Max Lugavere is a filmmaker, health and science journalist, author, and host of The Genius Life podcast. His debut film Little Empty Boxes is out now. littleemptyboxes.com www.maxlugavere.com
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@Bedardo125 күн бұрын
Ahh, so KZfaq IS afraid to have Protect Our Parks on.
@Brimbino5 күн бұрын
Nah he will prob drop it tomorrow or Saturday.. the better shows drop wnd of the week
@schmeegledorf5 күн бұрын
@@Brimbinoit dropped on Spotify yesterday
@macedizzle52235 күн бұрын
Maybe wait a couple days before you get your panties in a bunch
@RP_5115 күн бұрын
pretty sure it's becuase they wanted to play music so they are keeping it as spotify exclusive
@420NotSure885 күн бұрын
I got a 30 pack of budlight a day early
@judyverkerk36932 күн бұрын
What a stunning son helping his Mom like that.
@joshmirgan5882 күн бұрын
My sister is the head clinical researcher of Alzheimer’s disease at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota her name is Christina dheel. Joe should have her on the podcast. That’s exactly what’s she’s doing now is researching dementia in the disease
@markbons7766Күн бұрын
Dr Dale Bredesen and Dr Daniel Amen have identified and defined many of the causes. Sheding the spike proteins and prions are to be the trending problem as prion disease (form of mad cow) via the mRNA injections will accelerate. AFLDs Simone Gold has been working with a large group of doctors to address the removal of the prions and spiked proteins via hydroxychloroquine (as a chelator of sorts)
@foolycooly37635 күн бұрын
The doctors simply called it Parkinson’s dementia, but my father had Lewy body dementia it’s the same thing. He was diagnosed in September of 2020, he was having “episodes” but was still himself. Within two to three years he was a shell of himself. He just passed away early this month. Rest in peace dad, I’ll miss you forever. 1/1/65 - 6/3/24
@siggifreud8125 күн бұрын
condolences. am shocked by how relatively-young your dad was when he passed.
@daviddarner68585 күн бұрын
My dad is going through this now as well. He's got a lot of difficulties but it is still great to go see him after his diagnosis in 2021.
@user-nn3jb7pu2x5 күн бұрын
I’m so sorry for your loss, my grandfather died from LB in 2016. Sad to see such a strong intelligent man go down that way
@RB_DEGEN5 күн бұрын
Never forget what he meant to you brother! 🖤
@skannerdk72685 күн бұрын
May your Father rest in peace and my condolences
@gerb10185 күн бұрын
Holy fuck, why did I just get like 50 videos dropped on my feed?
@MrPde275 күн бұрын
I literally had to unsubscribe because of this. Weird as they aren’t showing up on the JRE main page.
@oui26115 күн бұрын
because youtube loves you
@Tugg_Speedman.5 күн бұрын
SAME
@hump23275 күн бұрын
Probably had to wait for Spotify to allow it? Not sure but they are from the time he was only w Spotify
@ralph16285 күн бұрын
@@MrPde27 same here.
@nicoazevedo35815 күн бұрын
If health was the top priority of health care we would be living in a different world.
@JoesMadness3 күн бұрын
My father was diagnosed with dementia over 13 years ago, and I've been his caregiver for about 12 years now. He had Colon cancer at one point they gave him 5 years to live had he's still with us 10+ years later. I'm definitely glad to listen to this guest tonight
@GeorgeOrwell-ek7sf3 күн бұрын
Having cared for my dad at home u till his final breath, I wanted to convey my respect to you. I know it is challenging and heart wrenching and at the same time perhaps the most rewarding pain you can endure. I pray you look back on this time with peace in your heart. God bless you beautiful human.
@izzydeadyet73362 күн бұрын
I can't imagine having to do this for my parents but I will 100%! My dad's been an alcoholic his whole life and he looks about ten years older than he is, he can hardly walk , needs a walker because of the nerve damage in his feet along with breaking multiple Bones in his life from falling drunk. My mother also has an alcoholic sister with the same issues, it's very hard on my mum.. my dads been getting dementia last handful of years, and my mother has been very hard on him over it because she always resented his drinking.. they're both getting older and I'm their only child, I will have to help both of them at some point.. very sad
@kjettern2 күн бұрын
Eat fatty meat. Avoid seed oils, vegetables and carbs.
@Rastamon12 күн бұрын
@@kjetternI think some vegetables are healthy and good however fatty meats are very good for your health.
@GeorgeOrwell-ek7sf2 күн бұрын
@@izzydeadyet7336 Respect. If I were to give you some experience based advice I would say work diligently on strengthening your relationships with each other now because it will pay off immensely when it counts. God bless.
@wileinthecountry95475 күн бұрын
Suffered from IBS. For awhile. I eat 80% meat. And stick to other low fodmap foods. Changed everything for me. Things are way better now. I feel great and havnt been sick in years.
