5 days ago, the IRGC publicly called for Senator Lindsey Graham to be assassinated. He was traveling abroad to a war zone the last few days to try to end the war between Ukraine and Russia.
He’s been home for less than one day, and tonight, his staff said he passed away from a “brief and sudden illness”.
Was he poisoned by a foreign adversary either abroad or upon returning to the US?
There should be an investigation into his death. Especially after Iran called for his death less than one week ago.
What do his staff mean by a “brief and sudden illness”?
Poison?
Wow, Iran's state TV accidentally told the truth.
A pro-regime woman admitted on their own broadcast, the second Khamenei died, Iranians ran into the streets to celebrate. Not mourn. Celebrate.
That's why they cut the internet.
That's why they staged a 5-day fake funeral. The regime needed to control the narrative.
And they wonder why they hate me. I found the mainstream media that finally put a microphone in front of Iranians who don't cry for butchers.
I fired my cardiologist. I stopped the statins. I found doctors who would look upstream instead of down.
I got my fasting insulin tested. My HOMA-IR. My hs-CRP. My homocysteine. My Lp(a). My trig to HDL ratio. The tests nobody had ever ordered in 52 years.
Then I changed the inputs. I changed what I ate. I changed how I moved. I changed what I measured.
No statins. No Crestor. No Repatha. No injections. No brain fog. No depression. No muscle pain.
My metabolic age today is 43. My body fat is around 12 percent. My resting heart rate is 50. My VO2 max is 44.7. My blood pressure is 112 over 62.
The man who was disappearing at 52 is performing better at 58 than he was at 40.
Root cause. Not a single pharmaceutical drug.
Here are the five documented side effects of statins, all in the literature, most on the label.
Muscle symptoms. 10 to 25 percent. CoQ10 depletion.
New onset diabetes. 9 to 48 percent increase depending on the study.
Cognitive effects. Memory loss, confusion. FDA label since 2012.
Peripheral neuropathy. Nerve damage. Danish study: 4 to 14 times more likely.
Liver enzyme elevation. The one they used to test for.
Five side effects. One drug class. 38 million Americans taking it right now.
And the number one response when a patient reports side effects? Try a different statin.
That was my cardiologist's answer. Three different drugs. Three different brands. Same mechanism. Same damage.
In February 2012, the FDA updated the safety labels on every statin sold in America.
Three additions.
Memory loss and confusion. Listed as a side effect. The FDA noted reports were "generally not serious and reversible upon discontinuation." Generally. Not always.
New onset diabetes. Statins may cause elevated blood sugar that leads to a diabetes diagnosis. The irony of that should take your breath away.
And the third change? They removed the recommendation for routine liver enzyme monitoring. Because serious liver injury was "rare and unpredictable" and monitoring did not help detect it anyway.
They added two new warnings and removed the one safeguard they had.
(FDA Safety Label Update. February 28, 2012)
When a 93-year-old woman noticed how tired she was on her daily drives, she started going out less.
But with FSD Supervised, she’s now able to drive herself to appointments, run errands and even take road trips to visit her family on her own
I asked my followers and truth seekers what they wanted me to cover next.
The most common request: “Where do I start?”
Start with your blood. But not the blood test your doctor is running.
Here are the 10 root cause markers that actually tell you whether insulin resistance is building, inflammation is rising, and your metabolism is breaking down.
Most standard panels test glucose and cholesterol. That is like checking the oil and ignoring the engine.
Print this list. Bring it to your next appointment. Ask for every test on it.
That conversation is the beginning.
I had never heard the words "insulin resistance" until a heart attack forced me to learn them at 52.
Two words. I had no idea what they meant. My doctor never explained them. Medical school does not teach patients what they mean. Google buries the answer under drug ads.
But these two words connect heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer's, fatty liver, PCOS, depression, low testosterone, autoimmune disease, thyroid dysfunction, kidney disease, and erectile dysfunction.
Twelve diseases. Twelve specialists. Twelve waiting rooms. Twelve prescriptions.
One cause. And nobody explains it in plain language.
Until now.
Alzheimer’s Is Being Called Type 3 Diabetes
This might be the most important thing I have ever posted that has nothing to do with your heart.
In 2006, Dr. Suzanne de la Monte at Brown University did something nobody had tried before.
She injected streptozotocin, a toxin that destroys insulin signaling, directly into the brains of rats. Not their pancreas. Their brains.
Their blood sugar stayed normal. Their pancreas was untouched. The only thing she disrupted was insulin signaling inside the brain.
The rats developed Alzheimer’s disease.
Amyloid plaques. Tau phosphorylation. Brain atrophy. Cognitive decline. Every hallmark of the disease appeared, triggered by one thing: the brain could no longer respond to insulin.
She called it Type 3 Diabetes.
The same insulin resistance that damages your arteries, raises your triglycerides, and drives heart disease is doing the exact same thing to your brain.
When insulin receptors in the brain are blocked, glucose cannot enter neurons. The neurons starve. Amyloid plaques build. Synapses fail. The brain shrinks.
When the brain is insulin sensitive, glucose enters freely. Neurons are fueled. No plaques. No shrinkage. No disease.
