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Summary
➡ The speaker discusses the shift in medical education and practice, attributing it to the influence of the Rockefellers. They argue that modern medicine has become more about business and less about holistic health, with a focus on pharmaceuticals over traditional methods. The speaker also shares personal experiences teaching at medical schools and observing the attitudes of students. They express concern over the lack of critical thinking in medical education and the potential for academic dishonesty. They also share stories of individuals who have maintained good health through natural means, suggesting that there are alternatives to the current medical model.
➡ The text discusses the evolution of pharmaceutical companies, focusing on how they extract specific compounds from plants for medicinal use. It also highlights the significant shifts in the gold and silver markets, suggesting it’s a good time to invest in these metals. The text further explores the changes in medical schools and practices, emphasizing the tension between traditional and holistic medicine. Lastly, it discusses the impact of diet on health, particularly the imbalance of Omega 6 to Omega 3 in our diets, which can lead to inflammation in the body.
➡ The body’s consciousness can lead to weight gain as it tries to store inflammation in fat cells. Factors like viruses, MSG, and trans fats can also contribute to obesity. Consuming natural sugars and avoiding processed sugars can help control cravings and maintain blood sugar levels. The environment, including the food and medical industry, often works against our health, promoting unhealthy ingredients and practices.
➡ The text discusses the impact of environmental factors and stress on health, particularly focusing on hormonal imbalances. It suggests that exposure to toxins, stress, and certain lifestyle choices can lead to health issues like adrenal fatigue, hormonal imbalances, and chronic pain. The text also highlights the importance of investigating the root causes of these health issues and suggests natural remedies, such as certain foods and herbs, to help balance hormones and improve overall health.
➡ The speaker, Dr. Lynn Lafferty, advises people to grow their own herbs for their medicinal properties and offers free webinars on her website. She shares her belief that many health issues, including heart attacks, are related to adrenal glands and imbalances in sugar, potassium, and sodium. She also discusses the importance of gut bacteria in relation to autoimmune diseases and criticizes the medical education system for not teaching these concepts. Dr. Lafferty offers classes and consultations, and she can be contacted through her website or by phone.
➡ You did a great job and I’m really thankful. Have a nice day.
Transcript
These other GLP1s on the market, they do not burn fat, they just reduce your appetite. This one retatrutide is stronger. It’s considered a next generation peptide because of that. And man, does this work. I’ve been using it for two and a half weeks and I’ve already lost 11 pounds and I cut my dose in half because I was losing weight too quickly and that kind of freaked me out to be honest. And so I also am taking this 5amino 1 mq in capsule form. This helps by making sure that you lose fat, not muscle. And so in conjunction I’m using both of these.
This will work whether you have this or not. And I am telling you it’s amazing. If you are interested in getting this, I have the link below or you can go to sarahwestel.com under shop. You can use the coupon code Sarah to save 10%. If you have questions about your own use, you should either consult your doctor or you can join Dr. Diane’s tribe. And I have a link below to that. It is only a dollar for the first week. You can ask her any question you want and get all your answers to this. How to take an injectable and there shouldn’t be any fear in doing that.
It is easy and straightforward. Go to sarahwestall.com under shop or use the link below and remember to use coupon code Sarah. Welcome to business. Game changers. I’m Sarah Westall. I have Dr. Lynn Lafferty coming to the program. She’s really REM. She has her doctorate in pharmacy but then also then went and became a naturopath and is a master herbalist and you know, deep into nutrition. So she has this like really 360 degree look at medicine or at health. Health is a better way of looking at it. So she has totally different perspective on so many things.
And this is really a fascinating conversation. We’re going to talk about Rockefeller medicine but she’s going to talk about the history of medicine. We even got into what happened, you know, during Naz Germany and the experiments there. And she’s talking about the fact that men have since the 1980s, their testosterone has plummeted. What does that mean for them? We’re going to get into a lot of topics that help to, for people to understand why we’re such a mess right now. And she if you want to learn more about her, I have her her website will be up on screen or will be at the link below and you can learn.
She has classes that go on and she also takes appointments she works at, she teaches at a university and so she says I’m cheap because her students are actually get to participate. So if you don’t mind that she can take consultations too. So I hope you appreciate this because this is a, this is a perspective you’re not going to get very often. Okay. Before I get into that show, I want to remind you of the peptide Free Peptide seminar that I’m doing with Dr. Diane Kaser. We are doing this because so many people have questions. They want to understand what peptides work, how do you use them? Just all the different things.
Because source of our peptides is a research place so you have to be your own doctor. They can’t give you information on what your dosages are, how much you have to take and they don’t know anything about you anyways because things differ per person. So you have to take this on. And so this seminar is about helping you do that. Learn about what common dosages are, what what are the best peptides to take for certain issues and what you should learn about cycling. You need to cycle these peptides on and off depending on what kind it is and you want to learn about that as well.
So your body doesn’t get to a point where it gets used to it and then it can’t function on its own. You want to make sure that never gets into that. So you cycle it on and off and help your body build its own abilities. Hope you join that. It’s March 11th at 6pm Eastern Time. I’ll have the link below. You need to sign up for it and then you’ll get information on it in your email and share it with your friends and family. See if they want to join as well. Okay, let’s get into my really fascinating conversation with Dr.
