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@ Why would I get fat?
2025-05-28 15:23:18
Doc Malik: "Can you do me a favor. Can you now talk about water."
[…]
Dr. Jack Kruse: "Make it simple. Apple and Microsoft. What water does is allow Apple to talk to Microsoft. So what is it? It's a transformer. In other words it allows disparate systems to talk to each other. So for example, it allows light to talk to magnetism. It allows light to talk to sound. It allows light to communicate with smell.
"Water is an electromagnetic capacitor of light. That's what it does. It buries light. What's the proof in the pudding? One thing that everybody who's a doctor learns in basic physics to get to medical school is water has huge specific heat capacity. What does that mean? We can put huge amounts of energy into it and it takes forever to raise water a degree of temperature. That ultimately should have told everybody that that's one of water's superpowers.
"Now the other superpower, what makes water not just a transformer, water changes its physical structure when light hits it. That's a really interesting change of events. Like most people who go through regular life and medical school and are doctors always believe that water is H₂O. Turns out in us that's not true. Metabolic water that's made into mitochondria is deuterium depleted and it has a completely different crystalline structure. That crystalline structure is there because there's no deuterium in the water.
"But the water we drink, you know the water behind me right now in the Pacific Ocean, that water has 155 parts of deuterium in it per million. In us, our mitochondria, it's zero. In our blood, our blood mimics what's in the ocean, it's 155 parts. The blood's reason for that is different than what's going on in the mitochondria, it has to do with the physics. And water, because it changes its ability, what's the main reason water does this from a physics standpoint?
"Water changes its hydrogen bonding network so that it can absorb more light. How does it do it? When hydrogen bonds change it allows more electrons to show up. […] Water has coherent domains. When water becomes quantum coherent it's because light has hit it. That means that that water has more electrons in it. Who should you immediately think of after that? Einstein. Why? He won his Nobel prize for the photoelectric effect: you cannot absorb light without electrons. That's axiomatically true.
"So when light hits water, what is water doing? It's creating more electrons so that you can absorb more light, hence the reason why it's an electromagnetic capacitor. OK? One story builds upon the other.
"So once you understand those three effects of water, then you need to realize what else do you know as an orthopedic surgeon about water that's special? Every time you hang an IV fluid, probably the most common IV fluid you hang is sodium chloride 0.9% solution, just like I do. Have you ever asked the question, 'Why do we use sodium chloride? Why is sodium such a big part of the extracellular matrix?'
"Well it turns out sodium chloride allows water to absorb more UV light. So what does that tell you? OK, wait a minute. Now the cell has a mechanism in it via water to absorb more UV light, not, not, NOT the same story that dermatologist and ophthalmologist told you, that the sun is toxic and you should stay fucking out of it. Actually biology is telling you something radically different, that because we use sodium chloride, that salt allows you to absorb more UV light in the blood. And you know that blood is 93% water, that's when you start to ask a question, 'What else fucking wasn't I told?'"
Dr. Jack Kruse with Doc Malik @ 01:19:20–01:23:56 (posted 2025-02-18) https://youtu.be/-W64QZLUq_E&t=4760