video with nearly 8 million views. And again, I know we're not supposed to correct things like this because it's It's not really true, but it's for a good cause. So let's just pretend it is. But I can't help myself. So here it is. Watch. For every 10 grams of alcohol consumed, so that's one beer in the U.S., maybe a little bit more than one beer in Japan, or basically a third of a drink in Russia, there's a 4 to 13 percent increase in risk of cancer.
Starting point is 00:18:11 That's pretty outrageous, right? and you might think, wait, how could it be that, you know, this stuff is even legal? Well, look, it's, as I described before, it's a toxin. It's also a toxin that people enjoy the effects of because of the serious nature of what we're talking about and because I would hate to be confusing or misleading to anybody, I want to to just emphasize that this statistic that there is a four to 13 percent, depending on which study you look at, a four to 13 percent increase in the risk of cancer, in particular breast cancer for every 10 grams of.
Starting point is 00:18:42 of alcohol consumed, that's 10 grams per day. So that's one drink per day. But I do want to emphasize that if that equates to seven drinks per week and all those seven drinks are being consumed on Friday and Saturday, it still averages to 10 grams per day. Okay. So he doubles back at the end there and clarifies that he's talking about one beer per day, not one beer. And all the same, his claim is probably very surprising for most people. the idea that if you drink just one beer per day,
Starting point is 00:19:16 you might be increasing your cancer risk of by 13%. Of course, a lot of people average much more alcohol consumption than that. And as a result, we can assume that of the 8 million people who saw that video, many of them walked away convinced that alcohol is effectively a death sentence for everybody. After all, 13% sounds like a lot, especially when you're talking about your odds of getting cancer. Now, like if I told you had a 13% chance of getting struck by lightning, if you play golf today, you're probably going to stay inside.
Starting point is 00:19:46 But the statistic is deliberately misleading in this case. The sleight of hand, which Andrew Huberman never explains, has to do with the difference between relative risk and absolute risk. And understand the distinction. Imagine that somebody tells you that because of your lifelong habits, you've increased your risk of getting lung cancer by 50%. Now, to most people, that sounds horrifying. But it becomes a lot less horrifying when you realize,
Starting point is 00:20:12 that your baseline risk of getting lung cancer as a non-smoker was only 0.5%. So a 50% increase on 0.5% when you do the math means that your risk is now 0.75%. Okay, so your risk is not 50. It sounds like what we're saying is your risk is 50%. Actually, your risk is 0.75%. Pretty big difference. It's still overwhelmingly likely more than 99%. likely in fact that you'll never get lung cancer in your entire life. And the same principle
Starting point is 00:20:47 applies to what Huberman is saying. According to the studies I saw, a typical woman has around a 12% chance of developing breast cancer in her lifetime. That's the baseline. Now, if Huberman is right, and drinking one beer a day increases the risk of breast cancer by 13%, which is the very high end of his range, remember he said like 5 to 30%, which is a big range. That's like 5% or more than triple that, right? But let's take 30%, worst case scenario. Then the beer drinking woman now has a 14% chance of getting breast cancer in her lifetime. Okay, that's what we're talking about. Her relative risk has increased by 13%, but her absolute risk of getting breast cancer
Starting point is 00:21:29 has increased by a little over 1%. Okay, because we're going from the baseline, it's actually 1%. So again, if you want to swear off alcohol to avoid that 1%, increased risk, totally fine. I respect it. What I'm trying to do is introduce some reality into the hysteria here. And you could do with it whatever you wish. Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
Starting point is 00:22:00 BetMGM and Game Sense remind you to play responsibly, 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, Peace contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor, free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario. Virtually all the propaganda that you read about cancer rates uses the same tactic. This is from a website called Our Cancer Stories and see what you notice. Codium nitrate is a chemical salt that is commonly used in bacon, ham, and deli meats.
Starting point is 00:22:36 The study showed that it was associated with a 32% increase in the rich. risk of prostate cancer. Potassium nitrate, closely related to sodium nitrate, was found to cause 13% increased risk of overall cancer and 22% increased risk of breast cancer. Sorbates, especially potassium sorbate, are typically used in wine, baked goods, cheeses, and sauces to prevent molds, yeast, and some bacteria. They were found to increase overall cancer risk by 14% and breast cancer risk by 26%. Potassium metabuselphite, which is also used in wine making, was linked with a 20% increase in breast cancer, 11% higher risk of all cancers. Acetates are used in foods such as meat, sauce, bread, and cheese.
