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  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 23, 2025 at 8:05 pm EDT in reply to: Missed the Senate hearing yesterday?

    I couldn’t be happier after watching these video clip. I’m a big fan of Dr. McCullough and always love to hear him speak. To see a room full of people listening to him, people that can finally do something with the information is surely the sight of there being light at the end of the tunnel.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 22, 2025 at 7:55 pm EDT in reply to: Spike protein antibodies

    I’m a patient and very interested in these answers as well and I am about to find out for myself what happens to spike protein antibodies with the combination of Augmented NAC for 3 months (200mg 3x day) and just having done a round of nicotine patches a week ago. I have a blood test scheduled for tomorrow and will be following it every couple of months.

    Last year I was > 25,000 and I hadn’t had a vaccine in a couple of years. I’ve been on LDN 4.5mg before bed since then with no other mitigations other than red light therapy. This year at the same time it decreased to 10,177 (as of a couple months ago).

    Having just done the nicotine patch, Ivermectin for 2 weeks, and started Augmented NAC, this blood test will give me a good starting point of reference. I also have thyroglobulin antibodies that were the highest two doctors had ever seen (above the test’s upper threshold) and have been tracking that.

    I can say without a doubt that the nicotine patches have had a major impact. I’ve been journaling how I’ve been feeling along the way, so I will be happy to write everything up and share it with everyone once I have some more data.

    The theory from Dr. Marco Leitzke that autoimmune disorders can subside once the spike protein is dislodged from the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors will in my case be measurable with the thyroglobulin antibody test.

    The more data and case studies the better… I’m excited to hear from anyone else if they have this data already.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 13, 2025 at 10:16 am EDT in reply to: Ever feel more drained after hydrating?

    My wife and I use the Jigsaw Electrolyte products (per our naturopath’s recommendation): https://www.jigsawhealth.com/products/electrolyte-supreme .

    Active Ingredients:

    Vitamin C (as calcium ascorbate), Vitamin B6 (as pyridoxal-5-phosphate), Vitamin B12 (as methylcobalamin), Biotin, Calcium (as calcium ascorbate), Iodine (as potassium iodide), Magnesium (as dimagnesium malate), Zinc (as zinc bisglycinate chelate), Selenium (as l-selenomethionine), Copper (as copper bisglycinate chelate), Manganese (as manganese bisglycinate chelate), Chromium (as chromium nicotinate glycinate chelate), Sodium (as sea salt, sodium bicarbonate), Potassium (as potassium chloride, potassium bicarbonate).

    Other Ingredients:

    Citric Acid (as bicarbonate reactor, for flavor), Natural Flavors (no MSG, for tartness), Malic Acid (for flavor), Stevia Leaf Extract (for sweetness), Red Beet Juice & Beta Carotene (for color), Carrot Concentrate & Hibiscus Concentrate (for color), Silicon Dioxide (reduces clumping), Monk Fruit Extract (for sweetness).

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 13, 2025 at 10:06 am EDT in reply to: Why does the same medication cost $10 in one country and $200 in the U.S.?

    Ivermectin right now falls into this category. I was telling a family member I just started taking it and their first reaction was to say, “But it’s so expensive!”

    When speaking economics and using the term “fair market value” it makes you question the “fair” part of the term.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 9, 2025 at 9:49 am EDT in reply to: Oklahoma Just Passed the “Food is Medicine Act” 🍎🩺

    In some respects, there are foods which are harmful that the human body is designed to crave such as high fructose corn syrup, which I think would be great if they were regulated, based on sound scientific studies of course. The food pyramid of course, as many of us know, was designed by big farming.

    I certainly like the idea of Laissez-faire here. “As a system of thought, laissez-faire rests on the following axioms: “the individual is the basic unit in society, i.e., the standard of measurement in social calculus; the individual has a natural right to freedom; and the physical order of nature is a harmonious and self-regulating system.”[1] The original phrase was laissez faire, laissez passer, with the second part meaning ‘let (things) pass’.”

