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love to see so many people interested in what you've been discovering over the years! The suggestions are good about Del Bigtree and the Highwire - he's been the communication director for RFK Jr..... and has a Health Think Tank that he created. Del's also talked with TANYA CARMONA DANIELS about autism, and how Cl02 can help. Del had said to her, that we need to get 'the top minds' together. The time is now! The Daily Wire is Matt Walsh, Ben Shapiro and a few others... they also are pretty open to medical insanity (see Matt's video from last year "What is a Woman?") ... they had Candace Owens on for years (but she's now on her own) and she talked and had a series about childhood vaccines... She is another that has no fear about anything. You may or may not agree with what she finds/learns... but she has no fear. We need more of these types in this movement!

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This is General Michelle!

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My daughter is 27 and has terrible breakouts about a week or so before she begins her monthly period, some months worse than others. I told her maybe something that would increase her estrogen levels would help. Something like Evening Primrose or Raspberry leaf Tea. Is it low Estrogen or Testosterone levels that would cause breakouts correlating with Menstrual cycles?

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Aug 23·edited Aug 23Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

She could try NAC? Help overall detox and support liver. I take a chinese herb to help with my cycle but you have to get it through a licensed practitioner. The key is getting the hormones through the liver. Maybe dandelion or milk thistle? Evening primrose is more for breast tenderness and fullness during perimenopause and menopause from my understanding. Best of luck!

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see above

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Most premenstrual syndromes are better treated with oral progesterone, which is harmless. Estrogen causes acne. read Hormone Secrets.

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You can apply a higher concentration of chlorine dioxide solution (if you're familiar with MMS, dilute it three times) to your face, and the acne will clear up quickly.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

If you choose to use Ivermectin at a 1mg/kg dose, it's taken 1/3 in the morning and 2/3 at night. Reason being cancer is more active at night. 3 days on, 4 days off. For cancer, you should also be taking another anti parasitic. Mebendazole is a solid choice. 4 days on, 3 off, 200-300 mgs depending on body weight. Some suggest alternating Ivermectin months with doxycycline. Others suggest swapping out Ivermectin with Niclosamide, one month on, one month off. The body gets used to damn near everything, which is why pulsing and cycling makes sense. Mark Lintern wrote an epic book, the Cancer Resolution that's fascinating reading and explains why anti parasitics work against cancer and chemo is usually a lost cause.

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posted in the original essay above along w your name thanks

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Sorry I missed you in Pasadena. Is there a place you list your public appearances?

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Benzene takes triple distillation, it making fluorine look like a pushover.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

50mg of iodine a day? I took 12.5mg Iodoral daily for 6 mos & I now have thyroiditis. I had a Radioactive Iodine Uptake test in July. My TSH was 0.01 and FT3 & T4 were both high. Spent 3 mos feeling like I was on speed 24/7 to now I'm cold and having difficulty staying awake at times. Is it possible the Thyroiditis is from something other than too much iodine?

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I'm not a specialist sorry.

To the best of my knowledge, 50 mg is a good starting point for people without your issue. See my post here for more careful disclaimers and background: https://robertyoho.substack.com/p/252-when-heroes-are-needed-courageous?utm_source=publication-search. Doses in the hundreds are recommended by Dr. Brownsteen for glandular cancers.

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Aug 22·edited Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Hard to know. I believe mine (hoshimotos) started after a shot 🤬 (I can't remember which "vax" I had to update for my hospital job). It's a living nightmare. I understand the feeling of being on speed or constantly lethargic. I stupidly took some iodine on the advice of a chiropractor and it messed me up again. With all the toxins we are exposed to, maybe thyroid is first defender so most affected? Two of my nieces had thyroid surgery in their teens.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Thank you for #5!

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

ciprofloxacin kills bacteria by stopping their dna repair ... does it do the same in us ???

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it's fluoridated so take it only if it is life or death

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Of course, at a much higher dose.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

IS THE DOSE PROPORTIONAL TO COMPARITIVE SIZE OF US AND THE BACTERIA??

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Dose is not the only consideration in the matter.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Make pasteurized milk into kefir(easy, google it); then you have fantastic probiotics

Milk is not good for you anyway; not high enough fat & high carbs + sugar; Fermentation also makes veg into a positive for our gut biome

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disagree

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see unbekoming's milk post

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

And btw, your content is awesome; I'm so happy you share your wisdom as you learn it & explain pivots as you learn more !

BTW, did you quit MB ?; I know from experience it's got it's handling issues, including pee staining, haha, however I really find it helps with cognition

As an aside, I 'm 65 & had been using ~95-135mg/mostly daily for about 6 months & just tried a break for ~two weeks....

I noticed the positive effects remained almost all of that time, so I beg the question; perhaps one doesn't need to 'maintenance dose' daily; maybe twice or so a week ?

It does seem illogical that our mitochondria would instantly shrink along with related activity including ATP, by pausing MB....

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mb is great but you can't do everything

CD is the elephant

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What is MB?

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Thank you for your comment Robert, may I ask what you disagree with & why please ?

I'm also coming from a carnivore perspective

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you are right milk has sugar and is not appropriate for stirct carnivores. see this post for more about its virtues: raw milk unbekoming

https://unbekoming.substack.com/p/the-raw-truth-about-milk?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=355417&post_id=147465524&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=axf9e&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

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Happy Friday Robert !

Thank you for the follow up & link; I have several books from William Campbell Douglass II, MD, though not this one.....

As a side note, raw milk products are best & I'd use the grass fed butter (

though holy moly expensive), although I understand making kefir with it requires a little more skill, as it has more diverse probiotic content

(anything sweet tasting is the enemy.....)