Starting point is 00:23:13 They were associated with a 25% higher risk of breast cancer and 15% increase in cancer risk in general. Now, what do you notice there? Aside from the fact they're listing like every food, everything gives you cancer, apparently, which, you know, might be sort of true. But the problem here is that in every single one of these examples, they're using rates of relative risk. Now, it's very scary to be told that your relative risk of prostate cancer goes up by 32% when you eat bacon and deli meats.
Starting point is 00:23:44 But that information by itself is irrelevant unless you know your baseline risk of prostate cancer. It's a bit like saying, you know, if you go outside, then you raise your risk of skin cancer by 200%. Well, 200% compared to what? If I told you that it was 200% when someone, when compared to someone who stays inside all day, like Desmond and lost, and that your absolute risk only increased by 1%, then you probably wouldn't care at all, I would think. I mean, you'd keep going outside like a normal person. Here's no way of looking at it.
Starting point is 00:24:16 Imagine I said that if you get in your car and drive every day, you're increasing your risk of a car accident by 100,000%. Sounds terrifying if you're stupid enough to take it seriously. It's also technically true with a massive caveat. Your risk of an accident goes up by 100,000% when compared to someone who drives only 10 miles a year. So if you imagine that a person who drives every day will end up driving 10 to 15,000 miles a year on average,
Starting point is 00:24:45 give or take, then his relative risk compared to someone who only drives 10 miles a year has increased by around 100,000 percent, if not considerably more than that. And if you compare a person who drives every day with someone who never gets in a car at all, then his relative risk has gone up by infinity percent. And yet still, the actual risk that you will get into an accident, particularly a fatal accident, the absolute risk remains extremely low. It's not zero, but it's low. It's a risk that you take every time you drive anywhere without even thinking about it.
Starting point is 00:25:23 When you get in your car and drive to Target, you are technically risking your life just to go to Target. Is it worth risking your life just to go to target? Well, yeah, it is. Provided the absolute risk is low. If it's a really low risk, then yeah. But it's not zero. And it's worth the non-zero risk because the other option is to inconvenience yourself and forego doing normal things just for the sake of avoiding an extremely unlikely outcome.
Starting point is 00:25:57 But here's the thing. you just don't think of driving to target that way. In both cases, we're talking about risk. And again, it's technically true that running your errand to target is putting your life at risk. That is undeniably true. But you don't think of it that way. And you don't think of most things that way, because the more you think of things that way, the more incapacitated you are.
Starting point is 00:26:21 You can't function as a person anymore. And when it comes to driving, you, for the most part, don't run. the risk calculation at all. And that's because when it comes to driving, you have a healthy and sane perspective, probably. People are losing this perspective when it comes to many other aspects of life. And here's the important point. If somebody ran up to you right as you were getting into your car and said, don't go to Target, you're risking your life. Well, they'd be saying something that's technically statistically true. But they're also being extremely misleading and emotionally manipulative.
Starting point is 00:27:01 You know, they're saying something technically true in the most dramatic, hysterical, and ominous way possible in order to persuade you to massively overestimate the risk. And then if it turns out that also that person happens to be selling, you know, a grocery delivery service to you, well, not only do you know that they're exaggerating and they're misleading you, but you know that they're doing it for the most cynical, greedy reason possible. And that's basically what's happening with a huge amount of the conversation around health on the internet right now. It's impossible to overstate how widespread these kinds of misconceptions have become. You see it everywhere.
