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@ Why would I get fat?
2025-05-24 15:18:54
Parkinson's, melanomas, hypothyroidism
"The mitochondria is […] the software that runs the hardware. The hardware is the DNA but it's the software that runs the show. Remember, the software doesn't work unless you've got a DC electric current that powers the whole system. That DC electric current is fundamentally tied to light, water and magnetism. That's where the story gets really interesting.
"The same system that's in us is also in plants. They also have a DC electric current. So all three domains of life, archaea, bacteria and eukaryotes, all run the same way. The difference is, you have archaea probably 1.0, bacteria 2.0, we're at 3.0. But systems within eukaryotes go all the way from say cephalopods (cephalopods are the first human brain, because they innovated about 600 million years ago, which is right at the Cambrian explosion) and then we are human brain 1,150,000. We've had that much time to innovate that tissue system, how it integrates with other systems, how it controls energy flow and energy transformation, is really the key to understanding modern disease.
"Why for example, atherosclerosis is always associated with neurodegeneration. Or for example, anybody that tends to have neurodegeneration also has significant osteoporosis. Those links aren't well known to people in centralized medicine. They kind of always act like, 'Wow, I didn't know that.' I'll give you an example. I don't know if you know this, but I think it's a very interesting, cogent point.
"People that have Parkinson's disease are much more likely to get melanomas and the reason for that is tied to the melanin problem. Everybody knows people with Parkinson's lose melanin in the substantia nigra. But what most people don't know is they also have almost no melanin in their surface because they sucked it all inside and still lost it through a destructive process in their brain. That's the reason why they have a huge problem.
"It's also the reason why people with Parkinson's tend to get really bad hypothyroidism, for exactly the same reason. When melanin degrades with low oxygen tensions it actually can turn into T3 and T4. And I bet you you remember in medical school they told you there even if you take someone's thyroid out, there's extra nodal sites that still make thyroid. Well it turns out every single cell in the body can make thyroid when it breaks down melanin. The problem is when you break down melanin, you're breaking down a shit ton of thermodynamics, so there's a huge problem with that. The only way to offset someone who's had say their thyroid removed from medullary carcinoma of the thyroid is they need to live probably inside the 20s. What fucking endocrinologist that you know has ever told anybody with MEN syndrome 1 or 2 that story? The answer is fucking zero, because none of them know that it's possible."
Dr. Jack Kruse with Dr. Ahmad Malik @ 32:55–36:10 (posted 2025-02-18) https://youtu.be/-W64QZLUq_E&t=1975