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It's personal and carnivore works wonders for many

I got incredibly constipated

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Please consider adding small amounts of ferments, like 1oz/lb meat, to get your gut biome in order; ck out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKrXokMUQFQ Sean O'Mara MD, who started the education process about loosing visceral fat

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

This is a great distiller for under 300; I have two & use every other day; if one goes down, I have a backup !

https://www.h2olabs.com/p-15-stainless-steel-model-100ss-water-distiller-with-polypropylene-carafe.aspx

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I want to suggest some nuance around the topic of veganism.

Vegan is a meaningless category around nutrition and health, for the simple reason that veganism is mostly about secular ethics, primarily the environment (the planet), and animal welfare. Of course when you get to the WEF promoting it, it becomes outright political and diabolical, but the environment tends to be at least the excuse.

Vegetarianism is mostly about religious ethics. By the numbers, vegetarians are Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and some Christian sects, such as SDA (LomaLinda), and so on.

From a health and nutrition stand point, the core research is the work of T. Colin Campbell, now emeritus professor at Cornell, running his own institute at age 90-something. It is truly an alternative nutritional model, and it has stood the test of time, not to mention his course is the most popular nutrition course at Cornel. (no longer taught in the school sincw 2007, but available online through www. nutritionstudies.org, which offers the course which is distributed through Cornell. His work is also foundational to the concept of Lifestyle Medicine, (ACLM, ABLM), and it in the process of revolutionizing healthcare.

In these days of vaccine inguries, we might also take note of the work of Dr. Alan Goldhamer, and his True North Healht center in California. He did a wonderful video with Steve Kirsch recently, where there was a discussion of water fasting/intermitent fasting and autophagy as one of the best steps you can take to reverse vaccine damage. (https://rumble.com/v59tq4d-vsrf-live-138-integrated-medicine-revolution.html) and after clearing out your system with a fast, your best bet is to adopt a low-inflammation Whole Foods, Plant-Based diet.

Dr. Michael Greger was also mentioned, and I would disagree with Robert somewhat. He is one of the good boys, but he is a bit confused. Overall he adopts a whole foods, plant-based diet, but while that approach is very holistic, Greger buys into reductionism a lot, and he kind of straddles the fence between lifestyle medicine and the traditional allopathic outlook, but I tend to want to see that as a transitional development. He has certainly produced a lot of useful information.

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Gregor is an "ethical" vegan. His confusion may stem from that but watching his bazarre affect in person, I believe he is paid.

"Vegan is a meaningless category " it means no animal products are consumed.

John Ioannidis, the renowned Stanford study design expert, says that most trials of diet and health are flawed. They are too small, not randomized, or otherwise biased.

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No. He is not "paid" by any industry or anything. I know the man. He believes in what he does, but I have reservations about his very reductionist stance.

Meanwhile, about study sizes, The China Study was and is the largest study of diet and health ever done. Something like 900,000 subjects.

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Aug 23Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Regarding reverse osmosis and fluoride: it depends on the filters that the companies use. It can be tested at home as this guy did:

https://truthaboutfluoride.com/does-reverse-osmosis-remove-fluoride/

Some companies have their filtered results online such as APEC, which filters 90-97% of fluoride.

https://www.freedrinkingwater.com/blogs/contaminants-facts/rejection-wqa

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super useful and I posted this addition above

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Pool care via a system based on nontoxic hydrogen peroxide has been available for a long time. Ask your pool supply about Baquacil. It is more expensive than chlorine, but worth it.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

A quick skim of the Baquacil website indicates it is more for algae control than antimicrobial, FWIW.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

It's a whole system for pool care. The "shock" which is pure H2O2 is the antimicrobial part.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Hydrogen peroxide isn't stable enough to survive very long in a swimming pool. That is why it is the perfect antibiological for T-cells to use.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

You test, and add more when needed.

It works. I used if for many years.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

How do you test something that deteriorated into water in seconds?

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Obviously, it didn't deteriorate in seconds.

Look, if you know better, maybe you should talk to the folks at Baquacil. All I can say is that my pool was clean and clear, did not smell like chlorine, and was good to swim in. If I had a pool or hot tub again, I would use it in a heartbeat. Cheers.

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Hydrogen peroxide is what T-cells use to kill pathogens, being a very potent oxidizer.

Ultraviolet irradiation of the water returning to the pool is just as effective as anything, if you don't need a residual to kill pathogens peed into the pool by people with bladder infections.

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those salt water systems are tried and true and cheap

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

What salt water systems?

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for swimming pools

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If you are on the coast, just jump in the water.

Why would you want salt water in a swimming pool?

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salt water pools are fabulous! your skin is so soft and smooth.. and, side benefit - no sharks. :)

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access any source to learn about it

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Berkey water filter doesn't remove fluoride? They got two kind of filters. Black and ceramic. I have a nice unit with black filters in it sitting on my counter, and I've been using it for many years. I was under the impression something bad could happen to you if you only used distilled water, because it took something you needed outta the water.

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eat Celtic or Redman salt and get trace minerals

Reverse osmosis is reliable but distilled is best

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

Great call ! RO wastes a lot of water; up to 3/1 waste to use ratio, which is a no go in drought areas like CA

The better distillers can also alleviate high 90's % of microplastics as well

You should see the deposits in my distiller after each use, cleaned each use as well

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Aug 22Liked by Robert Yoho, MD

"My only caution is that he promoted EDTA treatment for mercury toxicity, which can in some cases be a fatal error."

This seems to be a very important subject, considering that a lot of people who are awakening might go down the EDTA road.

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Kerri Rivera just emailed me:

I can tell you the story of edta. If it is used correctly there is no risk. Also, edta is a general metal chelator yet very weak for mercury and aluminum. We used dmps for mercury. Superior by far.

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