Starting point is 00:27:45 This is a popular video on TikTok with thousands of outraged comments. Just for example, watch this. What's that? Oh, it was just announced that ham is considered a class one carcinogen and is on the same level. as that of cigarettes? Tell me more! Yeah, this is crazy. They just announced that ham is a class one carcinogen,
Starting point is 00:28:12 and it is actually incredibly bad for you, and it's equivalent realistically to having one cigarette if you have one to two slices of ham. Okay. Now, like I said, this kind of stuff is all over the place. It's just, and TikTok again, just being a bane on everyone's existence with this sort of thing. As if a 30-second TikTok video is anywhere near enough time to have any kind of actually informative conversation about that. Now, it's true that processed meats, including ham, have been classified as a group one carcinogen by the World Health Organization, which,
Starting point is 00:29:04 is maybe the least trustworthy organization on the planet, as we all learned six years ago, but never mind that. And it's true that in this same category, they include asbestos, plutonium, and cigarettes. But it's completely false to suggest that therefore ham is just as dangerous as cigarettes. The label of group one carcinogens simply means that there is conclusive evidence that the substance is capable, theoretically, of causing cancer in some people. It doesn't tell you the odds that the substance will cause cancer or the risk of the illness. And all these conversations are meaningless unless you get down to the actual odds, the absolute risk. What are we really talking about? Right? None of these conversations can,
Starting point is 00:29:50 just like the example with Target, that you're risking your life. Well, but to what degree? Because that means everything here. If there's a 50% chance I'm going to die the way to Target, I'm not going. But are you saying it's like 0.1%? In which case, it doesn't mean anything. Effectively, the risk for all intents of purposes doesn't matter. Now, with the carcinogen thing, if researchers find that eating string cheese
Starting point is 00:30:20 increases your odds of getting cancer by 0.001%, then they can label it a group 1 carcinogen, which podcasters can then use to convince you that eating string cheese is fundamentally the same as like eating asbestos like it's cotton candy. And what's happened in this video, once again, is that the person is confused relative risk with absolute risk. Now, it's true that according to the World Health Organization,
Starting point is 00:30:43 eating 50 grams of processed meat every day, the equivalent of two slices of ham, will increase your relative risk of colon cancer by roughly 18%. But again, that's the relative risk. In absolute terms, your risk of getting colon cancer would increase from around 5% to like 6%. Okay, that's what we're actually talking about. about. It's minuscule. You go from someone with a very low chance of getting colon cancer to someone
Starting point is 00:31:09 who also has a very low chance of getting colon cancer. On the other hand, if you smoke every day, then your lifetime risk of getting lung cancer increases dramatically from less than 1% to roughly 18%. That's the absolute number. That is not the relative number. Your relative percentage goes up like 2,000%. In other words, the person in that video is comparing the relative risk of eating ham with the absolute risk of smoking cigarettes. So it is apples and oranges, or in this case, ham and cigarettes. It is incoherent.
Starting point is 00:31:40 But if you're not paying attention, it might sound convincing enough. The truth is, for many years now, this kind of deception has been commonplace. About a decade ago, a scientist who worked on classifying different carcinogens, according to a period on BBC, and explain that people are misunderstanding
Starting point is 00:31:57 what this term means. Watch. But to say that it's comparable to diesel fumes, asbestos, tobacco smoke, that's pretty scary. No one has done that. That is a distortion. Those are specific carcinogens. The best characterization of this is that eating red meat increases the risk of cancer, but it's a distortion to classify red meat as a carcinogen. We don't know what the carcinogens are. What we're in a position to do, is to provide the community with a clear basis for public health policy in relation to diet. And that doesn't involve labeling anything like a carcinogen or prohibiting anything. It involves a sensible intake of red meat and processed meat to minimize any risk of cancer.
