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@ Why would I get fat?
2025-02-19 19:30:34
Dr. Jack Kruse: "[…] you do have melanopsin in your skin. […] The pathway on your skin is direct. What makes it direct? What's the most common biologic chemical in your body? Water. The melanopsin system works through hydrogen bonding networks everywhere in your body. That's the reason why it's so powerful. […]
"The number one opsin in the human brain and human skin is melanopsin. So you got to ask yourself a question: 'Why is it that nature put a blue light detector everywhere in our body?' Then you got to ask yourself, 'What's the effect of us creating a blue light world?' Then all of a sudden you begin to see where the problem comes.
"The pathway that you need to know comes through the eye, hits something called the RPE in the eye, its the retinal pigment epithelium. That's the first place that melanin is at. Turns out that the melanopsin system is in the inferior nasal part of the retina. Then it projects to the SCN and it goes to a place in the thalamus called the habenular nucleus. That controls mood.
"Those are two places where the light pathways direct in the brain. Both of these are diencephalic derivatives, from the embryo. This tells you these are primitive pathways in all mammals, but they also extend to almost everything that's alive on this planet. It tells you that this is an ancient, ancient system. We're talking 650 million year old system when complex life formed. That's the reason it's important.
"Now where it begins to change is […] the pathway in humans goes the retinal hypothalamic pathway, which is that RPE, to the SCN. The SCN goes to the PVN, which is the paraventricular nucleus, goes then to something called the dorsal longitudinal fasciculus. That's where all the sleep pathways are. Then it radiates out through the whole spinal cord and all the things there.
"If you understand this one pathway of melanopsin, you can pretty much describe every single chronic disease that man is afflicted with.
"Now, do you need to understand how the non-visual photoreceptive system interacts with some of the things that centralized medicine talks about? For example, most people are stunned to find out that the number one non-visual photoreceptor in man is cholesterol. No one gets told that. No one understands truly what the difference between HDL
and LDL cholesterol is. The answer is electrons. Oh, we're back to the guy in Bern photoelectric effect.
1:26:16
"It turns out that the non-visual photoreceptor system varies by the light environment you're in, which is the reason why I told you conditions of existence are far more important than any of the Darwinists really understand. […]
01:26:43
"Once you understand how light controls our biology, and I just gave you a basic framework for the system you ask me, which is melanopsin. The system through the eye is very direct. […] The eye is the on and off switch for the brain. Turns out your skin is also an on and off switch for your brain. Because what is the skin? The skin is the solar panel for the accessory two lobes right here, the frontal lobes.
"[…] our skin is covered with hair but it's hair that allows the sun to go through. Chimps have a lot of hair. The amount of light they're getting through their surface isn't as great as what we get. That's the reason we lost the hair, so that we could give energy to these two extra lobes. […]"
Dr. Jack Kruse with Mike Vera @ 01:23:28–01:27:36 https://youtu.be/CVHZshSyiXo&t=5008