@hadleymon13033 күн бұрын
yes. carnivore is the hammer. 99% of illness is the nail.knock it out people
@booboobearify3 күн бұрын
I got more constipate on high animal protein.... im always taking senna pills
@BeProdigy2 күн бұрын
what’s ur typical diet? looking to make a change similar to yours
@dertythegrowerКүн бұрын
You need good herbs. For sure.
@CorrieGeorgeКүн бұрын
I had IBS. very severe ulcerative colitis/crohns. No longer deal with it at all. Have moved to a completely normal diet. I eat 70% meat easily...maybe same as you. I found a lot of data on it by a Dr in German named Dr Hamer. He founded German New Medicine, check it out.
@wildomegamusic5 күн бұрын
Max's book Genius Foods has been really helpful for me.
@Jakegotjuice5 күн бұрын
Thought this was Matt mckusker
@jakeprice52075 күн бұрын
The 432 hz shaman has many forms
@yuanjiazhu79405 күн бұрын
No shaman, no care. 432hz. Sound of water and sand. Eternal vibrations. Third eye on fleek.
@Syv_5 күн бұрын
Thought this was Matt Rife
@hdjono33515 күн бұрын
@@yuanjiazhu7940 they hate how fly he is
@CakedUpGeekbar5 күн бұрын
@@yuanjiazhu7940my people
@JessicaLahti5 күн бұрын
Excited to listen to this one. My Dad recently passed from Lewy Body Dementia and these topics need to be addressed.
@atombom82144 күн бұрын
I Agree, such a refreshing feeling to see the issues some of us are faced with being talked about.
@sofiane91932 күн бұрын
If you see this, please send positive vibes my way. I’ve been struggling with health issues for years and could use your prayers.
@MrDoffy-qd8qu2 күн бұрын
Rise up gamer
@Geeky9632 күн бұрын
You will get better 💪😉😊 ❤ Love and prayers 🙏
@looseygoosey23Күн бұрын
Hold on tight mate!
@rahvastepaabelКүн бұрын
Test carnivore for 30 days
@sdickerson8283Күн бұрын
My Prayers are going out to You. Please please please get Dr. Ede's book "Change you're Diet Change Your Brain". I changed my diet 18 months ago and will never go back. You can do this! It is totally in your control what you eat. When you change your diet, you will see improvements so fast (30 days or less), it will make you MAD that you didn't know this and had to suffer like you are, and so many others. I agree that the poisons in our environment are major problem, but you can still overcome your brain /health issues by changing/fixing your metabolism. Dr. Ede explains it all, and go as extreme in her eating program as you can. Much Love to You!
@shawn_1435 күн бұрын
Dropping a brain health pod on the day of the debate
@jeffmonroe63175 күн бұрын
Ive learned one thing. This guy loves his mom, almost as much as Flint Dibble loves his dad.
@ChrisBurns242 күн бұрын
One of my favorite guests this year on JRE. Definitely learned a couple things. Awesome that he got this platform to speak more about this.
@LobsterMobility-pl3iw4 сағат бұрын
i agree Chris.
@robwindsor63735 күн бұрын
Man, I feel for this guy. He speaks the truth when discussing prevention, which is anathema to the current medical system and pharma scam. The last thing they want is for people to become healthy, so they treat the symptom instead of the actual issue.
@ajrob775 күн бұрын
I have an uncle who is in the late stages of Parkinson’s - he retired from a chemical plant here in WV they made one of those pesticides. Over 20 men that my uncle worked directly with have had and passed from the same disease.
@chrislarabee57263 күн бұрын
This past century may likely be referred to as the "Chemical Era" in regards to human consumption. We are slowly becoming more aware of the damages that we know they do and to what degree. We will learn over time that natural is the way.
@aaronjgranados5698Күн бұрын
One thing that immediately helped my aunt stop the progression of Parkinson's was high pH water from an enagic machine Alkaline diets in general tend to be pretty helpful
@atege78bilay3 күн бұрын
I’m in need of your prayers and healing vibes. Please keep me in your thoughts as I work towards better health.
@PacoBear3 күн бұрын
💙💜💙🙏🙏🙏💜💙💜
@laurelroush81155 күн бұрын
With dementia running so high on my mother side of family, and seeing her stuggles as of late, i appreciate this info greatly
@ghost9-9ghost4 күн бұрын
I've read pretty much every book on nutrition and biology, along with 10000s of hours of articles and podcasts..... The general take away is "modern food/junk" is bad....and almost everything our ancestors ate foe the last 10,000 years is likely helpful
@TheCommentSection20045 күн бұрын
"Jamie, go ahead and pull up every episode I've ever done and then delete them."