Lynn Lafferty. Hi Dr. Lynn. Welcome to the program. Hello. It’s so good to be with you, Sarah. I’m a big fan and have listened to you for a long time. Well, thank you so much. I’m. I am amazed at your background because I, you know, I have family members who are pharmacists and MDs. But the fact that you’re a pharmacist, PhD in pharmacy and a doctor, naturopath, and then you also have nutrition background. Right. I mean, naturopathic nutrition goes with it. That’s an incredible combination. That’s pretty rare. I mean, being honest. And, and so I’m really excited to talk to you because you have this, this bigger perspective than what you normally get.
And what made you go from, do you get your pharmacy degree first and then the natural path or what? How did you start? Yeah, I got my pharmacy degree first and I actually was going to go to medical school. My boyfriend was in medical school and he really foretold this was back in the early late 70s, early 80s, that you don’t want to be a doctor. It’s medicine is going to be really awful in the future. So he really knew what was coming down the pike. And so I went there and I actually worked for Big Pharma for a couple of years and then I did a drug education program and then I got very ill and went to the best hospitals and doctors in the country in UC San Francisco and at Stanford and they offered the same things.
And I just kept getting sicker and sicker. And when I went to a naturopathic doctor, I felt amazing. I lost 30 pounds, my body went back into balance and I did a lot of pharmacology research when I was in pharmacy school. And I always loved pharmacology and physiology. And so I really want to know how the herbs work and why did that work so much better than what we are offering today for the medicines? And didn’t they used to always, like back in the 1800s and the early 1900s, that was just standard. There wasn’t. Until Rockefeller came around.
Right. And they just tore apart our whole system. Right. The first drug was, I think it’s 1849, it was aspirin, though they had it extracted it, it looks like back in the 1700s in England. But Bayer, of course, takes credit for that. And then Bayer extracted morphine out of the opium plant and that was in 1888. So up until that time, the pharmacists and doctors worked the same. And mostly the pharmacists. There’s a really good article about in the Civil War, the pharmacists did all the triage, but. And, and then what they took in their bag, they had things like, you know, lavender and all sorts of natural antibiotics and things like that that they used back then.
Well, one thing that I’ve heard from pharmacists is that they’re not respected by the medical doctors, even though they know so much more. Like, they get frustrated because they. At least people I know are frustrated because they don’t get the respect that they should for at least the knowledge that the medical doctors don’ Up. Yeah. Is that true or not? Well, I’m, you know, I’m older. I’m, I’m, I’m six. Well, you’re also a doctor of naturopath. Yeah. You have a couple different degrees. Yeah, I get, I get a lot of respect as a pharmacist. I’ve saved a lot of doctors from killing people.
So. Yeah, and it’s worse now in medical school because they only get that when I was in school, the doctors and, and pharmacists. We took a year of pharmacology back then, which really teaches you how drugs work. And a lot of the drugs back then were natural, like belladonna. There’s a lot of drugs that came out of that. And they were used a lot for your stomach, they were used for anesthesia, also a lot of the animal tissues, desiccated thyroid for your thyroid, adrenal glands and vitamins. There was a prescription vitamin line that all were cow liver to begin with.
And so even when I was in school, when I graduated, most of the things, or at least half were natural back then. Wow. And then that all just disappeared because didn’t it? So it just disappeared gradually to the point where we’re now just at the extreme level now. It seems like it’s really bad right now. What happened? The Rockefellers came in and they took over the boards of all these medical schools. Well, what they did was I read a book called the Rockefeller Medicine Men, and they came in during Reconstruction and took over the south, and they thought that the workers were lazy because they were very slow and they weren’t as productive.
But they saw that when they did abatement of worms that then they could work to get rid of some worm infections, or we call them parasites now, infections. And they really wanted to make medicine and they’ve done it pretty much into something like a factory worker, you know, and that’s really. I have medical students because I put up. I put together at our medical school here. I’m at a university at Nova Southeastern University, and I put together how. Put together the integrative medicine department and then put in about six courses. There’s an elective that medical students can take on herbal medicine.
And. Yeah, it is. And anyway, and I was brought in here by a pharmacist. He was our chancellor and he also has a PhD. He said he went to Columbia University, the only Ivy League pharmacy school at the time. He said, I want you to come in and teach these people the older ways of what we knew. And I’d say about a third were very receptive, another third were very unreceptive, and another third were just, okay, whatever. Why were the third that were unreceptive so unrecepted? What was their attitude that. I mean, why would they not want to learn? Well, you know, my brother recently, he almost died.
And I went to his cardiologist and I couldn’t even believe the things he was saying, but he was only 42. And I said, you’re all Ivy League educated. I mean, he went to like Harvard and I think Yale and Columbia Presbyterian for his cardiology. And, and some of the things he was saying were so ridiculously crazy. And he knew I taught at a medical school. But there was this, you know, okay, you’re, you’re a professor in medical school, but I’m at the best, I’ve been told I’m in the best medical school. So what would you know that, you know, a world famous cardiologist wouldn’t know, you know, so their arrogance is cause.
Is causing this. Yeah. You know, and he wasn’t an arrogant person, but it was just the, you know, what he’d been programmed with is what I really. It’s a, it’s been reduced to a program. There isn’t any thinking anymore. It’s a, it’s a program I compare it to, and I can appreciate that they’ve been programmed, but I compare it to like in sports because I Coach Sports for 15 years, right. And it’d be like somebody going to a certain camp or certain school and they’re just better than these other kids, even though they didn’t. The thing is with sports is you actually have to play and prove you’re better, you know, but in this, in the real world, in this world, for some reason, they don’t have to prove that they’re better.