Same person. Same genetics. Different metabolic environment.
They prescribe memory drugs that do not work. Billions of dollars spent on targeting amyloid plaques. Not one drug has reversed cognitive decline.
They never test fasting insulin.
The root cause of Alzheimer’s may be the same root cause destroying your arteries. Insulin resistance.
The one marker most doctors never order.
(de la Monte SM et al. J Alzheimer’s Disease, 2006. Intracerebral streptozotocin model) (de la Monte SM, Wands JR. J Diabetes Sci Technol, 2008)
Elon Musk just said the one thing about America they made sure you’d never learn.
The one thing that should’ve made you proud, not ashamed.
Musk: “After World War 2, the US could have basically taken over the world and any country. Like we got nukes, nobody else got nukes. We don’t even have to lose soldiers. Which country do you want?”
One nation held a weapon no civilization had ever possessed.
Total monopoly on destruction. No rival. No consequence. No limit.
Every empire in history that held that kind of power did the only thing empires know how to do.
They took until there was nothing left to take.
America had a greater advantage than all of them combined.
And rebuilt the nations it just defeated.
Musk: “The United States actually helped rebuild countries. So it helped rebuild Europe, it helped rebuild Japan. This is very unusual behavior, almost unprecedented.”
Not almost unprecedented.
It had never happened. Not once in 5,000 years of recorded civilization.
The nation with the power to take everything chose to rebuild instead.
Enemies became allies. Rubble became economies. Surrender became partnership.
Germany went from ashes to the economic engine of Europe in a single generation.
Japan went from unconditional surrender to the third largest economy on earth.
Three years after the war, America was flying food into Berlin.
Into the capital of the country that just tried to end the free world.
That decision reshaped every economy, every alliance, and every trade route on the planet.
Billions of people lifted out of poverty over the next half century trace back to one moment. One nation choosing restraint over domination.
No other country in history can make that claim. Not one.
Musk: “There’s always like, well America’s done bad things. Well of course America’s done bad things, but one needs to look at the whole track record.”
Every nation on earth has blood in its history.
But the measure of a nation was never its worst chapter.
It’s what it does when nobody can stop it.
When nobody could stop America, it fed its enemies and rebuilt their cities.
You’re being told every day that this country is something to be ashamed of.
By people who have no idea what the world looks like without it.
Every free market. Every open border for trade. Every democracy that took root outside Europe stands in the shadow of that single decision.
The values that built this country didn’t just shape America.
They shaped the modern world.
AI is about to hand a small number of people a power advantage that makes nuclear monopoly look primitive.
1945 was the first test.
AI is the last.
That power is going to exist. The only question left is who holds it.
The most powerful thing America ever did wasn’t building the bomb.
It was having the power to take everything and choosing not to.
The people trying hardest to tear that story down have never built a single thing worth defending.
American cardiology quietly rewrote its rules in the spring of 2026, and almost nobody noticed.
The new dyslipidemia guideline does two things. It drops the ideal LDL lower than ever. And it swaps in a risk calculator that no longer asks whether you'll have a heart attack in the next ten years. It asks whether you'll have one in the next thirty.
Think about what that unlocks. A ten-year risk keeps the drugs pointed at older people, because that's who actually gets heart attacks soon. Stretch the window to thirty years and a healthy thirty-year-old suddenly lights up as "at risk", because give anyone enough decades and the odds of anything climb. The guideline says the quiet part out loud: it wants treatment to begin at thirty, on the theory that a lifetime of lower cholesterol beats a few years of it.
A Harvard team ran the numbers on the new thresholds. At one setting, the guideline recommends statins for roughly 21 million more American adults than before. Twenty-one million fresh patients, conjured not by an epidemic but by a formula and a lowered line.
None of these people are ill. That's the elegant part. They feel completely fine, because there are no symptoms to have. They will be told, on the authority of a risk equation, that a silent number in their blood has marked them, and that the responsible thing is to take a drug every single day from now until they die, to shift a prediction about a year most of them can barely picture.
The beauty of a thirty-year risk score is that it can never be proved wrong in time for you to care. Take the pill and stay well, and the pill worked. Have a heart attack anyway, and think how much worse it would have been without it. The prediction protects itself.
There is no version of the next thirty years where you get to find out you didn't need it.
I am going to make a claim that will get me attacked by cardiologists, pharmaceutical companies, and most of the medical establishment.
Heart disease can be cured without drugs.
Not managed. Not reduced. Cured.
I do not mean in theory. I mean there are populations on earth right now with virtually zero heart disease. No statins. No PCSK9 inhibitors. No cardiologists. Clean arteries into their 80s.
And the reason they have no heart disease is not genetics. It is not luck. It is not low cholesterol.
It is because they never triggered the mechanism that causes the disease in the first place.
That mechanism is taught in every medical school. It has been understood for over 25 years. And it proves that heart disease is a chain of events that can be broken at multiple points without a single drug.
Let me show you.
Persian women were leading wars and the country when European women couldn’t own a spoon ,
At the same time, a Greek woman couldn't leave her house without permission !