@HaikesXO5 күн бұрын
“Say less”
@NoContent19914 күн бұрын
Why?
@Drteomas4 күн бұрын
@@NoContent1991 So say more?
@christianrandall56184 күн бұрын
Apparently a deleted episode, protect our parts, along with many other episodes were uploaded and then quickly deleted again.
@penknight85324 күн бұрын
@@christianrandall5618 Yeah, it was all about Covid. I actually started to watch a little bit of it thinking it was the new episode.
@northrndisordr92195 күн бұрын
My mom had lewie bodies dementia and killed herself when I was in high school. This is instantly hitting me in the feels. I’m very excited this information is out there
@GallieSallie4 күн бұрын
Aww sweetheart that must have been so rough. Bless you and your family.
@OldSchoolParatrooper3 күн бұрын
Care to talk at all? Dementia scares me. I've worked in memory care facilities. And, due to my younger days and genetics, I'm likely to develop Dementia. I've always said that I'd end my life myself before I allow my wife and kids to be my caregivers as dementia takes over. Just from what I've seen, I understand the person thinking that they are being merciful to their loved ones. I apologize if this messes you up at all or further. What are your thoughts on this viewpoint? What would you say to someone about your experience?
@angelvelik5 күн бұрын
Thank you for recommending the Goblet Squat, this exercise fits very nicely to my body type. Much love Joe, you keep changing my life for the better
@nikitopi6324Күн бұрын
You all are spreading so much love. It’s truly heartwarming. Thank you!
@dirtymudslinger2 күн бұрын
You all have filled my heart with joy. Thank you for your kind words!
@tylerhowerton85185 күн бұрын
In so broken hearted 😅 I flipped through and saw all these interviews I was about to indulge and I was bamboozled 😢
@loadedmoses5210Күн бұрын
JR love the back health discussion. I have b-on-b in both hips. Excruciating pain when standing/walking. I went to Mexico for StemCell therapy, but unfortunately, no change. Thanks again for introducing me to Max. I've added his pc to my listening library. Cheers.
@bobzoellner19822 күн бұрын
It's time for Victor Davis Hanson to be on the show Joe!!!!
@The2pacRemixChannel5 күн бұрын
50 videos in my feed joe rogan is the algorithm
@jackso_285 күн бұрын
Spotify is allowing him to upload older podcasts on KZfaq
@gameheadmail5 күн бұрын
because celebrities with too much money deserve the ad revenue before anyone else. Duh...
@Stan.k.Phlaps64475 күн бұрын
@@jackso_28they've all disappeared again. Either Jamie had a bad day at work or someone hacked him because they really wanted to see that protect the parks episode lol
@BloodierCorpse5 күн бұрын
It was well over 300 before they removed them
@chrisc55745 күн бұрын
@Stan.k.Phlaps6447 what episode number?
@JP-xs5lo5 күн бұрын
Lyme disease can also cause delayed neurologic symptoms that are similar to MS, such as dysesthesias (sensations of itching, burning, stabbing pain, or “pins and needles”). Lyme disease symptoms can come and go, similar to relapsing-remitting MS. Lyme disease can also produce abnormalities that are similar to MS on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the brain and cerebrospinal fluid analysis (CSF
@timstinson10194 күн бұрын
Carnivore dieter here, I have become very regular when i dropped the carbohydrates, fiber/vegetables and fruits all together. People need to remember plants are not our friends, look up oscillate acids. Also, remember the pesticides that are on everything that is grown under the sun. Look up Shawn Baker.
@RWahuW13 сағат бұрын
I worked as a nurse in long term care and what’s happening to these elderly frail people should be criminal. Why would a 90+ year old with advanced dementia be getting these drugs he’s talking about crushed, put in pudding/applesauce (they have swallowing difficulties) and fed to them? Same goes for cholesterol meds for the same patients. What’s the goal except to satisfy the pharmaceutical industry’s greed?
@carter_15 күн бұрын
My 77 yr.o. mom, in her early 40s, joked saying she had some'timers (a pre-Alzheimer's joke). But she FELT it then & today I'm 42 & can relate. I NEED this interview! ❤
@hlinville60345 күн бұрын
My father jumped in to Dementia with both feet. At 60 he seemed five by 63 he was in the throws of the condition. I suspect it was Lewy body cause it had Parkinson's like characteristics. I know cooked with aluminum pots and pans often. But he was a functional alcoholic for 25 or 30 years. I believe sleep is very important. I also put lion's mane in my coffee most days. Try to drink golden milk occasionally. Exercise moderately.
@LivingBGLegend4 күн бұрын
Me too my friend. Me too.
@laudankirk25573 күн бұрын
Max’s podcast is amazing. I listen to his work every week. I’ve learned so much and have created a more healthier lifestyle.