Starting point is 00:32:52 So this is the common sense advice that you've probably heard from your parents, everything in moderation. Don't drink to excess. Don't eat anything to excess. and you'll probably be okay until you die, which you will also die along with the rest of us. But in the meantime, that's all you can do. It's not that complicated. But if you're told the truth, then it's much harder to sell expensive app subscriptions
Starting point is 00:33:16 and diet plans. And therefore, many of the so-called diet apps only contribute to the confusion here. They prey on the fact that people are more neurotic than they've ever been when it comes to food and don't understand statistical. Most people just do not. not understand how statistics work at all. One of the great failures of the school system of many
Starting point is 00:33:37 is we've got a whole, we have generations of people now who have no clue how to read statistical information and are manipulated all day long by everyone because of it. But here's a study from the UC San Diego released a few years ago. Quote, few researchers have studied how these apps affect women with eating disorders in university and college settings. This research investigates the unintended negative consequences of engaging with these tools. Participants reported that diet and fitness apps trigger and exacerbate symptoms by focusing heavily on quantification, promoting overuse, and providing certain types of feedback. Eight themes of negative consequence emerged.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Fixation on numbers, rigid diet, obsession, apt dependency, high sense of achievement, extreme negative emotions, motivation from negative messages, and excess competition. So in the words, diet and fitness apps cause. more problems than they solved in many cases. And even when they're functioning as designed, these apps aren't making people happier or more motivated. And very often the apps don't even work. They're based on junk science. Somebody named Austin Lieberman just posted these two screenshots from the Oasis Health app, which supposedly will tell you if you're eating unhealthy food. And as you can see there, the app ranks Fair Life Protein Milk as having three harmful substances
Starting point is 00:34:56 and it receives a rating of 14 out of 100, not great, especially for protein milk, which you'd expect to be somewhat healthy. And meanwhile, you pull up Jim Beam Bourbon on the app and you're told that it contains no harmful substances at all. And it receives a generous 85 out of 100 rating, which the app translates as good. So I guess the message is that instead of drinking protein milk,
Starting point is 00:35:18 you're better off with whiskey, which, you know, sounds good to me, frankly. I'll take you up on that. actually when you think about it for a second the app might be correct maybe oasis health app is on to something here after all every single one of us is descended from people who drank alcohol literally all day every day so the idea that it's now poison akin to chugging gasoline straight from the pump and we can't even have a glass of the stuff without destroying our bodies is insane i mean if that were true humanity would not exist right now but here's the point even if all the podcasters were on the right track from a statistical point of view, which they're not really, then we should still ignore most of what they're saying. And that's because longevity, despite what godless neurotic podcasters and liberal women will tell you, is not the single most important goal in life. No sane society would trade Alexander Hamilton, who died before his 50th birthday for all the cat ladies and HR gargoyles in Brooklyn who think they're going to live to 100 years old. You know,
Starting point is 00:36:23 If our founding fathers were afraid of the son or even alcohol, it's likely we wouldn't have a country today. We certainly wouldn't have the same writings or insights from the founders. Certainly if they were the kind of guys who would walk around with umbrellas because they're afraid of the sun or the kind of guys with such weak institutions that one glass of wine would nearly put them in the hospital, then we wouldn't have a country. We just wouldn't. when Ben Franklin was being carried away from Independence Hall following the constitutional convention, a woman asked him what the men inside had created, a monarchy or something else.
Starting point is 00:37:00 And Franklin, of course, famously replied, a republic if you can keep it. At the time, Franklin was suffering from gallant, which historians suspect may have been related to his wine habit. It isn't something you hear about very often in school, but indeed, Franklin may have been slightly buzzed when he uttered that famous quote. And while we're at it, the Sons of Liberty met at their usual tavern before launching the Boston Tea Party. In fact, on a Friday night in September of 1787, the founders ran up a legendary bar tab after putting the finishing touches on the country's new constitution. They met at City Tavern, which was their usual watering hole, just a few blocks from Independence Hall. And on this occasion, the founders were greeted by the Light Horse of Philadelphia,
Starting point is 00:37:38 a cavalry corps that crossed the Delaware with Washington and served as his personal bodyguard. The Light Horse also fought in several major battles of the war, including Trenton and Germantown. And so began the massive bender that started this country. According to the final bill, which was recreated in the 1950s, as you're seeing right now, the Founding Fathers drank, quote, 54 bottles of Madeira, 60 bottles of claret, eight bottles of whiskey, 22 bottles of Porter, eight bottles of hard cider, 12 bottles of beer, and seven large bowls of alcoholic punch. Now, there were only 55 attendees, which means that every guest was afforded several shots,
Starting point is 00:38:18 a few cups of punch and two bottles of wine, roughly a gallon of booze per person. The musicians and waiters reportedly got a separate liquor bill accounting for 21 bottles of wine, which the soldiers paid for. Now, it's quite possible that by participating in this night of drinking, everybody involved raised his lifetime risk of cancer by 1%. It's even possible that some of these men may have affected their REM sleep cycles or caused a cortisol spike. Worst of all, some of these guys may not have been able to podcast for three, four days afterward. But all things considered, it was probably worth it. I mean, we should all be grateful that they didn't lock themselves in a basement and refused to go outside for any reason because they might increase their risk of death.
