Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:03.720] Warning, the following show contains explicit language. [00:03.720 --> 00:07.840] Certain people should not listen to this show, such as children and panty waste adults who [00:07.840 --> 00:15.400] cry like 12-year-old little girls when they hear profanity. [00:15.400 --> 00:16.400] Welcome my friends. [00:16.400 --> 00:18.520] Thank you for joining me again for the Dr. Reality Podcast. [00:18.520 --> 00:21.120] For those of you who are new, I'm Dave Champion. [00:21.120 --> 00:24.440] Today I'm going to start in sort of an unusual manner. [00:24.840 --> 00:29.960] I'm going to begin by telling you a couple of stories that may seem disparate, but they're [00:29.960 --> 00:32.560] all heading in the same direction. [00:32.560 --> 00:38.520] I normally introduce you to the subject of the podcast at the outset. [00:38.520 --> 00:40.980] Not today. [00:40.980 --> 00:42.160] Story number one. [00:42.160 --> 00:44.760] I had x-rays last week. [00:44.760 --> 00:48.760] I'll give you a little backstory, then I'll tell you what the x-rays were for. [00:49.440 --> 00:54.600] There's a connection in the x-ray story to the theme of this podcast. [00:54.600 --> 00:59.400] I don't know if this goes back maybe five or six weeks ago. [00:59.400 --> 01:09.400] I was having a hell of a time playing and whooping it up with an 80-pound pit bull puppy [01:09.400 --> 01:12.760] who does not know his own strength, his own power, his own weight. [01:12.760 --> 01:16.000] We were having a great time playing around. [01:16.000 --> 01:21.040] He went hauling down the hallway and I went hauling after him. [01:21.040 --> 01:24.280] He goes around the corner and I'm like, I'm going to get him. [01:24.280 --> 01:28.320] I'm just about to the corner and he comes blasting back around. [01:28.320 --> 01:30.920] Now my right leg, I'm running. [01:30.920 --> 01:33.920] I'm literally almost flat out running. [01:33.920 --> 01:38.520] My right leg is back, not on the ground, and he comes tearing around. [01:38.520 --> 01:46.480] That gigantic, hard as a bowling ball pit bull head, he slams into my shin bone on the [01:46.480 --> 01:48.840] run, keeps moving. [01:48.840 --> 01:56.360] What happened was the impact was so hard on my shin that my leg swept back. [01:56.360 --> 02:01.440] That pushed my shoulders, my torso, my chest, my head, pushed that forward as the leg went [02:01.440 --> 02:04.400] back and down I went. [02:04.400 --> 02:12.600] Now I landed on my forearms and on both knees and I landed hard. [02:12.600 --> 02:20.920] That's caused a knee issue that is plaguing me and normally it manifests itself not during [02:20.920 --> 02:25.120] when I'm doing cardio, whatever form of cardio I'm doing, but in the hours afterward. [02:25.120 --> 02:26.560] My knee starts to ache. [02:26.560 --> 02:31.040] My leg feels odd all the way down into the ankle. [02:31.040 --> 02:36.960] I waited to see if it was something that would fix itself and it hasn't. [02:36.960 --> 02:42.640] I've had chiropractic adjustments on the knee, on the hip, on the ankles, trying to see if [02:42.640 --> 02:46.680] maybe it was something that could be fixed by some form of realignment. [02:46.680 --> 02:49.120] That didn't work either. [02:49.120 --> 02:53.400] Last week I said, you know what, let's find out what this is or is not. [02:53.400 --> 02:55.480] I went in and they took x-rays. [02:55.480 --> 02:59.360] The way they do that is they take an x-ray of the leg where you're having an issue and [02:59.600 --> 03:03.920] they take x-rays of the leg where you're not having an issue so they can compare and see [03:03.920 --> 03:08.640] if the leg with which you're having an issue has some sort of difference in appearance [03:08.640 --> 03:11.240] from the leg that's completely healthy. [03:11.240 --> 03:13.000] They took the x-rays. [03:13.000 --> 03:16.960] There's absolutely no difference. [03:16.960 --> 03:22.880] I looked at them closely with