Shocking...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.: "She came to me with a transcript of a secret meeting with i think 52 vaccine industry officials officials from all the regulatory agencies, FDA, CDC, NIH, the European Medical Association, the WHO. They all had a secret meeting in a off-CDC campus because they didn't want it to be subject to freedom of information requests."
"And they had convened this meeting because all these mothers who were complaining to CDC that my kid got poisoned by a vaccine and got autism. They actually did a study and they used the biggest database in the country called the Vaccine Safety Datalink, which is the vaccination records from the top 10 HMOs from millions of clients."
"They looked at the hepatitis B vaccine given during the first 30 days and they'd compare that to people, kids who got it later or didn't get it at all. That vaccine was just loaded with mercury. And what they found is kids who got it during the first 30 days had an 1135% greater chance of getting a later autism diagnosis."
"And they knew right then what was causing the autism. I've just been gone from one in 10,000 in my generation, and it still is in 69-year-old men, to one in 34 in my kids' generation. So they knew. And I don't know how it happened, but somebody had transcribed that meeting."
"And I published them in Rolling Stone magazine and in Salon simultaneously. And then Salon withdrew it six years later, withdrew the article, and then... Rolling Stone finally, 16 years later during the pandemic, when Rolling Stone was taken over by pharmaceutical people, they also withdrew it. And that was the beginning of my battle with the pharmaceutical industry."
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Joe Rogan ditched his reading glasses after using red light therapy.
Gary Brecka shared this on Diary of a CEO — after a few weeks with a full red light bed, Rogan’s eyesight improved so noticeably he no longer needs readers. And that’s just the beginning.
Brecka explained the science: specific red and near-infrared wavelengths (photobiomodulation) enter your mitochondria, kick out nitric oxide, and force oxygen in.
This jumps cellular energy production from 2 ATP per cycle… to 36. Sixteen times more efficient. The ripple effects hit inflammation, skin, brain health, and recovery hard.
The wild part? You don’t need an expensive bed to start seeing benefits.
Just get outside in the first 45 minutes of daylight (before harsh UV hits). Brecka says this simple habit resets your entire circadian rhythm better than most sleep hacks — proper cortisol timing, melatonin prep, and the natural light cues we evolved with.
And red light itself? You can use it any time of day, even right before bed. It’s relaxing and won’t keep you awake like blue light does.
I’ve been experimenting with morning sunlight and the energy difference is legit.
This part of the conversation really hit me — Brecka called humans “photovoltaic beings.” We’re wired to the sun’s cycle way more than we realize. Morning light sets up your whole day hormonally, while red light helps your cells perform at a much higher level.
It made me realize how much modern indoor life has taken us away from something so basic yet powerful.
Why it matters: In a world of endless complicated supplements, light might be one of the highest-leverage (and mostly free) tools we have for energy, recovery, and long-term health.
A jaw-dropping cancer breakthrough: Cheap LED light + tiny tin oxide nanoflakes (SnOx) zap 92% of skin cancer cells and 50% of colorectal cancer cells dead in just 30 minutes of lab exposure—while healthy skin cells walk away completely unharmed.
No brutal chemo side effects, no expensive lasers—just precise, localized heat from everyday near-infrared LEDs turning these biocompatible nanoflakes into microscopic cancer killers.
UT Austin + University of Porto researchers (ACS Nano, Sept 2025) engineered SnOx nanoflakes from tin disulfide via a green, scalable process. They absorb 810 nm LED light with 93% photothermal efficiency, heating up fast to ~42-45°C—enough to denature cancer proteins without boiling healthy tissue.
Stable over multiple cycles, low-cost, and portable: This could shift treatment from hospital rooms to clinic patches or even home devices post-surgery, targeting residual cells.
Why it matters: Skin cancers (easy light access), breast (post-lumpectomy margins), colorectal (endoscopic delivery)—superficial or reachable tumors stand to benefit first.
Selectivity shines: Cancer cells, already stressed, die quicker from the heat; healthy ones recover. No systemic toxicity in tests.
Still preclinical—no human trials yet—but the path to affordable, targeted photothermal therapy just got brighter.
The AMCC isn't just about pushing through—it's tied to your will to live.
How to grow it:
Do micro-sucks & macro-sucks daily — small or big things you really don't want to do.
Not enjoyable hard things (like your favorite workout) — but the ones you resist.
Examples:
- Load the dishwasher when it's gross
- Clear 100+ unread emails
- Run that extra 20 meters when you want to stop
Each one builds the engine you can use for anything else.
Methylene blue — the 19th-century textile dye — ended up being what stopped a neuroscientist’s relentless seizures after nothing else could.
Chase Hughes on JRE opens up about the quiet dread of temporal lobe epilepsy: up to 9 seizures a day, each one silently eroding his hippocampus and wiping recent memory, all while he knew exactly how bad it could get.
The shift when this compound worked carries real weight. 🧵👇
Its backstory starts in the 1890s: a researcher injects it into rats, does autopsies, and finds the entire nervous system stained deep blue.
The compound clearly seeks out neural tissue. Today’s understanding: it donates electrons to mitochondria, ramps up ATP production, and clears reactive oxygen species — giving struggling brain cells essential support.
Hughes’ description of the turning point hits hard.
It also markedly improves red light therapy outcomes by absorbing red wavelengths efficiently, channeling more benefit straight to neurons.
His family uses it too now. They switched to black toilets at home — a practical move that says a lot about how central this became to their daily reality.
Del Bigtree just released the clearest 29-minute timeline I’ve ever seen on the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act and the government compensation program that still exists today.
Whether you’ve followed this topic forever or this is brand new info — it’s worth the full watch.
Key moments below (thread)
1986: Vaccine manufacturers told Congress they were facing so many injury lawsuits they might stop making childhood vaccines entirely.
Congress responded with the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act:
• Liability protection for manufacturers
• A small tax on every dose funds the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP)
That framework is still law today.
By 2007 roughly 5,400 autism-related claims had been filed with the VICP.
Instead of 5,400 separate trials, the government created the “Omnibus Autism Proceeding”:
→ Select just 6 test cases
→ If even ONE proved vaccines can cause autism, all 5,400 families would get their hearing
→ If none did, the rest could be dismissed