@TonyBlade-im2cq4 күн бұрын
I'm in need of your prayers and support. Please keep me in your thoughts for a speedy recovery.
@user-zn3cf8kr4r4 күн бұрын
Hate from Australia.
@hrins84935 күн бұрын
The talent on display is incredible!
@brbapappa5 күн бұрын
I was waiting for this guest! Great conversation
@MichaelH12325 күн бұрын
You are less than 3 minutes in 😂
@travperk5 күн бұрын
i slipped into a coma by min 7. 🥱 💤😴 🛌🏻 whutta S n o O z E · F e S t !!!!
@travperk5 күн бұрын
eL·snooze·õ f e s t õ 💤😴 🥱 _.. I'm about to slip into a coma_
@hump23275 күн бұрын
Most people can't sit through a technically deep podcast. This shit is very interesting, especially when you have seen it destroy your childhood hero firsthand.
@Art-bk6vv5 күн бұрын
@@travperk haha too bad, it looks like you could use nutritional advice
@cudpast5 күн бұрын
Looked like Matt McCusker for half a second and almost shit myself
@RandomRabbit0075 күн бұрын
DA MUTHA-FUCKIN SHAMAN, himself
@DamnThatsFunny3085 күн бұрын
True DAWG
@FlyinHawaiian8085 күн бұрын
😂 n I would have watched it if it twus Slop
@jesserodriguez15694 күн бұрын
Wassup DAWGS 🗣️
@RandomRabbit0074 күн бұрын
I’m a Shaman from the waist down
@nizamaamer4 күн бұрын
The research put into these videos is very thorough.
@theironforce3000Күн бұрын
Excellent interview. Lots of good topics that are right up my alley. 👏👏
@ian4040Күн бұрын
Max always looks like he just woke up hungover in a strange girl's bedroom and made it to the interview 15 minutes late.
@willgibbs935 күн бұрын
To everyone that’s hating because it’s not entertaining to them.. it’s actually so important to learn about this because this condition is becoming more prevalent in todays society.
@pokemanwyman88585 күн бұрын
Exactly!
@waynehedd5 күн бұрын
I don't see anyone hating in the comments...? Why did you write that?
@pokemanwyman88585 күн бұрын
@@waynehedd look harder there are always plenty my guy, he’s no wrong. People love to hate on the educational podcasts Joe has, they can’t all be comedian filled or fighter filled
@nothanks95034 күн бұрын
Yeah that’s joes audience for you that’s what he cultivates with his views on Covid being so skewed by what makes him money
@Cola.Cube.4 күн бұрын
You're right, theres literally nobody hating, everybody commenting on relatives with brain disease and various things, nobody hating on guest or subject. OP should delete the nonsense. @@waynehedd
@TraderCabuloso3 күн бұрын
Valuable insights are always provided. Thank you!
@LobsterMobility-pl3iwКүн бұрын
I listened to this immediately last night here in Australia. It is Amazing! This is a amazing episode. Important. Max Lugavere has such important information to share on this serious subject. Dementia is so common and it is gathering pace and effecting younger people.
@frankschwarz4084 күн бұрын
After learning about fasting the past few years, watching this video only confirms my belief that fasting and its healing properties would solve nearly most of these diseases and health issues. He mentions dementia and alzheimers is like type 3 diabetes or diabetes of the brain. Diabetes is insulin resistance and that occurs from over eating.
@carolFerguson-on5gx5 күн бұрын
At 76 thanks for the information so much. So far so good😊💪
@travperk5 күн бұрын
i could see an interest if i was 76 🥱 . . but im 43 .. and all this video did was slip me into a coma.
@latindoggy80595 күн бұрын
You typed this 37 times…
@zarbins5 күн бұрын
@@travperk The whole point of the video was to state that you need to address these issues in middle age. It was targeted at you.
@jasoncrump18865 күн бұрын
Very good podcast guys. Appreciate the info . It's all about that mind , body , and spirit. Gaurd those portals and keep doing work with that health.
@csokapicy40245 күн бұрын
The passion shines through in every video. It's truly inspiring.
@LobsterMobility-pl3iwКүн бұрын
i totally agree mate
@uapReX5 күн бұрын
Looking forward to watching your new documentary 'Little empty Boxes'
@parasocialbondsmetaswvoits90785 күн бұрын
YOooooOoo getting all those vintage JRE episodes back on YT is a BLESSING. Thanks a lot❤
@LobsterMobility-pl3iwКүн бұрын
thats awesome
@blackstarz5565 күн бұрын
Such a captivating upload.