the doctor, with friends, and there's absolutely no difference. [03:22.880 --> 03:24.120] There's no damage. [03:24.120 --> 03:26.680] There's no skeletal problem. [03:26.680 --> 03:27.680] Why did I do that? [03:27.680 --> 03:31.600] Did I do that because I felt confident that there was going to be some sort of skeletal [03:31.600 --> 03:32.600] issue? [03:32.600 --> 03:33.600] No. [03:33.600 --> 03:34.600] As a matter of fact, quite the opposite. [03:34.600 --> 03:35.600] I was pretty sure it wasn't going to be skeletal. [03:35.600 --> 03:37.560] I'm pretty sure soft tissue. [03:37.560 --> 03:45.840] The purpose of having the x-rays was to discount the skeletal, to ensure that that was not [03:45.840 --> 03:47.000] the problem. [03:47.000 --> 03:54.720] By ensuring that was not the problem, we can then focus on what perhaps is the problem. [03:54.720 --> 03:55.720] Story number two. [03:55.840 --> 04:00.680] Remember, they're all leading up to the purpose or the conclusion of this podcast. [04:00.680 --> 04:02.880] Story number two. [04:02.880 --> 04:08.080] Imagine that the United States military wanted to build some large compound in an area that [04:08.080 --> 04:09.080] was prone to enemy attack. [04:09.080 --> 04:13.600] This was going to be a very serious compound with a lot of very important functions taking [04:13.600 --> 04:14.600] place there. [04:14.600 --> 04:18.640] They wanted this to be well defended, perhaps perfectly defended. [04:18.640 --> 04:24.760] Of course, we know that the military is experimenting with artificial intelligence. [04:24.920 --> 04:28.840] What happens is they call a meeting of the top experts, whether it be generals, whether [04:28.840 --> 04:31.320] it be tacticians, whether it be commandos, what have you. [04:31.320 --> 04:35.840] They all get these guys in a room and they say, okay, we need to find out what kind of [04:35.840 --> 04:43.600] attacks might be brought against this facility, what nature, the various variants of attack. [04:43.600 --> 04:51.320] Then we need to design a system so that the AI has this vast selection of options to respond [04:51.320 --> 04:53.400] to the attacks, sort of like in chess. [04:53.400 --> 04:58.280] If you're experienced and you see your opponent doing that, you say, I know exactly what tactic [04:58.280 --> 04:59.280] that is. [04:59.280 --> 05:03.160] I know where he or she is going with that, so I'm going to respond this way. [05:03.160 --> 05:08.880] This is the same thing that the AI would do in this contrived scenario we're discussing. [05:08.880 --> 05:17.120] Let's say this panel of experts comes up with 47 different ways this facility, this compound [05:17.120 --> 05:19.880] could be assaulted, 47 different ways. [05:19.880 --> 05:25.520] They all sit down and they formulate the various ways that it can be defended, and this may [05:25.520 --> 05:30.280] include infantry, it may include bombing, it may include artillery, it may include close [05:30.280 --> 05:32.680] air support, what have you. [05:32.680 --> 05:43.520] They break it down like, okay, so the 47 methods of attack, we have outlined 193 responses [05:43.520 --> 05:45.240] to that. [05:45.240 --> 05:54.560] If we take variations within the 47 and we add those, okay, so now we're at 291 potential [05:54.560 --> 05:57.800] defenses that the AI can draw from. [05:57.800 --> 06:03.320] The AI has to identify exactly which of those 47 methods of attack it is, and if there's [06:03.320 --> 06:06.640] any variations from the main theme, it has to detect those, and then it's going to go [06:06.640 --> 06:13.920] out to its 291 options, and it's going to summon whatever the assets, whatever the resources [06:13.960 --> 06:18.760] are that are needed to absolutely protect that compound. [06:18.760 --> 06:19.760] Get it? [06:19.760 --> 06:20.760] Okay. [06:20.760 --> 06:27.480] Then, sure enough, the compound is attacked, and you get to see real-time, maybe from a [06:27.480 --> 06:33.000] satellite, the