@jameshenryand You should give him @maxkeiser credit if he accomplishes this. He would have single-handedly led the biggest crypto psychological operation bubble in history. If he now pivots back to silver, his timing would be remarkable.
"Paper is poverty, that it is only the ghost of money and not money itself." - Thomas Jefferson
“Money is Money and Paper is Paper. — All the invention of man cannot make them otherwise.” — Thomas Paine
📁 Derya Unutmaz, immunologists and top experts on T cells, is internationally recognized for his pioneering work on immunity, aging, and chronic disease. This is what he says about AI:
“Don’t die in the next 10 years. Please try to survive, because if you live 10 years, you’re going to live another 5 years. If you live 15 years, you’re going to live another 50 years, because we are going to solve aging.”
Drinking caffeinated coffee daily might be one of the simplest ways to extend your life
People who drink 1–3 cups daily experience around 30% lower all-cause mortality compared to non-coffee drinkers, thanks to powerful polyphenols like chlorogenic acids—potent antioxidants with anti-inflammatory effects
Coffee drinkers even show signs of delayed biological aging (about one year younger based on epigenetic markers)
Regular coffee intake is also strongly linked to reduced risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, dementia, and Alzheimer's (but caffeine is key for brain benefits)
Psilocybin shows potential as an anti-aging molecule, with lifespan-enhancing results in human cells and mice observed in a new study.
In vitro, psilocin (psilocybin’s metabolite) extended cellular lifespan by 29% at baseline and 57% at higher doses. It also reduced markers of aging like β-gal activity, boosted sirtuin (SIRT1) levels, lowered DNA damage and oxidative stress, and preserved telomeres.
In vivo, 19-month-old female mice (equivalent to ~60–65 human years) who received monthly psilocybin doses for 10 months had 80% survival vs. 50% in controls. Treated mice also appeared younger—with improved fur quality, more hair growth, and less graying.
Although psilocybin is listed as a Schedule I substance, these findings position it as a novel therapy for healthy aging and open a path toward 'psychedelic-assisted senotherapeutics', interventions that may enhance psychological well-being while also slowing genetic aging.
No matter your stance on psychedelics, these findings should intrigue you.