They just get to go to the camp that has the nice stripe on it. But then they don’t. In sports, you have to prove it. Here, you don’t have to prove it. No. And it’s awful. Yeah. I taught at Stanford in a medical class and a third of them didn’t show up the main professor of the course told me another third are there because her parents gave $5 million. And then the other third that were there, they were a little bit combative. And the thing is they don’t have any monitoring of their tests. I’ve never heard that at any school before.
You mean they, they just get to take the test without being monitored. So like they could just cheat? Can they bring they. So who knows? So they. Is that throughout the entire process? I believe so. Through the whole. I think the whole university has the on your honor test. At least they did 20 years ago when I taught there. So I don’t know today maybe they changed it. But 20 years ago it was like that, just honor. Well, that’s ridiculous because I know, you know, I taught at a university and I was really careful about making sure the students.
Because how do you learn anything and how do you make sure otherwise they all just cheat? I mean, come on. Right? I, yeah, I’m not, I don’t know if they cheated or not because I wasn’t there, but I did. It seems to me like it could be a great possibility that that happened. I would say that it’s almost a certainty that that happens if it’s an honor system. Wow. Okay. And so has. Has it when when you said there was a third. A third third of it. Was that back 20 years ago or is it today that he was saying it’s like that.
You mean at Stanford or. Yeah, just when that was 20 years ago. Okay. So who knows right now? But I think it’s been that way for time immemorial there. But I know that a lot of schools do great inflation now and that these kids come out with these high grades that do not represent what they really know. Yeah. You know, my grandmother had a 150 acre farm growing up and she was the best doctor, you know. And she never took a drug until she was 80. That was in 1980. And the reason she took it, we were in a car accident.
She broke her hip and they told us she wasn’t going to live, that she had less than a 1% chance of living. And she came out and they said she’s got bones like a 50 year old woman. And she lived on her farm in upstate New York. We were in the middle of the snow belt and she lived by herself for another 15 years. By herself. I don’t know how she did all that. Yeah. And she didn’t have any electric. Electricity in her house, which was also funny because my dad was the head electrical engineer. At Motorola.
And I remember when we were about eight years old, my dad came. He was so excited. He goes, I got a team of guys, we’re going to put electricity in next week. So you’ll have, you know, electricity goes. She said, absolutely not. It disturbs the electrical current in my body. I don’t want it. And she would not put that in. She got a phone after she broke her hip. That was a big, A big deal for her. Wow. Okay. But I know what good living is and I know what real health is because she was. When right before accident, she was climbing her ladders and pruning her fruit trees, you know, so she was so excellent.
I went to China in 20, 19, 2020, right before they shut down for COVID 19. And there was a woman that was in the delegation with us, and she was 92. And she didn’t. She walked everything just like we did. Never complained, didn’t need a wheelchair. Other people asked for a wheelchair. They were 30 years younger. She was on the cross country ski team for the local university. She looked like she was 25 years younger and was sprite and you would never know. And I, you know, my kids, I always refer back to her on if, you know, look what she was doing.
It’s incredible. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So, I mean, if somebody, they can do it, we can do it. We just have to get our act together. Right. Correct. That’s all. It’s. It’s not rocket science. And you know, also God has given us so many hints to how to heal ourselves. And also wisdom. She was a little bit Native American, part Native American, but she never would admit it because back then you couldn’t own land. But she garden. You know, what they call regenerative farming back then, what they call it now, they don’t call. They didn’t call it that back then.
And she just had us. I see now because my cousin owns the land. She had a little plot of land and she would end up with, you know, 100 jars of pickles, 200 jars of tomatoes can. And she’d give them away to all her children and stuff. It was just amazing how she got so much food from. I’m in Florida and I. I try to have a garden, but the iguana love eating everything. So I have a really hard time being able to plant many vegetables around. But I don’t know what she did, but she was amazing, really.
For sure. That is really amazing. So now the Rockefeller. I’m going to get back to the Rockefeller medicine. And you know, they, they had some success with getting out parasites, but then they went in and realized it was a really good business. Right. And that because to me it seems like the entire medical field is geared for just they’re like pharmaceutical reps is what it seems like. Oh yeah, absolutely. So what it, what it was, was so you have this, Bayer was in Germany and you have this emerging idea of the pharmaceutical company. I want the one thing out of the plant that’s going to have the best effect.
And so that’s, you know, that’s what they did. They extracted the salicylic acid and called it aspirin or the morphine out of the plant, which it’s. You get opium, you know, if you just dry the leaves or whatever, that’s opium and take opium and then do a few things to it and you get morphine. So this was called then you know what we have today, what I call orthomolecular medicine. They’re taking one compound out. A quick break in the program to share with you that the gold market, the silver markets are seeing huge movements not seen in our lifetimes.
There is massive movements of gold coming off the comex, coming back to the United States. United States. We’re hearing chatter of gold being reevaluated from $42 an ounce upwards of what market is right now, which is almost 3,000 an ounce, or even a lot more than that. This is an amazing time to get medals, to get gold, to get silver. Silver will move with the gold. If gold is reevaluated, it could be one of the best times in history to get ahead of, of the curve on this. I recommend using Miles Franklin. They have the best prices, they have the best service in the industry.