attack, and then you get to see the exact elements that the AI plucks [06:33.000 --> 06:37.000] out of its database and starts implementing for defense of this compound. [06:37.000 --> 06:46.880] My question for you is, would you believe, watching that go down, that it was just random? [06:46.880 --> 06:47.880] It wasn't designed. [06:47.880 --> 06:48.880] There was no intent. [06:48.880 --> 06:49.880] There was no purpose. [06:49.880 --> 06:50.880] It's just random. [06:50.880 --> 06:51.880] No. [06:51.880 --> 06:55.000] Nobody in their right mind would believe that. [06:55.000 --> 06:58.380] Story number three, a little less complex scenario. [06:58.380 --> 07:05.040] You are an archaeologist, and you're out on a dig, and you're down to, say, the 2,700 [07:05.080 --> 07:12.080] year old level, and during this dig, you or the people you're working with come across [07:12.080 --> 07:16.600] earthen pots with lids. [07:16.600 --> 07:24.280] You're looking at these 2,700 year old earthen jars with lids. [07:24.280 --> 07:33.840] Would you imagine that that was made by somebody with purpose, with intent? [07:33.840 --> 07:39.160] It was designed to do a particular thing that its designer intended it to do. [07:39.160 --> 07:50.640] Or again, would you imagine, somehow, randomly, nature created an earthen pot with lid? [07:50.640 --> 07:54.320] Story number four, the last one, I promise. [07:54.320 --> 07:55.320] Story number four. [07:55.320 --> 07:58.440] When I was a boy, I used to like to play with Lincoln logs. [07:59.200 --> 08:03.880] Back when I was a kid, they came in sort of this rigid, tall cardboard tube with actually [08:03.880 --> 08:06.080] a metal screw-on lid. [08:06.080 --> 08:11.320] The very first thing that I did when I wanted to play with my Lincoln logs was I unscrewed [08:11.320 --> 08:16.960] the metal lid, laid it aside, took the tube, and poured it upside down. [08:16.960 --> 08:21.840] All of the contents, the Lincoln logs, fell out onto the floor. [08:21.840 --> 08:25.400] Then I would proceed to build a house. [08:25.400 --> 08:29.400] I think the most typical thing that people build with Lincoln logs, especially back when [08:29.400 --> 08:32.160] I was a kid, is a house. [08:32.160 --> 08:39.320] However, in all the years that I played with Lincoln logs, never once, when I poured the [08:39.320 --> 08:46.080] Lincoln logs onto the floor, did they ever fall out of the tube onto the floor in such [08:46.080 --> 08:50.400] a way that they randomly created a house. [08:51.400 --> 09:00.320] If I was immortal and lived forever, and over millions of years I poured those Lincoln logs [09:00.320 --> 09:08.280] out onto the floor billions of times, they would never, ever pour out onto the floor [09:08.280 --> 09:11.000] in the form and structure of a building. [09:11.000 --> 09:14.160] That should be pretty self-evident, right? [09:14.160 --> 09:18.640] The conclusion that I think any rational person would take away from stories two, three, and [09:18.880 --> 09:29.880] four is that randomness, chance, is the exact opposite of, it is exactly antithetical to [09:29.880 --> 09:34.680] intended purpose-driven design. [09:34.680 --> 09:35.960] And guess what? [09:35.960 --> 09:45.840] That finally brings me around to the purpose of this video, which is who actually designed [09:45.840 --> 09:54.920] human beings, because when you study physiology, there is absolutely no way, zero, let me emphasize [09:54.920 --> 10:03.400] that, zero way to imagine that the human body was somehow created randomly. [10:03.400 --> 10:09.360] You look at the biochemical actions and the related endogenous electrically mediated signaling, [10:09.360 --> 10:14.320] and I could just go on and on with hundreds and hundreds of examples, and the fact that [10:14.800 --> 10:22.120] much like the AI, defending the compound, just as an example, that's a similar system [10:22.120 --> 10:24.360] to how our immune system works. [10:24.360 --> 10:30.280] So if you looked at