@WizCudder15 күн бұрын
Lost my uncle to Lewy Body dementia last December. Horrible disease. Interested to listen to this one
@glanerao13565 күн бұрын
Hello Joe 🔥🔥🔥
@CD_B895 күн бұрын
My mother has suffered from alcoholic dementia for 21 years now. I watched it from the beginning until now. I’m 35 years old and it started when I was 14. It has been a real struggle that still exists today
@Xenumiscagive5 күн бұрын
Eat meat MEAT HEALS
@wesleydunn1695 күн бұрын
@@Xenumiscagive Read "The China Study"
@wesleydunn1695 күн бұрын
Alcohol isn't inherently a neurotoxin but it is once you become dependent on it.
@floatinggoose91975 күн бұрын
Jesus man. I feel for you bud. Forced role reversal onto children is tough. You and I probably have allot of the negatives in common, hope you got through some of the stuff earlier than I did.
@CD_B895 күн бұрын
@@wesleydunn169 my mother drank for many of her adult years and she drank pretty heavily. I remember a period she used to drink wild Irish rose and malt liquor old English 1800. I remember her always drinking pretty heavy through my childhood. About 20 years ago, her doctor found out she was drinking on top of her alprazolam, and he cut her straight off. She has quit drinking alcohol years ago, But she is a diabetic, she has developed severe OCD, and it has worsened with time. She will be 64 this year
@pelitosyorejitasbunny2 күн бұрын
These videos are truly inspiring!
@ehtrunner115 күн бұрын
In min 14 when he talks about his mom and asked her what month it is....that shit hit hard. wow.
@Think-dont-believe5 күн бұрын
Especially since it took me a 1-2 count b4 I knew the answer ... 😬.
@nicholemccann56305 күн бұрын
My grandfather died with Lewy Body Dementia. He had type 1 diabetes and his doctors had him on a RIDICULOUS diet, void of red meat entirely, and so low calorically that my parents have always thought it accelerated his condition. I'm so glad Max does this research and presents it in a digestible way for the laymen.
@travperk5 күн бұрын
I wish a doctor could take the Lewy Body and replace it with Lewy Vuitton
@encompassthyeclipse72785 күн бұрын
So sorry to hear that, my grandfather passed with dementia last October as well, with some similar diet torture and diabetes issues. Was one of the saddest things I’d ever witnessed. Good vibes going your way
@xenon69475 күн бұрын
To live Type 1 diabetes is difficult and require regular insulin injections. Oral diabetics drugs don’t work.
@aaronpedigo9875 күн бұрын
Damn you would think he would def need the nutrition sorry for your loss
@nicholemccann56305 күн бұрын
@@aaronpedigo987 yeah it was wild what the doctors did to his diet. Knowing what I know now we likely would have done something but for meat they had him eating only tuna, and honestly just the most messed up diet for a person with diabetes you could think of short of eating cake every day
@nathanclark97645 күн бұрын
Thank you good work
@LuckyCatScratches4 күн бұрын
You were a great son to your mom man. I applaud you for doing all you did.
@Big-ry6mu5 күн бұрын
Let me save you 2 hours. Eat Keto and never be sick again. You’re welcome!
@ghost9-9ghost4 күн бұрын
I disagree....there's a preponderance of research showing that natural carbs such as berries, carrots, tubers, etx, are healthy promoting...... The reason keto works is because it eliminates the refined garbage.....not because every carbohydrate is unhealthy.
@williamandersson7638Күн бұрын
Have to say that's correct , went in keto for 1-2 years, absolutely amazing. Went back to normal diet due to various factors. And feel like shit inside and out. Heading back in again.
@phillipmcdonald96545 күн бұрын
I lost my grandmother in 1999 . Wish this information was around then. The one bit of shining light I can take away, is now we have this information. Thank you .
@Big-ry6mu5 күн бұрын
Unfortunately the information has always been around. But the food industry doesn’t want it out.
@paulanthonygarcia5 күн бұрын
2 other videos I tried to watch were UNAVAILABLE after a few min of watching! DAAAMN I was all happy here at work LOL
@JREaintme2 күн бұрын
Great show loved it
@JP-xs5lo5 күн бұрын
Some studies have found that a high percentage of people with ALS test positive for Lyme disease, and that some patients previously diagnosed with ALS actually had Lyme disease instead.
@paulsacramento59954 күн бұрын
As of right now, it seems more correlation than causation but that may be because of how hard it is to detect Lymes and all the controversy around Lyme's and it's treatment. It may be the case that Lyme's triggers a genetic predisposition to ALS and other degenerative neurological disorders.