I’ve done a ton of research on this and you don’t want to be paying higher premiums than you should be. You want to keep as many of your assets as possible and even consider converting your IRA to precious metals. They’re good at that too and they can help you do that. If you are interested in preserving your wealth, wealth and preserving your assets with precious metals, go to sarawestall.com Miles Franklin and you can fill out that form that’s there to go directly to an expert associate that works at Miles Franklin and you by filling out that form will get access to the private price list.
Just for Sarah Westall listeners. Okay, go to sarahwestall.com Miles Franklin and fill out that form and get access to the private price list. Okay, back to the program. So then what happened was they. And, and this is you know, people, corporations will argue about how they don’t want regulation, but they’re love regulation because when they make regulation, the little guy can’t get on the road. It’s only the people that can afford implementing the regulations that can get on the highway. Right. And isn’t a lot of the regulations are geared for whatever they have? Right, Exactly. Yeah.
So they take the. There were two brothers, and at the same time, these guys were billionaires and they were getting a very bad rap, you know, the industrialists back then. So Carnegie and Rockefeller started foundations to make themselves look good. And there were two brothers, one was a doctor and the other one was a teacher. And they decided to change medical schools. And they what they did then, they were the arbiters of what medical school had to be and look like. And there was something back then called eclectic doctors. And the eclectic doctors are a lot like what the integrative doctors.
They, they would use both the natural and more of the orthomolecular things together. And then they made all these rules and regulations. So now they closed down the naturopathic doctors, the eclectics, there were other doctors, midwives then. Midwives were famous. Closed everything down except the osteopaths. And the only reason, the osteopaths in 1920, if you went to an osteopath for Spanish flu, you had, I think a 95% chance of living. And if you went to a regular doctor, you had like a 25% chance of living. So they got to keep themselves. And then chiropractors, they really know how to do politics.
I will give that to them. I, I admire their acumen. Although the chiropractors have been really persecuted. Oh yeah, they’re persecuted, but they persevere. Yes. So osteopaths, what do osteopaths do compared to naturopaths or medical doctors? Well, that’s what I go to. We have both schools here, medical doctor and osteopathic doctor at our university, but I taught in the osteopathic school. So like a naturopath, they believe the body heals itself. And in school now they have to learn and take the exact same boards that the medical doctors do. So they have to learn everything. A medical doctor, it’s a four year program like medical school is, but they spend a lot more time in the body, touching it and everything.
So at still who started osteopathic doctor, he was an MD and he, it’s a really good case. He has to explain the philosophy. A lady came to him and she was going blind and when he palpitated around the eye, he could feel that a ligament or a muscle, but I think it was a ligament, had somehow blocked off the blood supply going to the eye. And that’s like your food being cut off or the water from the lawn being cut off. So it starts to die, so your eye starts to die. So she started going blind.
When he manipulated that and got it going the right way, she could see. Now as me, as a clinical nutritionist and this is where I would talk to the osteopathic doctors, I get along really well with them is I would say well. And from my perspective, I want to give more of the nutrients to the eye. So the eye is mostly fat. So I want to give fish oil to the eye. I want to give to the rods and cones, I want to give different colors like carrots, we know, help the eye or give anti inflammatories to the eye to help it repair so there’s not inflammation there.
So that, that’s what a clinical nutrition does to help the eye work better. So the philosophy is, you know, more in the MD world it’s called allopathic. It’s more about killing. Let’s kill the virus, let’s kill the bacteria. But in naturopathic, true naturopathy, now there’s some other groups of naturopathic, unfortunately who prescribe drugs and have embraced that world. And I don’t find that to be true naturopathy. They’re trying to come in this state and do that and take the right for the rest of us who got our degrees in real naturopathy to not be able to call ourselves that.
I think they were probably funded by big pharma to do that anyway. They. But so the. Let’s go back to the Flexner brothers. That’s what the osteopathics do. The Flexner brothers then wanted to just be the arbitrators of what a good medical school would be and how much money they had to have. And so they gave a lot of money to like Johns Hopkins and to University of Chicago, millions, like $30 million back then, which would like be a billion today or more. And to only do this orthomolecular medicine or this allopathic medicine that we have today.
And so they. Now how do they keep it that way? Because I would think that there’s so much information of we need this holistic medicine way of looking at our bodies and people are sick and I mean, how are, how do they feel? Force it. Because there’s a huge force going on that’s the worst I’ve ever seen making regulations. So if you don’t do it their way, you don’t get on the highway, you don’t get to play. And if you veer off, you lose your license, you don’t get well. Yeah. Or, you know, you don’t get to bill insurance, you don’t get to practice at a hospital.
That’s the way. And they, they did it tiptoeing. You know, to give you a great example, cherry bark syrup is amazing for cough. And so when they first started doing the chemical versions of cough syrup, they made it cherry flavor. So people didn’t really know what was going on. And then they, When I was in school in the late 70s, this doesn’t work. You don’t need vitamins. You, you know, herbals don’t really work like a drug does. You know, all of these messages that were fed to us, well, what do you think now with the fact that people are just sick? I mean, we have this diseased obese society right now.