what was going on with that military compound, with the kind of attack, [10:30.280 --> 10:35.680] and then what resources were brought to bear based on what we know works to defend against [10:35.680 --> 10:40.240] that kind of attack, if you looked at that and said, there's no fucking way that's random, [10:40.240 --> 10:45.400] if it's absolutely by design, with intent and purpose, then there's no way that you [10:45.400 --> 10:50.560] can look at the human body's immune system and imagine it's random, rather than being [10:50.560 --> 10:53.680] a purpose-driven design. [10:53.680 --> 10:59.880] In short, if a person wants to actually be intelligent and use reasoning, when they study [10:59.880 --> 11:07.280] physiology, there's no way to say that the design of the human body is random. [11:07.920 --> 11:13.520] If they want to say the human body was designed randomly, not with purpose or intent, they'd [11:13.520 --> 11:16.840] have to say the same thing about the Earth and Jupiter, they'd have to say the same thing [11:16.840 --> 11:20.360] about the AI defense, and they'd have to say the same thing about Lincoln logs, which is, [11:20.360 --> 11:22.960] of course, absurd. [11:22.960 --> 11:28.960] In short, and to focus more directly on the point, if we accept by looking at the human [11:28.960 --> 11:35.000] body that it was not created randomly, that it was purpose-built, it had intent from the [11:35.000 --> 11:42.880] moment it was created, then we have to dismiss evolution as a participant or as a cause. [11:42.880 --> 11:49.240] That said, in America, in the late 20th century and into the 21st century, the way that people [11:49.240 --> 11:52.920] think, I'm going to say Americans, because that's really on this type of subject, the [11:52.920 --> 11:59.800] people that I interact with, so Americans are very linear in their thought process. [11:59.800 --> 12:08.640] We've sort of come to a point in our culture where, oddly, people feel that they must know [12:08.640 --> 12:15.480] how everything works, even when they don't have a single fucking clue how it works. [12:15.480 --> 12:20.440] They still have to posture, as if they do. [12:20.440 --> 12:26.120] With this linear thought process I'm describing, typically when we look at things like the [12:26.120 --> 12:30.800] design of man, there's two competing notions, one, of course, being evolution, which we've [12:30.800 --> 12:39.000] already dismissed, and the other one being that created by a deity, a god. [12:39.000 --> 12:45.280] Then, of course, depending on where you live, you get into the debate of, like, which one? [12:45.280 --> 12:46.280] Was it Zeus? [12:46.280 --> 12:47.280] How about Vishnu? [12:47.280 --> 12:48.280] Yahweh? [12:48.280 --> 12:49.280] Bumba? [12:49.280 --> 12:50.280] Odin? [12:50.280 --> 12:51.280] Okay. [12:51.280 --> 12:53.520] Yeah, you see where that's going. [12:54.120 --> 13:00.840] Personally, just for myself, I think it's kind of absurd to believe that a mythical [13:00.840 --> 13:05.440] character created anything. [13:05.440 --> 13:08.200] So you've hung in with me all this time. [13:08.200 --> 13:12.760] What's the big reveal in this podcast? [13:12.760 --> 13:20.120] Well, I don't know that there necessarily is one, except to point out that when we look [13:20.120 --> 13:25.380] at something like the design of the human body, we have to acknowledge that it could [13:25.380 --> 13:28.600] not be created by the random process involved in evolution. [13:28.600 --> 13:34.600] By the way, I work really, really hard not to turn this into a podcast about the evidence [13:34.600 --> 13:40.040] that evolution is nonsensical, which, yeah, it's overwhelming. [13:40.040 --> 13:47.000] Evolution is every bit as factual as flies cause shit, guns cause crime, and crude oil [13:47.000 --> 13:49.600] is a fossil fuel. [13:49.600 --> 13:55.840] But since most Americans falsely believe that the theory of evolution is actually science, [13:55.840 --> 13:58.440] I decided