@JP-xs5lo3 күн бұрын
Besides the commonalities, studies have shown that a high percentage of those with ALS test positive for Lyme. Lou Gehrig actually lived right outside of Lyme Connecticut where the disease was born. Past patients diagnosed with ALS have actually been found to have Lyme instead.Aug 23, 2018
@JP-xs5lo3 күн бұрын
Physicians who have cared for persons with chronic Lyme disease have faced harassment at a minimum and for some, their careers have been ruined. Researchers who have seriously dedicated themselves to the scientific study of chronic Lyme disease in humans and/or animals have often found themselves attacked or marginalized. To persist in their researches would have resulted in virtual career suicide and some have been forced, by exigencies of survival, to leave the field. Laboratories that test extensively for Lyme disease, including use of direct detection methods such as PCR, have found themselves subjected to concerted smear campaigns and harassed. Whereas PCR is a well-accepted method in virtually all other infectious diseases, its clinical use for Lyme disease has also been marginalized. Direct detection methods developed more than a decade ago by some of this country’s finest physician-researchers and biomedical research scientists (Dorward DW, Schwan TG, Garon CF. Immmune Capture and Detection of Borrelia burgdorferi Antigens in Urine, Blood, or Tissues from Infected Ticks, Mice, Dogs, and Humans. J Clin Microbiol 1991;29:1162-1170 & Coyle PK, Deng Z, Schutzer SE, Belman AL, Benach J, Krupp L, Luft B. Detection of Borrelia burgdorferi antigens in cerebrospinal fluid. Neurology 1993;43:1093-1097 & Coyle PK, Schutzer SE, Deng Z, Krupp LB, Belman AL, Benach JL, Luft BJ. Detection of Borrelia burgdorferi-specific antigen in antibody-negative cerebrospinal fluid in neurologic Lyme disease. Neurology 1995;45:2010-5) have been moth-balled, I believe, for political and medical socioeconomic reasons. Seronegativity, a well-recognized feature of spirochetal disease (e.g. in syphilis) is held to not need consideration despite early recognition of this phenomenon in Lyme disease, ironically, by a signer of the 2000 and 2006 IDSA Lyme disease guidelines (Dattwyler RJ, Volkman DJ, Luft BJ, Halperin JJ, Thomas J, Golightly MG. Seronegative Lyme Disease. Dissociation of T- and B-Lymphocyte Responses to Borrelia burgdorferi. N Engl. J Med 1988;319:1441-6). That there is no active support by the Federal government for training programs for pathologists or support for pathologic laboratories for in-depth pathologic study of tissues from humans with chronic Lyme disease using all available methods (and which, hopefully, might develop new and superior methods) indicates a choice to remain in ignorance. There could and there should be one or more such laboratories of highest scientific calibre where such methods could be made available to clinicians and researchers and their patients, comparable to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, which has been known for excellence in the study of syphilis. A key formative influence in the creation of the National Institutes of Health was Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (Harden VA. Inventing the NIH. Federal Biomedical Research Policy 1887-1937.Johns Hopkins University Press. 1986. pp.57-59,114 & 122). It would be naïve not to consider the possibility of ongoing behind the scenes influence of the insurance industry on N.I.H. policy. Honest review of the worldwide peer-reviewed scientific literature reveals an abundance of evidence for the existence of chronic Lyme disease in humans and animals. Much of this evidence was presented to the Lyme Disease Review Panel of the Infectious Diseases Society of America on July 30, 2009. Regrettably, the panel chose to sustain the 2006 IDSA Lyme Disease Guidelines. IDSA leaders were defiant from the outset asserting the Connecticut Attorney General could make them review the guidelines but that he couldn’t make them change them. In retrospect it was a serious strategic error to leave the review process within the hands and ultimately under the control of the IDSA itself. The standard of care set by the IDSA 2006 Lyme disease guidelines is one of medical neglect of persons suffering from chronic Lyme disease. However, such guidelines are indeed useful. They serve to shield from liability physicians who neglect persons with chronic Lyme disease. By misusing CDC case surveillance criteria as the sole basis for a clinical diagnosis of Lyme disease, these guidelines serve the insurance industry very well indeed because such cases represent but the tip of the iceberg of actual cases of Lyme disease, whether acute or chronic. Denial of the possibility of seronegative Lyme disease, likewise serves the insurance industry well and also such simplistic constructs for Lyme disease also serve those physicians who cannot wrap their minds around the true complexity of this illness.T The medical profession and the United States Public Health Service, predecessor to the CDC, have a long history of medical neglect of persons suffering from spirochetal infection. The profession and the USPHS were completely unable to reform themselves from within in this regard. It required moral and political intervention from without to bring the Tuskegee Experiment to an end with Senator Edward Kennedy’s hearings in February and March, 1973 before Committee of Labor and Public Welfare’s Sub-Committee on Health (Jones JH. Bad Blood: the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment - a tragedy of race and medicine. The Free Press. New York. 1981 pp. 213). The Tuskegee Experiment involved about 400 subjects. Lacking the taint of racism, nonetheless the “mainstream” handling of chronic Lyme disease affects far more people; it would be a fair estimate to say, Tuskegee X 10,000 in the United States alone. Furthermore, the standards held out by the CDC and the IDSA have worldwide influence. Canadians are unable to get care for chronic Lyme disease. We are seeing significant numbers of persons with chronic Lyme disease forced to leave Canada for care. State legislators have begun taking matters into their own hands and the states of Rhode Island, Connecticut, California, New York, Massachusetts and Minnesota have passed laws or promulgated policies protecting physicians who treat persons with chronic Lyme disease. Are these legislators stupid? Are they dupes of Lyme activists? Or can they see what is so obvious to the patients and to any good clinician, that Lyme disease can be a chronic infection that often requires a long-term treatment approach? Furthermore, as the disease spreads and more and more individuals are affected, legislator’s staffers, their wives, their children and they themselves are experiencing the effects of chronic Lyme disease. In the fullness of time, the mainstream handling of chronic Lyme disease will be viewed as one of the most shameful episodes in the history of medicine because elements of academic medicine, elements of government and virtually the entire insurance industry have colluded to deny a disease. This has resulted in needless suffering of many individuals who deteriorate and sometimes die for lack of timely application of treatment or denial of treatment beyond some arbitrary duration.