I mean, it, it’s an epidemic. Do they ever look internally and go, maybe we’re just not doing some stuff right here? Well, it’s not them. I mean, they can’t. It’s so hard to do anything right. Everything has been polluted to the degree. You know, Barry Sears, who is, he did the zone diet, he wrote a book called Toxic Fat and talks about the fact, and he was from mit, that we have such an imbalance, especially in this country of, of fat. Omega 6 to Omega 3, Omega 6 more easily goes into something called acrodonic acid and it goes into prostaglandin.
And that’s very inflammatory to the body. And so it’s. It should be 2 to 1, Omega 6 to Omega 3 or even 1 to 1 in our country, it’s like 24 to 1. So that the body has its own consciousness, it knows what to do. And it says, ooh, I don’t want all this inflammation in my heart or my brain. I need that. I’m going to put it in the fat. Well, the fat goes. It’s. This is too much for me. I’ve got to make more fat cells. And that’s one of the, just one of the reasons people are fat.
There’s viruses that cause people being fat. Msg, monosotum, glutamate, they gave that to animals and versus animals they didn’t give it to. And the animals that they gave it to, they ate 30% more food and they were given the same diet or Duke gave monkeys, that one group of monkeys regular fats and then the other trans fat, and the ones with trans fat gave gained weight, even though they put the monkeys on a low calorie diet. Yeah. So they gained weight on a low calorie diet, whereas the other ones are eating more. They just didn’t have.
So. Because I get people, yeah, I get people telling me all the time, or not all the time, but comments that when we. Because I’m working with Dr. Diane Kayser to bring peptide therapy and stuff to people, and people will comment they’re fat because they don’t exercise and don’t eat enough. And that’s an example of. This is just fundamentally not true. I mean, well, it can be true, but if you put MSG and everything, you’re craving food, or if your brain, your brain runs off sugar, your heart runs off fat, and if they’re not giving you the right kind of foods, like, you know, oranges or, you know, you know, beets or things with natural sugars in them, then you’re going to be craving sugar.
That’s why so many diabetics crave sugar and have such a hard time sticking to a diet. You have to. You got to get them off from that and you’ve got to find good treats. Like, you know, if you use turbinado sugar, for instance, it doesn’t make your blood sugar go up very much. So you, you don’t have the same spike and crash that you would with white sugar. It’s like cocaine. You know, if you take crack cocaine, it spikes really fast and then you’re depressed in a few minutes, so you want another donut. But turbinado sugar has what we call lower glycemic index.
So there are sweet things. And, you know, I tell my students, I mean, we used to have Coca Cola, but it was made with cane sugar. And the sugar cane is brown. It’s almost like brown sugar. Um, and it’s brown because that’s where all the minerals are. So like chromium, for instance, in, in particular, really helps the drive the insulin and the sugar into the cell where it should be. So you’re not hungry where if you have. If your cell membrane has been corrupted by trans fat, it is corrupting the, the insulin receptor. And the insulin and sugar can’t get into the cell.
So now you’re, you’re hungry and now your blood sugar is too high. And then that high blood sugar in your blood vessels starts causing a lot of inflammation and damage to your little capillaries and things like that, that it causes. And that’s what really leads to a heart attack and stroke more than anything. So we just are bombarded with, with our entire environment is working against us. Yeah, exactly. And now when, you know, you talk about Rockefeller medicine, we want to move on to it. If, I mean, you said that Coca Cola used to have cancer.
So did Coca Cola used to be okay for us. It used to be a medicine even when I got out of school. So it was invented by a pharmacist and used to have cocaine in it. That’s where the name came from. And you know, cocaine was used a lot in medicine. I, I actually, when I was a farm, when I was a student, before I became a pharmacist, I worked in a pharmacy. And the man, he was a mess. His back room. And I also worked for the chemistry department. And I said, how about if I get all your chemicals listed and we give them to the university and you can write it off.
And he said, that’s a great idea. And I found a quarter pound jar of cocaine. I said, is this real cocaine? He said, yeah. Said the DA was in here and said, thank you for giving it back. That was worth like a quarter of a million dollars out on the street. But yeah, we used to make stuff with cocaine and it was, it’s very good for the stomach because of the phosphoric acid, because as you age, you don’t have enough stomach acid usually. So people will actually feel better. But now they’ve put the high fructose corn sirup in and we know study after study proves that high fructose corn syrup causes diabetes.
But when I was a kid, it was cane sugar that was in that. And real spices. You know, there’s a lot of spices in Coca Cola, the pharmacist, because the herbs. So imagine the early pharmacies, they were all dealing with herbs, you know, and they were compounding things and all that. And herbs are bitter for the most part. So they were always trying to find concoctions. And that’s why you’ll see in 1930 movies or something, you’ll see they all had a soda bar in their pharmacy because they would want that soda to cover up the taste of those bitter herbs.
Wow. So it wasn’t bad for us. Now I gotta revisit this cocaine thing. Cocaine, of course, became a drug, a recreational drug that just really is horrendous. But in moderation, it actually is a good thing. Well, it’s an anesthetic like lidocaine or any type. And Usually the ents used to use it in packing the nose when if they were going to do a surgery on your nose or something like that. And then we used to make this thing called Brompton Solution for cancer and HIV patients. I used to have it in it. And the cocaine like potentiated some of the other medicines.
But going back just one second also to the, to the Rockefeller medicine. So what happened was the Rockefellers funded the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, which in Germany that was funding all these things. And so basically the concentration camps were really set up to do pharmaceutical experiments with the people. I mean, that’s, I think, the main reason why they were set up to do that. And then they said mind control experiments. Those two things mostly were what was being done on the people in the concentration camps. And. Or they’ll say chemicals like the fluoride. Fluoride dumbs you down.