not to go there. [13:58.440 --> 14:04.560] So why would I think that it's significant to know that the design of the human body [14:04.560 --> 14:07.760] — we can extrapolate beyond the human body, but I'm just sticking to that for simplicity [14:07.760 --> 14:08.760] today. [14:08.760 --> 14:14.000] Why is it significant for us to acknowledge that the design of the human body is not random, [14:15.000 --> 14:20.640] and it's not by some mythical character? [14:20.640 --> 14:23.740] Let me share a thought with you on that. [14:23.740 --> 14:30.840] If you've had any experience with the innocence projects, we know that people are accused [14:30.840 --> 14:38.700] of murder, oftentimes prosecutors withhold exculpatory evidence, police officers hide [14:38.700 --> 14:43.740] evidence that shows that the person put on trial didn't actually commit the murder, and [14:43.740 --> 14:48.420] the person gets wrongfully convicted and sent off to prison, oftentimes for the better [14:48.420 --> 14:49.420] part of their lifetime. [14:49.420 --> 14:57.580] Now, that is horrible enough that a man who did not commit a murder does 15 or 25 or 35 [14:57.580 --> 15:01.060] years locked in a cage for something he did not do. [15:01.060 --> 15:04.580] Yeah, that's just horrible enough, right? [15:04.580 --> 15:06.540] But there's another aspect to it. [15:06.540 --> 15:12.140] When the prosecutor's overzealous or the cop lies or conceals evidence from the defense, [15:12.140 --> 15:18.600] when that happens, one of the most, in my opinion, one of the most egregious aspects [15:18.600 --> 15:24.540] is the party who's actually guilty is walking around free. [15:24.540 --> 15:27.260] Now, it could just be they're walking around free and they feel like they got away with [15:27.260 --> 15:33.100] it and they carry on with the rest of their lives, or perhaps they kill again, right? [15:33.100 --> 15:38.900] But the bottom line is justice, if you care about something like that, which I do, justice [15:39.100 --> 15:48.100] is denied 100% when the guilty walks free and the innocent is falsely convicted. [15:48.100 --> 15:55.700] So similarly now, go back to the whole design of the human body, if we claim wrongly that [15:55.700 --> 16:03.900] it's evolution or we claim wrongly that it's some sort of mythical deity, then believing [16:04.100 --> 16:10.300] we know the answer, if you think you know the answer, there's no reason to look anywhere [16:10.300 --> 16:15.140] else, which I would tell you is exactly in this situation what we should be doing, not [16:15.140 --> 16:16.660] looking at these things which are false. [16:16.660 --> 16:21.460] We should be looking for that which is true. [16:21.460 --> 16:24.860] So what is true? [16:24.860 --> 16:28.460] Shit, I don't know. [16:28.460 --> 16:33.860] And from my point of view, that may be the biggest takeaway of this podcast, that there [16:33.860 --> 16:42.860] are things we simply, at least at this moment in mankind's history, we simply cannot know. [16:42.860 --> 16:51.180] And it is okay to say, well, shit, I don't know, rather than try and invest ourselves [16:51.180 --> 16:56.460] in what I mentioned earlier, that simplistic linear thought process, yes, it's one of the [16:56.460 --> 17:02.060] two and I've got to choose a side and I've got to tell everyone, I know, when you don't [17:02.060 --> 17:03.060] fucking know. [17:03.060 --> 17:08.140] When I started studying physiology and then writing about physiology, one of the things [17:08.140 --> 17:15.620] that became crystal clear to me is that 99.9% of the population knows virtually nothing [17:15.620 --> 17:17.380] about physiology. [17:17.380 --> 17:24.540] They take their body for granted, they, I call it the conscious inhabitant, that's our [17:24.540 --> 17:30.540] mind, that's what we think with, that's our personality, I call that the conscious inhabitant [17:30.540 --> 17:33.980] because the body itself functions on a whole other level, right? [17:33.980 --> 17:40.900] So the conscious inhabitant doesn't have a clue what's going on inside the host anatomical [17:40.900 --> 17:41.900] structure. [17:41.900 --> 17:46.740] The host anatomical structure is doing its own thing, almost completely divorced from [17:46.740 --> 17:51.380] what's going on in the thoughts of the on-board inhabitant. [17:51.380 --> 17:58.380] And that complete separation from the mind, the on-board inhabitant and what it doesn't [17:58.380 --> 18:03.940] know, the mass ignorance about physiology and what the body is really doing, that complete [18:03.940 --> 18:12.780] divorce is a huge physical and medical problem for primarily Western civilization at this [18:12.780 --> 18:16.020] point but I think it's an ever-growing problem across the entire planet. [18:16.660 --> 18:24.780] Kind of one of the weird things is the on-board inhabitant has one carrier, one vehicle, one [18:24.780 --> 18:27.820] body, period. [18:27.820 --> 18:35.100] And when that body, that carrier, that supporting meat sack in which the on-board inhabitant's [18:35.100 --> 18:41.460] mind functions, when that meat sack is over, when it gets sick, when it gets diseased, [18:41.460 --> 18:47.580] when it can't sustain itself anymore, well, on-board inhabitant, goodbye, which is going [18:47.580 --> 18:52.260] to happen sooner or later to every single one of us, but why the fuck would anybody [18:52.260 --> 19:00.620] want to rush that process by something as correctable as ignorance? [19:00.620 --> 19:07.260] Now maybe I'm just somebody who loves life, but the idea in my head that like, okay, so [19:07.260 --> 19:13.900] I could conceivably, in ignorance, now referencing all the people who don't understand physiology, [19:13.900 --> 19:29.180] I could conceivably drop dead 32 years earlier than I would if I was informed rather than [19:29.180 --> 19:30.180] ignorant. [19:30.180 --> 19:35.380] Like, who wouldn't go for the extra 32 years if it just involved getting a little bit of [19:35.380 --> 19:36.660] education? [19:36.660 --> 19:42.060] I was just reading today, before I came in and sat down to do this podcast, that the [19:42.060 --> 19:50.340] oldest man in the United States, 116 years old, just died. [19:50.340 --> 19:54.340] And I realized, because I was fortunate enough to stumble across some things that piqued [19:54.340 --> 19:58.260] my curiosity and started me studying and I found out that I actually love the study of [19:58.260 --> 20:04.460] physiology and so forth, because of that, I realized that instead of passing away at [20:04.460 --> 20:14.220] the same age some of my peers already have, I could conceivably, because I am knowledgeable, [20:14.220 --> 20:17.980] there's no disconnect between the on-board inhabitants in this meat sack and the meat [20:17.980 --> 20:20.260] sack itself, there's no disconnect. [20:20.260 --> 20:25.420] And because of that, I'm 61 right now as I'm sitting here doing this, because of that, [20:25.420 --> 20:37.100] I might live another 50 years while my peers, who don't know that, are dropping dead already. [20:37.100 --> 20:40.020] So at this point, you know what I'm going to say, right? [20:40.020 --> 20:47.900] Get that education so that the on-board inhabitant is now connected, not disconnected, from what's [20:47.900 --> 20:54.380] going on with the one and only physical structure you will ever have in which your mind can [20:54.380 --> 20:55.580] inhabit. [20:55.580 --> 21:00.740] And perhaps the best way, not the only way, but perhaps the best way to cut right to the [21:00.740 --> 21:04.140] chase, yeah, it's to read body science. [21:04.140 --> 21:10.060] So I want to encourage you to go to DrReality.News, grab yourself a copy of Body Science. [21:10.060 --> 21:14.060] By the way, I say all the time about whatever my materials are, whether it's written, whether [21:14.060 --> 21:18.620] it's one of these podcasts, whether it's one of my books, do not believe me. [21:18.620 --> 21:23.620] Please read the