If you want to see all the data I am amassing about our current weakening of the magnetic field just got to the 40 minute mark in this podast and listen to 1:07.
You'll be a lot wiser about what began in Dec of 2012 when the magnetic North Pole began is Usain Bolt run from Canada to Siberia.
https://t.co/7RIiwqTTXN
What it means to things with chloroplasts and mitochondria are astounding.
A landmark Harvard study reveals that your gut microbiome can take over a decade to recover from precancerous polyp removal, potentially explaining why colorectal cancer risks remain elevated after surgery.
For years, removing precancerous polyps—known as adenomas—during routine colonoscopies has been hailed as one of the most effective ways to prevent colorectal cancer. Yet, a puzzling mystery has lingered: why do patients who undergo this procedure still face an elevated risk of developing colorectal cancer later in life? A groundbreaking study led by researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health has finally found a likely culprit. By analyzing long-term health data and stool samples, scientists discovered that the complex ecosystem of the gut microbiome remains significantly disrupted for an average of 12 years after polyp removal, failing to return to a low-risk, healthy state.
These persistent microbial imbalances closely mimic the biological signatures seen in active colorectal cancer cases, effectively keeping the body's internal environment primed for disease. Surprisingly, the study also revealed that lifestyle plays a pivotal role in this long-term recovery process. Patients with poor diets and sedentary habits exhibited much more pronounced, cancer-linked gut changes than those with active, healthy lifestyles. This crucial finding suggests that simply removing a physical polyp is not enough; post-procedure recovery must involve active gut health management through targeted dietary and lifestyle interventions to truly lower long-term cancer risks.
source: Nogal, A., Wang, K., Thompson, K. N., & Song, M. (2026). Long-lasting gut microbiome and fecal metabolome alterations after colorectal adenoma removal and their relationship to colorectal cancer. Cell Host & Microbe.
@PATHTrain Glad to hear about the service improvements. Do you know if they will ever run trains more often (like maybe every 10 min) betw NYC & Hoboken/JSQ after 11:30 pm on weeknights & weekends?
@AmmousMD I definitely have my circadian rhythm and diet dialed in. Lots of grounding and cold/heat exposure too. I’d already read a lot of negative reports about that procedure before your post. Thx for replying.
In 1959, Dr. Jane Wright tested 15 cancer patients.
Instruction: spend as much time outdoors as possible, no glasses, avoid artificial light.
By summer's end: 14 had shown no further tumor advancement. Several showed possible improvement.
The 15th patient kept wearing regular glasses — blocking most UV from entering her eyes.
The experiment was never repeated.
Two objections were raised: no control patients were used, and experimental procedures should first be proven with animals.
The animal study followed.
Dr. Samuel Gabby, Senior Staff Member at Sherman Hospital, Illinois ran it using C3H mice — highly susceptible to spontaneous tumor development.
Three groups:
- 30 pairs under daylight white fluorescent tubes
- 30 pairs under pink fluorescent tubes
- 8 pairs under natural daylight filtered through window glass — the control.
Control mice developed cancer two months later than those under daylight white fluorescent — and three months later than those under pink fluorescent.
Pink fluorescent mice also had severely reduced litter sizes — one to two offspring instead of the normal six to fifteen.
The full report was submitted to the Illinois Medical Journal.
It was never published.
It was presented to the Illinois branch of the American Cancer Society.
It generated criticism of Dr. Gabby, nothing more.
(John Ott — Health and Light, 1973)
Israeli soldier testifies to the Knesset committee:
“We received orders from the Golani Brigade commanders on October 7 to cancel all patrols along the Gaza border from 5:20 AM until 9:00 AM.”
Do you see it yet ?
Super informative & engaging chat between @DrJackKruse & @SabinehazanMD about light, microbiome, the toxicity of influencer culture and much more. https://t.co/O4DRF29LIt
Two excellent books I’ve been recommending to anyone who has money struggles and/or just wants to learn about why the current fiat system sucks and what the alternatives could look like. @LynAldenContact@LawrenceLepard
@bitcoinand_beef@daylightco@JonesDanny This makes me think I should hold onto my iPhone 11 Pro Max as long as I can…until you guys come out with your phone.
Super informative podcast tying together all threads of the story from DARPA/Gen. Groves to the mRNA platform/MAHA, why we’re in the midst of a sixth extinction & how to save yourself. Savages need to understand the nuance & spread the word. @DrJackKruse https://t.co/5TX0X9O1ih