Starting point is 00:39:03 If they had done that, we'd be British subjects to this day. And speaking of the British, for centuries, sailors in the British Navy were issued a half pint of 109-proof rum every day, which is like four or five shots. every day for months or years while working in the most extreme and dangerous environments imaginable. And you might say, well, they shouldn't have done that. Their fitbits would have been yelling at them nonstop. But if that's your attitude, then you need to simply answer this question. The Royal Navy stopped the daily rum ration in 1970. Was the Royal Navy a more fearsome and effective fighting force before or after 1970? Before the rum ban, the Royal Navy, contributed to the birth of the empire and the rise of British naval supremacy. After 1970, they're lucky if they can find the keys to their aircraft carriers. They only have two of them,
Starting point is 00:39:54 which they never use. I mean, the British Empire no longer exists. The entire country has been emasculated. And the point is not that the British Empire collapsed because sailors stopped getting hammered every day. I'm not alleging a direct causal connection here, although it's not crazy to think there might be some kind of connection, to some degree. That's not the point, though. The point is that today you have men claiming they cannot function for a week after sipping a glass of wine with their Sunday dinner. Not that long ago, men were literally conquering the world while drinking whiskey like water and having in every way what the modern podcaster would call suboptimal health habits. There is again an unmistakable fragility and like neediness in all of this. and the hysterical claims about a sip of beer or a trip to McDonald's destroying you physically are revealed as absurd against a historical backdrop where men did much worse than that to their bodies and yet also achieved much more than you or I ever will.
Starting point is 00:41:01 And that's your ancestral story, no matter where your family comes from. We are descendants of men who slept for four hours on a bed of straw, woke up, drank wine, and stormed castles. you know, and we are losing that vitality completely. We're focusing on the wrong kind of longevity, the longevity of lifespan rather than legacy and bloodline. And it's not that we have to choose between the two necessarily, but the latter should be much more a priority than the former. There aren't many examples of great men who achieved great things and lived perfectly
Starting point is 00:41:43 healthy and optimized lifestyles. In fact, I can't think of any examples. I'm not saying there aren't any, but I can't. Can you? On top of your head? It seems that greatness usually requires a certain looseness, a certain lack of care for your physical health, not recklessness, not like being suicidal and certainly not being a glutton, but just an openness to risk that terrifies the health optimizers with their little bracelets. A resume only tells you so much, which means hiring the right person can be very difficult. Most people's resumes say they're motivated or a hard worker. Everybody is apparently a dynamic team player.
Starting point is 00:42:26 None of that means anything anymore. What actually matters is whether somebody genuinely wants the role. And you can usually tell pretty quickly some candidates sent out 200 applications that morning and barely remember what position they applied for. Other people show up prepared. They look into the company. They ask thoughtful questions. They sound interested in the work itself.
Starting point is 00:42:44 And the difference matters because when somebody actually wants to be there, they tend to care more. They pay attention. They learn faster. They fit better into the culture you're trying to build. Well, if you're hiring, you want a candidate who's passionate about your role, but you can't get that insight from a resume unless you post your job on ZipRecruiter. And now, you can try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Walsh. ZipRecruiter's powerful metric technology helps you find qualified candidates quickly. and also have a new feature that shows you the most interested qualified candidates first,
Starting point is 00:43:12 so you can spend more time talking to the right people instead of digging through stacks of applications that clearly aren't serious fits. Candidates can also tell you in their own words why they're interested in your job, which is important because hiring isn't just about checking boxes on a resume. You know, you want people who understand the role and want the opportunity. ZipRecruiter helps surface those candidates faster. Find candidates who really want your job on ZipRecruiter. employers who post on ZipRecruiter within the first day.
Starting point is 00:43:40 Try for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Walsh. That's ZipRecruiter. Meet your match on ZipRecruiter. Now, it's not every day that I cite Harvard on this show, but this study bears mentioning because it began long before Harvard and the rest of higher education in this country went completely insane. There's something called the Harvard Study of Adult Development. And it's described as the longest study of human life that's ever been done.
Starting point is 00:44:05 Mass General studied three generations. of families across thousands of people for 85 years. And they began this study in the 1930s. And here's the top line conclusion after all that time. Quote, the people who are happiest, who stayed healthiest as they grew old, and who lived the longest were the people who had the warmest connections with other people. So even if you're tempted by the neurotic perspective on this, it still doesn't matter. I mean, in the end, it all comes out in the wash. Eat bacon if you want. The most important thing you can do, according to the experts. themselves is to do exactly what I'm saying. Don't focus exclusively on extending your life.