American women couldn't get a credit card without a man's signature until 1974 , Iranian women owned businesses 2500 years ago !
The purpose of mentioning these facts is not to degrade women anywhere in the world,
it is simply to remind ppl, of Iranian values and culture, especially to those ignorant European politicians who dare to state that "they don’t think Iranians are ready for democracy."
Every week, these strange white crates leave a high-security Tesla compound in Lathrop, California.
They’re showing up near the Hoover Dam. At an Air Force base in Georgia. In the heart of New York City…
An estimated 4,000 of them are now spread across 48 locations in 14 states. And more roll out every week.
But you won’t see this on CNBC, and you won’t read about it in the Wall Street Journal.
Because these mystery Elon crates have nothing to do with electric vehicles, space, social media, crypto, biotech, robots, or AI…
The “mystery Elon crates” are Tesla Megapacks — grid-scale battery storage units being deployed across the country for utility, military, and commercial energy projects. Tesla is quietly building the backbone of America’s grid-storage infrastructure while everyone’s distracted by culture-war bullshit — but it is the actual story worth paying attention to.
No secret technology. No hidden invention. Just the most boring, most profitable, and arguably most important thing Tesla does — hidden in plain sight.
Tesla Model Y L is the perfect successor to the Model X.
• ~$40K in savings
• Model Y L has a 3 inch longer wheelbase
• More legroom and headroom for third-row passengers than in the Model X
• Power-folding flat second-row captain chairs vs. fixed.
• Cheaper insurance rates, etc.
• Model Y L has 3 cu ft more cargo room when the 3rd row is folded.
• Identical cargo room when the 3rd row is folded up in both cars.
The Model X was an incredible car, the Falcon Wings special, but the Model Y L caters to a much larger crowd. It’s gonna sell like crazy.
Five cancers are rising in adults under 50.
Breast. Colorectal. Kidney. Uterine. Pancreatic.
All five are linked to insulin resistance. All five feed on sugar and glucose. This has been known since Otto Warburg won the Nobel Prize in 1931.
Every hospital in the world finds cancer the same way. They inject you with radioactive sugar. Then they watch what lights up. The cancer cells glow. They consume more sugar than any other cell in your body.
That is how a PET scan works.
Then they wheel you into the hospital cafeteria and serve you oatmeal. Orange juice. Low fat yogurt. A bread roll. The exact foods that spike the exact fuel that lit up the scan.
I know. Because I was in that cafeteria.
I had a heart attack at 52. Insulin resistance. Prediabetes. The same metabolic dysfunction that feeds cancer cells.
The first meal they brought me was applesauce. Oatmeal. Orange juice. Every item on that tray was the highest risk food for the condition that put me there.
The cancer ward gets the same tray. The cardiac ward gets the same tray. Same hospital. Same cafeteria. Same food.
They use sugar to find cancer. Then they feed it to you for breakfast.
Nobody tells you this.
I’m a dermatologist. I’m supposed to say there is no amount of safe sun exposure.
But I won’t, because that’s a lie.
The attached shows how much sun is safe in different cities at different times of year.
What do I mean by ‘safe’?
I mean this: UV causes DNA damage and skin cancer.
But, shockingly, your body repairs that damage. As long as the damage doesn’t outpace repair and start accumulating it shouldn't increase your risk of skin cancer.
Data just came out that tells us how much UV you can get without damage accumulating.
They took the people most susceptible to DNA damage from UV and exposed them to UV, then did skin biopsies to measure the damage, then more skin biopsies to measure the repair, and repeated it daily for 4 days.
At 1.6 ‘Standard Erythemal Dose’ (SED) there was no accumulation of damage.
So, the attached charts show how much sun it takes to get 1 SED in different cities at different times of the year at different times of day.
And there are extra safety margins built in. It assumes a perfectly clear day with zero air pollution and that the sun is hitting your skin perpendicularly. Unless you’re laying flat, most sun is hitting you at an angle, which isn’t nearly as intense.
But a bigger question you might be asking is ‘Why would a dermatologist be telling you to get sun in the first place?’
Because getting sun reduces your risk of death.
Mostly by reducing your risk of heart attacks and strokes. That is very well proven.
But it’s also very likely that sun exposure reduces your risk of autoimmune disease, dementia, cancer and depression. It’s just not as well proven as the protection against heart attacks and strokes.
And before you reply and say ‘just take vitamin D!’, know that it has been ROBUSTLY proven that vitamin D has little (if any) benefit for preventing any of the above. Vitamin D is mostly useful as a marker of if you’re getting enough sun.
What do I do myself and what do I tell my patients?
Get as much unprotected sun exposure as you can without getting a burn.
That’s my GUESS as to what has the best risk/benefit ratio. Dying of skin cancer is actually really rare, especially when compared to the risk of heart attacks, strokes, autoimmune disease, dementia and other cancers.
But I’ll admit it’s not for sure best to get as much sun as possible, since sun does increase the risk of skin cancer and it might be the case the benefits plateau at a low level.
So, if you’re really worried about skin cancer stick to the charts.
The best science I can find says that amount won’t cause skin cancer.
The takeaway?
Sun is good for you, just don’t get a burn.