And so they add it now to our water. But there’s a lot of times in drugs they’ll put a fluoride on, on a group of the drugs. And then it was funny, a friend of mine, her, her kids now are like 30, but when they were little, she told me, she said, because she always was on an army base with her husband, she said, oh yeah, they give our kids those chew tablets twice a year for fluoride because they don’t put fluoride in the water here. So that’s what they tried to do to my kids too.
The doctor did the MD when we went there, because we live, we have a well. And they said, well, they need to get their fluoride because they’re not getting it from their water. And then I never gave it to them. But, but that’s what they were trying to do. Right. The doctors didn’t know. Right. And fluoride does help your teeth, but I think iodine, any of those halogens, if you took chemistry, I don’t know if you were a chemistry professor when you were a teacher, but it was business chemistry, which is very fascinating of a study I came upon the other day because, you know, iodine, we think of iodine for our, for our thyroid.
And it is the largest place, but the second largest place is the breast. Because if babies don’t have enough iodine, they get cretinism and so the breast. And also there’s iodine in our receptors, in our gonads as well. And in men, the second highest place is the prostate gland. So in, you know, I have a clinic here at the university and people come from all over the world. I call myself a Body detective. And we go, we comb the literature. I do some really crazy things with my patients, you know, and they at work. But we go through everything we do.
Is science really science based? I mean, we go find the answer. It’s in there in the medical library. And so anyway, we were, I, I said to them, I said, I know there’s a correlation between thyroid cancer and breast cancer. And we had a prostate cancer patient. And I said, look up for prostate and thyroid. It probably is correlated, but because of the iodine. But I never looked up. And they found a study that talked about because we don’t have enough iodine, usually in our food and things, that it will be replaced with chlorine and fluoride and bromine that are those halogen chemistry groups and those cause cancer.
So it was very fascinating. Yeah. Reading that. We, we got that a couple of months ago. Well, do you think. Because when you look at how sick people are today, you don’t seem to blame it on medical doctors. You think it’s more the environment. But I, I would say that it’s a combination because our environment’s terrible, but then the medical do aren’t equipped to deal with it. Yeah, exactly. Again, this is, this is my pharmacology book from 1700 pages from 1976. And in there are. I get all sorts of poison cases all day long. One of my cases, 18 years old, they took them all over to the very best hospitals, doctors on the west coast.
They spent almost like $75,000 trying to find out what’s wrong with their son for seven months. And he comes back with a diagnosis, chronic pain syndrome. What the heck is that? Right? Yeah. What is that? I have a 200 question survey that I give my patients. And the parasympathetic. And especially when you’re young, you don’t really get parasympathetic nervous symptoms until you’re older. Because our adrenal glands are. What is parasympathetic? What would you say? So there’s the sympathetic nervous system, which is mostly known as fight or flight, and that’s your adrenal glands. And you know, mostly when we’re in our, you know, teenage years to probably 50, we’re mostly dominant with our sympathetic nervous system.
We’re running kids around. We’re trying to get to the top in our job. You know, we’re working three jobs, whatever it might be, were fight or flight all over the place, and then we’re burnout. It’s called adrenal fatigue. By the time you’re 50. So then the parasympathetic dominates, because before, the sympathetic dominated. So is that why. So when you get older, you kind of. Your nerves can be frazzled. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. You’ve burnt your. Kind of burnt yourself out. But when I see young people, and I’ve had three, two of them being students, I. With parasympathetic circling almost every symptom in that category.
I said to his father, I go, he’s been poisoned. I said, do you live near farmland? Yeah. I go to the spray. He goes, I don’t. I don’t. I’m not sure. I said, you need to find out. I said, are you. Did he take a vaccine? Yeah. Did he. Is he near mold? Yeah, he’s sleeping in the basement, and it’s moldy down there. I’m like, okay. And he didn’t have any of these symptoms until they move. So I said, we’ve got to find out. I mean, that’s why I say the investigative work, and we’ve got to find out what’s going on with the kid, you know, but where it’s coming from.
But we got to clean all that up. So. I was on the board of the American Academy of Environment Dental Medicine for many years, and that’s always it. I. I used to have to go get a massage halfway through because it’s so negative. It’s one bad thing after another. Being poisoned by this or that or the EMF ways or whatever. That’s how I feel like I have to go get a massage. Just dealing with all the crap. So now. So I resonate with the fact that, and I think a lot of people do, with the stress in our environments, that you’ve been in this flight or flight mode for so long that you get a little bit older and you just.
You’re. You’re frazzled. Right. You’re stress bomb. And I think that’s what’s happening to a lot of people. How do you deal with that? Well, another thing for us as women about when we hit 39, it’s called perimenopause, our progesterone goes down, and progesterone actually hits the same receptor as Valium. That’s our hormone that makes us feel less anxious and things like that. And I noticed for myself that my friends from college that never drank very much, I noticed when they got to be in their 40s, they started drinking a lot of wine. And I’m sure it’s because of that, because that receptor sits right next to the alcohol receptor in the brain.