    Though at the same time, I think there needs to be protection from harmful foods and perhaps this would be one way to curb the influence of things like high fructose corn syrup. Say for example no foods with “added sugar”.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 8, 2025 at 10:15 am EDT in reply to: ‘Trump Ends Federal Funding For Risky Gain-Of-Function Research’

    Pre-pandemic article 2017: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/china-to-permit-lab-poised-to-study-worlds-most-dangerous-pathogens/

    “But worries surround the Chinese lab, too. The SARS virus has escaped from high-level containment facilities in Beijing multiple times, notes Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University in Piscataway, New Jersey. Tim Trevan, founder of CHROME Biosafety and Biosecurity Consulting in Damascus, Maryland, says that an open culture is important to keeping BSL-4 labs safe, and he questions how easy this will be in China, where society emphasizes hierarchy. “Diversity of viewpoint, flat structures where everyone feels free to speak up and openness of information are important,” he says.”

    Just think about that last sentence. The author was dead right. I think this is more than enough justification and reason.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 23, 2025 at 8:38 pm EDT in reply to: Spike protein antibodies

    👍 I love doing that too. Before the mRNA spike protein got the better of me, I had gotten my Spanish to level B1. Speaking into the Google Translate app in a foreign language is also a fun test of proficiency.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 22, 2025 at 7:43 pm EDT in reply to: Spike protein antibodies

    @lynner4u Using translate.google.com:

    According to the FCCC protocol: Intermittent daily fasting or periodic daily fasting: Fasting stimulates the degradation of damaged mitochondria (mitophagy), misfolded and foreign proteins, and damaged cells (autophagy). Autophagy likely removes the spike protein and the misfolded proteins induced by the spike protein. Autophagy could therefore play a crucial role in reversing the “spicopathy” caused by COVID infection. In fact, activation of autophagy may be the only mechanism for removing the intracellular spike protein.

    I have no personal experience as to whether fasting-induced autophagy eliminates cells that produce spike proteins. However, the therapy is effective in cases of chronic immune dysregulation.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 17, 2025 at 1:02 pm EDT in reply to: rheumatological disease

    If you haven’t tried a round of low dose nicotine patches, I’d be curious to hear what you notice.

    Page 37 of the PDF for the protocol: https://imahealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/conf2024-Emerging%20Neurological%20Disorders%20A%20Path%20to%20Solutions-gazda-slides.pdf

    3.5 mg for 2-3 days

    7 mg for 7-10 days

    3.5 mg for 2-3 days

    The theory (Dr. Marco Leitzke) is many types of autoimmune disorders can stem from nicotinic acetylcholine receptors being jammed with spike protein and are quite difficult to dislodge (years) without some assistance. Nicotine can do it.

    I have a diagnosed autoimmune disorder and have blood tests showing levels higher than two doctors told me they had ever seen. I just started Augmented NAC, Ivermectin, and the nicotine patch protocol mentioned herein. On the 2nd day of 7 mg my sense of wellbeing and energy level suddenly changed to feeling like I haven’t felt since before the pandemic. Today is my last day of the nicotine protocol and yesterday I stopped Ivermectin after 2 weeks of .2mg/Kg daily. I’m still feeling amazing and the next two weeks (only Augmented NAC and LDN going forward) will tell if this is a permanent change for the better. Then in a couple months I will have my blood tested and that will indicate if I have in fact reversed an autoimmune disorder.

    I can’t rave enough about the stark contrast in how I’m feeling.

    The reason I think it might work is that Ivermectin also acts on acetylcholine and may be the reason you are feeling better, but it does not knock the spike protein out of the receptor like nicotine can do. In theory, you could get off of Ivermectin if nicotine resolves the root cause. Some folks are reporting people getting off of Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) after using nicotine.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 16, 2025 at 10:14 am EDT in reply to: Inverse Vaccines?

    I completely agree with the idea of fixing what’s causing autoimmune. I think the idea in the article is “Allopathy gone amok”.