Starting point is 00:44:46 Focus on doing something significant. And when I made this point on social media, as expected, a lot of people attack me, called me a troglodyte, etc., which fine, maybe so. But then they told me about their diet apps and their heart rate monitors and their vegan diets and so on. And, you know, my response to these people is pretty simple. You, maybe with all of that stuff, you optimizing your health to that degree, well, I'm not doing all that, although I am doing, I think, reasonable things. Maybe you outlive me by a few years, or maybe not. But who cares? Like, I have six kids. I have four sons. My bloodline and my name will live on. I could die tomorrow, and I still win. The problem with the health maxers is they
Starting point is 00:45:32 only care about extending their own lives by every minute possible. They don't think about bloodline. They don't think about legacy. And that's the kind of longevity that matters. That's the kind of longevity that lasts a thousand years. You know, it's why we have a republic today. Now, increasingly, this health optimization obsession has become a desperate and doomed quest for actual immortality. Brian Johnson's motto is don't die, which has all the scientific seriousness of trying to sell a course on how to harness telekinetic powers, which is something that TikTok influencers are actually doing, by the way. That's a conversation for another time. A self-described engineering physicist responded to that video of Johnson hiding under an umbrella
Starting point is 00:46:17 with this, quote, avoiding sun is being extremely bearish on the longevity biotech thesis. Assume we will have peptides for everything, retroviral DNA upgrades, nanobot healing glands, nature wants us dead at 35. Science will have us live to see the stars burn. out. That again is just the hysterical fear in these people. Nature wants us dead at 35. And you're supposed to nod sort of solemnly at those kinds of pronouncements. Oh yes, that's true. What are you talking about? What the hell are you talking about? Nature wants it. Where are you getting that? You're just making it up. But it's all for a good cause. What's the good cause again? Oh, making you terrified, paranoid, and again, selling you things.
Starting point is 00:47:07 But anyway, sorry to inform you, that's not how it will work or can work. You're going to die. Absolutely. Very soon, actually, in the grand scheme of things. You have several decades at most. In 80 or 90 years, tops nobody listening to these words right now will be alive. And most of them won't even be remembered. Like, it'll be like they never existed as far as the world's concerned.
Starting point is 00:47:36 And this fact is so terrifying to some people that they live every second in denial clinging to the insane hope that somehow science will come along and rescue them from mortality. And even if it could, which it definitely can't, then what? You live to watch all your friends and loved ones die and even their tombstones decay while you linger on, trembling in fear, grasping desperately onto a life that no matter how long it lasts your wife, wasting anyway. And then you get to see the earth decay around you and the sun burn out. So you can live on in total darkness and decay. Well, sounds like a lot of fun. But no thanks. I don't need to live for a billion years. I just want the time I have, however long or short it might be, to be meaningful. But they don't sell any bracelets that will track your progress towards living a meaningful life.
Starting point is 00:48:37 There are no supplements or peptides for that. Science and technology can do a lot of things. Can even extend your life by a little bit. But however long a life it gives you, it can't make that time actually mean something. And that should be the part that matters most. That'll do it for the show today. Thanks for watching.
Starting point is 00:48:59 Thanks for listening. Talk tomorrow. Have a great day. Godspeed. King Jr. is an American icon, widely considered one of the greatest Americans who ever lived. A man who had a vision for a colorblind society, a post-racial America. He had a dream. It's just not the dream you thought it was. Or his true aims, a colorblind society, or something far more radical?
Starting point is 00:49:29 Who bankrolled him? What unfolded behind the scenes in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963? Was civil disobedience actually peaceful? We wanted to show you a clip of the I Have a Dream speech, but according to our lawyers, we can't. In fact, King's family has made a lot of money suing media outlets. They want to silence critics like us. What they're doing makes it very difficult to judge Martin Luther King Jr. Not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character.
Starting point is 00:49:58 Is America today stronger, more unified, and racially equal than before King's rise? These questions demand answers, and as Americans, we are entitled to a full accounting of the the Civil Rights Movement and its consequences. King's Movement fundamentally transformed our country and our system of government. I speak as a citizen of the world. Each day the war goes on, the hatred increases, though the cause of evil prosper.
Starting point is 00:50:24 First part of our two-part special on the Civil Rights Movement, a new constitution. Available now on Daily Wire Plus.

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