@JP-xs5lo3 күн бұрын
Lyme is all diseases the great imitator it’s called just like syphillis. but it’s smarter way more dangerous Harvard just found it’s shedding viral dna from co virus inhabitants sars2 dna COVID. There completely linked because there gain of function Lyme transcribes sars2 dna 🧬 just like mrna tech does Harvard research just came out I will post again it’s also related to cancer turbo that’s what Lyme is bacterial cancer. All auto immune diseases implicated mj Fox was bitten before Parkinson’s diagnoses says it on David letterman and letterman was bitten almost died from anaplasmosis there is much more Tuskegee 2.0 x100 it’s in the blood supply gestational and std and there covering it up BIG problem.
@JP-xs5lo3 күн бұрын
Harvard deciphering Lyme study 2024 exert Correlating the samples to patient outcomes, they found that the most severe cases were associated with a surface protein coded by patterns of plasmids that occur only in certain strains of Borrelia. Lemieux, whose lab also studies COVID-19, a virus, notes that there is crossover between his lab’s studies of COVID infection and Lyme disease. “If you look at some of these plasmids,” he explains, “they used to be viruses that infected bacteria. In the history of evolution, what we are seeing today is a bacterium that has integrated into itself a range of viruses.” That virus-derived DNA is now linked to both the wide-ranging and lasting nature of symptoms associated with Lyme disease-clinical aspects of infection that are now familiar to the public in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic.
@DJ-rq8bm5 күн бұрын
Benzodiazepines have also shown to be a cause factor as well, long term benzo use.
@janvento13205 күн бұрын
yeah, that shit is really bad for your brain. Stay away from that poison.
@AllTerpsNoBrakes5 күн бұрын
I'd like to know the strength benefits that being work strong compares to weight training. I'd also like to see the affects working hard labor jobs has on reducing anxiety like weight training
@jennamarie26653 күн бұрын
This podcast is EPIC! A big thank you to Max and Joe for doing what you do.
@fnafgamertv97832 күн бұрын
To anyone reading this, please pray for my recovery and send positive thoughts my way.
@Tyrone9925 күн бұрын
man i love joe podcasts
@pizzamahn12085 күн бұрын
Sit yo corny ass down
@JustAsaph4 күн бұрын
my grandma died of dementia. most painful thing ever. i be having serious brain fog so this interview i needed
@hultprizecvs3 күн бұрын
Did anyone else notice the small detail at 5:23? It’s so cool!
@rjdolbin5 күн бұрын
“Train by day , Joe Rogan podcast by night , all day”
@jackso_285 күн бұрын
That’s what the intro says, yes.
@osamaalshareef4915 күн бұрын
What kinda train?
@osamaalshareef4915 күн бұрын
I bike sometimes walk by day, Joe Rogan when I see it on my KZfaq feed, all day
@hbsurferguy3115 күн бұрын
I hate that quote. Doesn't make sense
@milotighfield3 күн бұрын
@@hbsurferguy311 that's the joke...
@gogetanator88125 күн бұрын
We love Rogan!
@janvento13205 күн бұрын
As long as he's not spreading misinformation? ;-)
@supamalleo643 күн бұрын
@@janvento1320what does that mean?
@janvento13208 сағат бұрын
@@supamalleo64 Misinformation is incorrect or misleading information.
@supamalleo646 сағат бұрын
@@janvento1320 no like what misinformation did he spread?
@rubenperezpena533 күн бұрын
Great show, it is so important to open to the people these information. Way to goe, Joe!