reviews put on the website by the reader, and you will see that they [21:23.620 --> 21:28.680] are pretty astounding, 100% complimentary. [21:28.680 --> 21:36.260] Every single reviewer has given it five stars, including doctors, including people with decades [21:36.260 --> 21:39.340] in the medical practice, five stars. [21:39.340 --> 21:44.020] So go to DrReality.News, go ahead and read the reviews, and then get yourself a copy [21:44.020 --> 21:45.020] of Body Science. [21:45.020 --> 21:48.860] While you're there, I also want to encourage you to consider getting a copy of Income Tax [21:48.860 --> 21:51.460] Shattering the Mist. [21:51.460 --> 21:57.060] You know, I think a lot of people are, what would be the right word, they have some anxiety [21:57.060 --> 22:02.900] about reading Income Tax Shattering the Mist, because we're ingrained from a time we're [22:02.900 --> 22:10.060] very small to believe that income tax applies to, well, everybody in America. [22:10.060 --> 22:14.460] If you're in America, and you work, and you earn a living, you are the income tax. [22:14.460 --> 22:18.840] So I think it's stressful for people to consider that they might read Income Tax Shattering [22:18.840 --> 22:20.580] the Mist and find out that's not true. [22:20.700 --> 22:26.460] I think a lot of people have this conundrum, they're like, if I read it and it turns out [22:26.460 --> 22:33.980] that what Dave writes there in that 400 pages is factual, what am I going to do with that? [22:33.980 --> 22:38.380] I think a lot of people feel, okay, so once I get the knowledge, damn it, then my conscience [22:38.380 --> 22:40.220] is going to compel me to act. [22:40.220 --> 22:42.380] So for some people, that's absolutely true. [22:42.380 --> 22:44.140] It certainly was the case for me. [22:44.140 --> 22:48.540] I haven't filed or paid income taxes since 1993, because once I discovered the truth, [22:48.540 --> 22:49.900] I did, absolutely. [22:49.900 --> 22:54.180] My conscience drove me to say, oh, hell no, hell no. [22:54.180 --> 22:55.580] This is my fucking country. [22:55.580 --> 22:59.140] You're not going to lie to me and take my shit based on a lie. [22:59.140 --> 23:02.400] That is never going to happen in my fucking lifetime. [23:02.400 --> 23:05.780] And ever since I came to that moment, that's how I've lived. [23:05.780 --> 23:06.780] But I want to be clear, that's me. [23:06.780 --> 23:09.080] That doesn't have to be you. [23:09.080 --> 23:11.300] You can read Income Tax Shattering the Mist. [23:11.300 --> 23:13.780] You can get to the end and go, you know what? [23:13.780 --> 23:20.580] is 100% spot on, which, again, read the reviews on the website, you'll be like, wow, okay. [23:20.580 --> 23:24.180] You can read it without having to act, so I don't want you to feel stressed or anxiety [23:24.180 --> 23:27.300] ridden simply about reading Income Tax Shattering the Mist. [23:27.300 --> 23:32.020] As a matter of fact, people who are not positioned well to actually act upon it, the best thing [23:32.020 --> 23:37.140] you can do for your country in terms of one of the many big lies going on in the United [23:37.140 --> 23:40.180] States is when you learn the truth, tell others about it. [23:40.180 --> 23:42.580] When they go, oh, man, that's not true, it goes, look, here, I'm going to loan you this [23:42.660 --> 23:44.660] book, or buy a second copy as a loaner. [23:44.660 --> 23:45.540] A lot of people do that. [23:45.540 --> 23:49.700] I know one guy, he has one in his car, one in his office, and one in his house, because [23:49.700 --> 23:51.140] it's such an incredible resource. [23:51.140 --> 23:53.460] So you might consider that as well. [23:53.460 --> 23:59.220] But I really want to get your attention focused on body science, because if you continue this [23:59.220 --> 24:04.100] process of disconnect between the onboard inhabitant and the actual carrier of that [24:04.100 --> 24:08.580] onboard inhabitant, yeah, nothing good will come of that.