You Know, insulin will calm them down, but there’s herbs you can take. I had an 81 year old that had regular progesterone normal. I said, I’ve never even seen a 50 year old. And they used to put it in, I think it was in the Clinique makeup base. I don’t know if they still do that or not. And, but yams and sweet potatoes will increase your progesterone. So I said, do you eat yam? She goes, oh, two a day. It’s my favorite food. I could live off yams day and night. So. And she was really healthy at her age.
And I was amazed. And then I saw a 50 something year old woman who had normal estrogen. So usually when you go through menopause, that’s where your estrogen really starts crashing. And she ate hummus all day long. So the, the, the chichi beans or garbanzo beans, those will help increase your, your estrogen. Also, wheat germ oil increases estrogen. There’s a lot of things that, in the natural world that, phytoestrogens, a lot of good things you can do to increase your estrogen. I mean, just balance it out. What about men that have been living with estrogen this freaking, you know, weird anxiety their whole life and now they’re trying to calm down.
What can they do? Since 1980, their testosterone has just plummeted. Plummeted. It’s, it’s sad and it’s horrible. And I don’t, I remember Alex Jones once talking about how the frogs had all been turned to females because of the. I think it was atrazine in the water. But plastic. Men should not drink out of plastic, do not cook in plastic, do not microwave in plastic because those are all xenoestrogens in there. Marijuana increases estrogen in men. There’s, there’s so many things in men. There’s a great herb called tonkat ali and it has about 200 studies talking about increasing testosterone.
Now you see, you know, one thing I’ve noticed is all these men are also bald now. And there were no men like that. When my dad, you know, my, my dad, he was always in the country, you know, with organic farm and stuff. But he had a full head of hair when he died at 84, I think he was. And one of our Professors died at 93. He left at 92. Had the most beautiful big curly hair. It was silver gray, but it was beautiful. And people would say, why are you live long? He said, I stand erect.
And he did. He had perfect posture at 92. He was gorgeous at 92 years old. Quite amazing. Like the lady you talk about in the China. Yeah, that. Yeah, that. That’s amazing. So is this why we’re seeing. Is this why we’re seeing more men who are feminine and more transgender and more of that whole world? I think that. And I also think sexual abuse is up. You know, I, I didn’t read this about the boys that want it because someone had asked me to be on their podcast talking about the drugs. And what I read from some medical studies about the women was that the women had had bad sexual experience as a child and they didn’t want the breasts and they didn’t want to be whistled at and they didn’t want the attention at all from a man.
So I think there’s a lot of that going on too, with. For the women wanting to be male. But what about the. They didn’t want to be. They admitted they did not want to be a boy in no way, shape or form. They didn’t want to be female because they didn’t want men. They didn’t want to bring any attention from a man to them. Yeah, it’s, it’s very sad what’s going on. We have a lot of abuse, but. So now. But, but how much of the, you know, the Alex Jones talking about the frogs, how much is that true and how much of that is exaggeration? Well, that was true.
That was in a, in a, in a newspaper here. I mean, that was before the frogs were. But, but comparing it to, like, human males, you know, are. Is the, the, the plummeting testosterone since the early 80s? Well, that’s been measured. Yeah. Yeah, it’s been measured. Is that causing the, the low birth rates? Is it causing more men to be feminine? Is it causing more, you know, is that. Because, I’m sorry, use men now. Today, young men are a lot more feminine than they were when I was young. Yeah, there’s so many factors, right? There’s. That.
There’s also, you know, this, what they spray on the lawns and all of that type of thing. It disturbs your biochemistry in your body. And all these men being bald now, I mean, cutting their hair off, you know, who, when I was, you know, I’m 66 years old, so I, I didn’t, I never witnessed that except for the last 15 years. These younger men, they, they’re cutting it off because they don’t have much hair, so they think it looks better that way than, you know, having a bald on top or something, I guess, you know, well, they look like badasses with bald hair and a goatee.
You know, whatever. I think it’s kind of cool, but. Okay. So what do you think? If you had to give people a few pieces of advice dealing with the world that we’re living in, what would you say is a couple things that we should. Should focus on? I think one, even if you just have, you know, a box in your windowsill, start growing your own herbs and things like that. And even putting fresh herbs on a salad or something gives you so much medicinal properties. I actually have a website. It’s D R L Y N N L A F-F-E-R-T-Y.com and I’ll also put it below for people.
Thank you. That website. I have a lot of free webinars on there, and I have some. A lot of other things. The medicinal properties of some of the herbs. And then I have. I started this because it made me so upset at Covid. So when I heard about coronavirus in January 2020, I went the way I was trained. I went to the medical library. So we were given. When I walked in pharmacy school, they said, look to the left, look to the right. One of you will be flunked out. We had to have 3.3 average to even apply.
And that was like in calculus, physics, organic and biochemistry. That’s what it was like for me in engineering. Yeah, look around, because most of you guys aren’t going to make it. And my physiology professor, she asked such tough questions, but, you know, she taught you the body is totally logical. Think it through. I was telling a functional cardiologist who practices on the weekends as a cardiology hospitalist at the top cardiology hospital in Miami. I said, she asked us a question. If you have Addison, which is low adrenal, what happens to the QRS wave in the heart? He said, you were asked that at 20 as a pharmacy student.
I said, yeah. And every question was like that. He goes, I gotta tell you, I don’t know one cardiologist that could answer that. I said, that’s probably true. And I don’t even know if I got it right. But I said, the bottom line is I know that 90% of heart attacks haven’t got a darn thing to do with the heart. It has to do with the adrenal glands and the imbalance in your sugar and then the imbalance when you’re stressed out in your potassium and sodium. And that’s what’s causing most of these issues. And he said, you’re Right.