@user-mx1ub4qc4i2 күн бұрын
Joe I'm aware of it because I can tell how I feel after I eat certain meals and I've heard you say it at least a dozen times❤❤❤
@oom57685 күн бұрын
I love this podcast but the episode dumping is absolutely destroying my feed lmao
@FraserImageTV5 күн бұрын
They gone now lmao
@atombom82144 күн бұрын
@FraserImageTV probably youtube thi king it was a bot spam. Happened to one of my channels before a few years ago. I'm sure they will all be up again soon.*correction they are back up for me now.
@vasid29915 күн бұрын
I've already watched the whole episode
@dizshiz5 күн бұрын
That you Terrence ?
@visualhorrorstories5 күн бұрын
@@dizshiz More like Katt Williams reading 3,000 books a year lol
@dewey-cox5 күн бұрын
1.75 x 1.75 = 3.5 watch time. Regards T.H.
@kerricollins8015 күн бұрын
This is just perfect.
@nonesuch4445 күн бұрын
Perfect just perfect
@mathewshore1034 күн бұрын
Thanks max, as always Joe respect from sxx bravo juliett
@Stranger_In_The_Alps5 күн бұрын
Been saving the oil for this one
@Steve-ev6vx5 күн бұрын
Dabbed all mine yesterday
@ajd01015 күн бұрын
@@Stranger_In_The_Alps drugs are more valuable than oil
@PaulHedges-zy8vb5 күн бұрын
You like to get high to listen about a tragic widespread health problem?
@King-O-Hell5 күн бұрын
I remember Max. He was the one that said something about a correlation between mouth-wash and heart disease.
@CHOCHOo-vd4in3 күн бұрын
The personality shines through and keeps viewers coming back.
@abovemotivationx3 күн бұрын
Thanks for this interesting video...
@charlesseo49015 күн бұрын
where the fuck is the hans kim and tony episode. it got deleted
@chickenhead...5 күн бұрын
I remember when all older mental was called senile ...my Dad has passed now this was so hard on my Sweet MOTHER ...SHE IS SO STRONG N LADYLIKE...
@BistroUA2 күн бұрын
Genuine and authentic content makes these videos so relatable.
@EternalSoulEvolution4 сағат бұрын
Hey Joe... great episode! Fascinating stuff... if not somewhat disturbing on some levels. I'm curious about your friend who has the gut issue from antibiotics. I'm wondering if he has ever used essential oils. There are a couple that could help with the nausea piece and can be applied topically, so he wouldn't have to even think about keeping them down. If he hasn't and would like to give it a go, I recommend diluting doTerra Peppermint and Ginger in a carrier oil (fractionated coconut oil is a good one, altho castor oil is a great anti-inflammatory and works really well as a carrier oil also) in a rollerball bottle and applying topically just under his sternum over the stomach area.
@davejohnson22355 күн бұрын
So glad joe is back on youtube. I missed my comment family 😊
@BallsackFeetstink5 күн бұрын
Tf you think these bots are your family? Get help bro
@damnbadger82424 күн бұрын
A little late to the party, huh?
@davejohnson22353 күн бұрын
@@damnbadger8242 eternally grateful fam
@jacobaguire24675 күн бұрын
And just like that, they’re all gone 😮
@pennyd.44094 күн бұрын
Amazing Episode ❤ thank you Joe 🎉
@BeAlphaX3 күн бұрын
Thanks for this awesome knowledgeable video... Like it...
@carlosrivera22995 күн бұрын
WHERE TF IS PROTECT OUR PARKS ON KZfaq!
@christiantaylor41675 күн бұрын
Probably a copyright thing because they played videos and music during which I think is better anyways.
@FullMetalAttackTitan9tailsHero5 күн бұрын
Shuttttt uppppp
@johnedward83525 күн бұрын
Joe told me it's only gonna be on Spotify because of all the music they were jamming to
@dingo82265 күн бұрын
People do realize you can watch on Spotify for free?
@FlyinHawaiian8085 күн бұрын
How about the new Tony hans that just vanished after a work call now wtf
@Stranger_In_The_Alps5 күн бұрын
“If you put your comment in quotes, everyone will read it” -me
@user-hn6cu8ds9v2 күн бұрын
Thank you. Game changer.
@iktr1095 күн бұрын
Excellent vid!
@ALANGREENSPAN4205 күн бұрын
#EPSTEINdidntKILLhimSELF
@InnerLuminosity5 күн бұрын
Scuffed Matt Mckusker
@aakarshchaudhary73594 күн бұрын
I remember smoking in college and getting horrible lower back pain. It has to do with disc issues and lower wound healing
@user-qm1kp2yt9k2 күн бұрын
Complex topics are broken down so easily. Everything is made so understandable.
@benoitmc28235 күн бұрын
Go Rogan!!
@travperk5 күн бұрын
👩🦲🦲 GO ROGANE !
@TheVelvetVixen5 күн бұрын
Thanks Joe for coming back to KZfaq for our societies ability to comment and communicate.