    Here’s one theory, that is likely correct for fixing the root cause of spike protein related autoimmune.

    https://bioelecmed.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s42234-025-00167-8

    “The described correlations explain the high incidence of IgG-type pAA associated with COVID-19 due to SARS-CoV-2 induced T-cell stimulation leading to a shift from nAA-IgM to pAA-IgG. Blockade of membrane-bound nAChRs of B cells by SGP may perpetuate this effect through release of proinflammatory cytokines with further nAA-IgM/pAA-IgG shift. The persistent disruption of nAChR-driven inhibition of inappropriate B cell proliferation and antibody overproduction would be a plausible cause of auto-aggressive immune dysregulation with subsequent ADs in LC.”

    AD = Autoimmune Diseases

    LC = Long COVID

    If you were to now turn off part of the immune system, as the posted article suggests, it’s kind of like taking a person with some kind of nerve impingement and rather than fixing the impingement, put them in a wheelchair. You fixed the problem of not being able to walk but have caused a host of other issues for them to contend with. Not the best analogy but you get the idea.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 13, 2025 at 11:54 pm EDT in reply to: Oklahoma Just Passed the “Food is Medicine Act” 🍎🩺

    ❤💛❤ ¡Viva España!

    Speaking of Spain and off topic, I ran across an article out of Spain today which was published in April of 2020 https://theconversation.com/parches-de-nicotina-contra-la-covid-19-137287

    ===

    Nicotine Patches against COVID-19?

    “¿Y si se pudieran utilizar parches de nicotina para frenar la tormenta de citoquinas e inhibir la inflamación del momento crítico? “

    “What if nicotine patches could be used to stop the cytokine storm and inhibit inflammation at the critical moment?”

    “El 11 de abril enviamos el artículo a una de las mejores revistas en medicina del mundo. Al no recibir respuesta en cinco días escribimos al editor, quien nos contestó que no podían priorizar ninguna evaluación. En la siguiente revista ocurrió de nuevo pues también tenían demasiadas propuestas sobre COVID-19.”

    “On April 11, we submitted the article to one of the best medical journals in the world. When we did not receive a response in five days, we wrote to the editor, who replied that they could not prioritize any evaluation. In the next magazine it happened again because they also had too many proposals about COVID-19.”

    ===

    I wonder how many lives would have been saved had this information made the rounds.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 12, 2025 at 10:23 am EDT in reply to: Oklahoma Just Passed the “Food is Medicine Act” 🍎🩺

    By chance I just ran across this new app (not yet released): https://www.redhenapp.com/

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 9, 2025 at 7:35 pm EDT in reply to: Oklahoma Just Passed the “Food is Medicine Act” 🍎🩺

    I think children are definitely a big part of this conversation. When I see children who are obviously unhealthy due to the food in their schools and the food at home, it is emotional to think this is being done to them and they have no choice in the matter. There is a tendency for bad food to be cheaper, and folks can’t afford to get the good food. Never before in history have we been at this level of poor health due to what we eat. Find a picture of folks on the beach from the 1970’s for example and you find yourself shocked at how different we look today. This isn’t the fault of people. The accountability rests upon our government to push for health in our society. How we have fallen to a state where something called “pink slime” ends up in our school cafeterias is beyond understanding. Bad “food” is near inescapable in our society today and going into a supermarket to shop it is near impossible to find quality food. It’s tedious reading labels and trying to make sense of it. Comparing A versus B with respect to carbohydrate/protein/fat ratios and on and on.

    I live in a small community environment and that gives me an advantage of finding eggs for sale on an honor system at the ends of driveways, a local creamery with hand milked A2 cows, people keeping bees, butcher shops where people bring in their own livestock… this is uncommon and unavailable to most people nowadays.

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 9, 2025 at 7:12 pm EDT in reply to: Oklahoma Just Passed the “Food is Medicine Act” 🍎🩺

    I share your dream world! 💙

  • Jeff Gerber

    Member
    May 6, 2025 at 10:01 am EDT in reply to: Glioblastoma

    I’m also just learning about MTOR and its function. There are ways to turn it on and off. I’ve learned you can turn it on with the proper set of protein. I recently learned that resveratrol turns off MTOR. https://www.nature.com/articles/srep21772 . Someone who’s done more reading than I can step in here but I think the logic would be you want to turn MTOR off to induce autophagy.

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