I said, because I treat people’s adrenal gland. And I teach in one of these big master classes we have here. And the man is from Greece, and he’s a big researcher. And I asked him, what do you, you know, what are you researching? How the adrenal glands affect the heart and the problems it causes. And I said, yeah, that’s the way I treat people. And he’s like, how do you know that? Because he’s like, 45. And they go, I learned that like 40 years ago in pharmacy. But almost nobody knows that, though. No, that’s. That’s the whole point.
Okay, so. And you. You have classes that people maybe could take? Yeah, and I teach these mostly women, but men take it, too. I love having men. Women, they’re between an hour and a half and two hours each. There’s one that’s a live one that’s coming up on the 16th, and it teaches you everything. One of the sessions is the story of your poop. I mean, they call me the poop doctor because I ask you everything about what it looks. And my grandmother used to look at your poop, and we all thought she was nuts, but it tells a big story of what’s going on in your digestive tract.
Well, that’s why the dog smell the other dog’s poop. Right. Tell them a whole story about what they did and what they’re feeling now. Right. And so. But there’s, you know, there’s two or three things. About three hours, six hours on your digestive track. The whole thing with autoimmune disease is just as fake and stupid thinking as possible. My first lesson I do with my students here is we go to Harvard, and I also teach the students how to read medical literature and how to look it up for themselves. But the first thing we do here, we go to Harvard and we look up rheumatoid arthritis.
It says. Oh, we have no idea what causes it. Oh, really? Okay, I guess I don’t go to PubMed. Let’s go to PubMed and put in gut bacteria and rheumatoid arthritis. And most of the titles are the etiology or passo Etiology, which Etiology means cause of rheumatoid arthritis. It’s from your gut bacteria. Well, what is the deal with that, then? I mean, Harvard’s supposed to be one of the best medical schools in the country, and they don’t even. I mean, that’s the sad. All the best. But how much did they get from Harvard? How much did Harvard get Paid by big.
Did they get from big Pharma a year? Well, that’s why they’re the last school to mandate. One of the last schools to mandate the shot. I don’t know about that. I did because I covered it. I mean, there’s still some now that had to had. There was like 15 that were still doing it with. And Trump had to ban it. But they were one of the last big schools to keep it on board. Right. So anyway, what I’m, what I’m trying to say is. And there was a lab that used to test regular antibiotics against Those and natural ones one, and one of the regular antibiotics usually worked.
Or two, where all of the natural, or 11 out of 12 of the natural ones worked against the pathogen. And the thing that’s really bad with regular antibiotics, they actually kill the good bacteria and the good bacteria kill your bad bacteria. Plus the good bacteria make a ph that bad bacteria and yeast and stuff can’t live in. I had my students go through all the autoimmune diseases and look for all the bacteria that’s implicated in Ra, sodrons, lupus, miss, whatever, and find out the names of the bacteria and then find out what ph they grow in.
And they all grow in a basic ph, which the standard American diet makes your GI tract a basic phone ph. So that’s why, like my grandmother canned all sorts of fermented foods, pickled beets, sauerkrauts, pickle, all of those things which the FDA thinks they should radiate in order to be on the shelf so they get rid of those good bacteria for us. Wow. Well, you need, you know what you need? You need to go in and redo the medical schools, rewrite their curriculums for them. There is very few people with your broad background with pharmaceutical, your naturopath and you, your nutrition background, all three is incredible.
Well, plus, I taught at a medical school for eight years full time. I still teach doctors and residents and stuff. And they come to me and they say, Dr. Lafferty, I just spent a million dollars and 25 years of my life studying and I don’t know anything. Or I was doing a mindfulness for the psychiatry residents one day, you know, and asking them, I went around the circle. There were about 15 of them. And I start with the first girl and I say, what? Well, when you walk here into the psychiatric hospital here, what, what do you feel? She goes, I feel like I’m going to kill somebody with these drugs.
And I asked the next one, I feel like I’m going to kill Somebody with the drug. They all said that they spent a million dollars and 25 years of their life. And our, our last dean in the medical school used to talk about how worried he was because of the suicide rates going up with the medical profession. You know, they’re. Most of the doctors, except the osteopaths that I know, they’re doing what we call regenerative medicine. And they, they go, Dr. Lafferty, you’re a thinker. I, I’m a. I’m an anatomy thinker. They come with me with what they think about this and what this will do and that, and it’s wonderful to see them thinking.
They’re thinking, understanding and thinking and understanding. We’re a big system. Right. So, okay, so do you take new clients or do you. You do. So if you go to your website, cheap too, because I’m at the university. So the students sit in and you can be a phone appointment. If you want an appointment, you would call 954-262-4550 and press 0 and they’ll send you all the forms and everything. If you’d like to speak to me and I’m available, I’ll be happy to talk to you for five minutes about what you have going on. And then if you want to email me@drlinlafferty.com I read all my own emails and I try to answer them the best I can without you being a patient.
Wow. Okay. Well, thank you so much for joining the program. This was really fascinating. Sarah, I’m. I can’t even tell you how happy you made my. My whole year being on your show. You do such a magnificent job. Thank you. I really appreciate that. Thanks. Have a good day. Sa.
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