Man in America Podcast

STARTS AT 10PM ET: Join me for an important discussion with Dr. Bryan Ardis.

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What is Man in America Podcast?

Seth Holehouse is a TV personality, YouTuber, podcaster, and patriot who became a household name in 2020 after his video exposing election fraud was tweeted, shared, uploaded, and pinned by President Donald Trump — reaching hundreds of millions worldwide.

Titled The Plot to Steal America, the video was created with a mission to warn Americans about the communist threat to our nation—a mission that’s been at the forefront of Seth’s life for nearly two decades.

After 10 years behind the scenes at The Epoch Times, launching his own show was the logical next step. Since its debut, Seth’s show “Man in America” has garnered 1M+ viewers on a monthly basis as his commitment to bring hope to patriots and to fight communism and socialism grows daily. His guests have included Peter Navarro, Kash Patel, Senator Wendy Rogers, General Michael Flynn, and General Robert Spalding.

He is also a regular speaker at the “ReAwaken America Tour” alongside Eric Trump, Mike Lindell, Gen. Flynn.

Seth Holehouse:

Welcome to Man in America. I'm your host, Seth Houlhouse. So a lot of us are looking for ways to survive in this toxic world. We walk outside and you look up in the sky, and there's chemtrails being dumped on us. Whether you believe in that or not, it's now pretty scientifically proven that you can find the studies that show that, yes, there is geoengineering happening.

Seth Holehouse:

They're dumping chemicals in the sky. It's clogging things up. It's making us cough. It's affecting our lungs. But even beyond that, we've now seen in the studies that are coming out, they're showing that, yes, actually, the conspiracy theorists were right again that the vaccines are shedding and that there's spike proteins being kicked off.

Seth Holehouse:

And then we've also found through, you know, my guest today and a lot of his brilliant research is doctor Brian Artis, that these spike proteins are actually almost identical to snake venoms. And it just so happens that those snake venoms are basically they're binding to certain receptors in our cells, and they're making us sick. And so as we're looking for a solution for this for ourselves, our friends, our family, our children, etcetera, what are the solutions? And so doctor Brian Artis, who has, be who was kind of went mega viral for his whole watch the water, documentary, has now been the person that is out screaming to the rooftops about nicotine. Now nicotine, it's it's you know, he has a presentation that says the other n word.

Seth Holehouse:

I mean, nicotine has such a bad rap in our society, but think about that. As you've learned how controlled our entire society is and how the information is fed to us through Google and through all the ways that they only want you to know this version of it, why do you think that something like nicotine is so demonized that they've created the entire industries? Every cigarette carton you look at says, warning, nicotine is an addictive substance. It's like red flags everywhere. But what we found is it's actually it's not the nicotine that's addictive in cigarettes.

Seth Holehouse:

It's the other chemicals are putting onto them. And so today, with doctor Brian Artis, we're gonna be diving deep into what nicotine actually does on a cellular level. Is it bad? Is it good? Is it a addictive substance that they want us to believe?

Seth Holehouse:

And actually, since I've started interviewing doctor Artis about nicotine a couple months ago, I've been trying it out, and I can tell you it's a magic thing. Actually, it's a little nicotine patch, you know, not very many milligrams, three, four milligrams. It's to me, it's better than coffee. Right? It's not I haven't noticed what the the it's not addictive.

Seth Holehouse:

It's not jittery causing. It just is this heightened clarity, and so we're gonna be diving into both the healing kind of principles of nicotine, how it works to protect your cells from these these toxins that are coming in, how it affects brain cognition and clarity, is it addictive or not, and a lot more. So and also, folks, if this is your first time coming to the show, welcome. I'm glad to have you here. And so I cover what you're gonna find today is a it's a deep search for the truth.

Seth Holehouse:

I'm looking for the lies. I'm looking for the ways that we've been lied to, and the things that can actually make us healthy and safe and productive in society that have been covered up. These things are coming out now, and this is this amazing process. And that's a big part of this journey on man in America, whether it's medical, financial, geopolitics. I'm trying to dig and find what's really going on and share that information with you, and I'm very blessed to have these amazing guests like doctor Brian Artis that will come on the show, and I'm not you know, I feel so lucky to have people like him that will come on and just impart this knowledge and not just them giving opinions.

Seth Holehouse:

What we'll be looking at today are actual studies, and we're not going to some conspiracytheorywebsite.com to find the studies. A lot of times the studies are on, like, medical journal journals, nih.gov. I mean, the main medical institutions are proving the theories and the conspiracies that they don't want you to know about. So, folks, I hope you enjoy this interview with doctor Brian Artis. Do you keep hearing more cases of your friends and family getting a life threatening diagnosis of cancer, or perhaps it's even happened to you?

Seth Holehouse:

Well, the unfortunate reality is that turbo cancer is now a worldwide epidemic. But the question we should all be asking is, what can I do about it? Well, the good news is that there are therapies that are working and proven in thousands of clinical studies. So one study on PubMed found that breast cancer's growth rate dropped by forty percent in only twenty four hours after using red light therapy. Another study on prostate cancer found that forty nine percent of the over four hundred male participants went into remission with just one red light therapy session.

Seth Holehouse:

A lymphoma cancer pilot study showed that three out of three of the patients became cancer free. It sounds unbelievable, but it's true. And you can discover all this information and more in a special training program from investigative medical journalist Jonathan Otto, who will show you how you can use red light, including the specific wavelengths as proven by studies for all different types of cancer as well as tinnitus, weight loss, wrinkles, acne, dementia, cognitive function, depression, anxiety, long COVID, jab injuries, stem cell regeneration, lower back pain, sciatica, the whole array of autoimmune diseases, including thyroid disease, arthritis, lupus, and gut disorders, and so much more. In fact, you can get your own in home red light therapy device risk free as you're completely covered by a sixty day money back guarantee and a three year warranty. On top of that, we've got financing options so you can get it now and pay later.

Seth Holehouse:

And the best thing, folks, is that this technology has become amazingly affordable. It's way less than you you expect with the smaller units costing only a couple hundred bucks. So just go to myredlight.com to make sure you don't miss out this free special training program and claim the extremely limited time bonus gifts and discounts, which include an additional 10% off with the coupon code Seth. Again, go to myredlight.com to get access to the free training. And if you make a purchase, make sure you use a promo code Seth, that's s e t h, to get an additional 10% off the already heavily discounted red light therapy products.

Seth Holehouse:

Doctor Brian Artis, it is always, like, honestly, just one of my favorite interviews to do is having you on the show because you're fun, you're smart, you're well researched, you're sarcastic. All the things that make for a fun show is you, and you got a beard. So all the things that just make for a fantastic experience, we've got them. So thank you for being here. It's great to have you on the show.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It's all the great things you need. Sarcasm, some brains, some knowledge, and then an incredible host with an amazing look and sound and incredible beard. Perfect. Perfect for an amazing successful interview. There we go.

Seth Holehouse:

So while there's about a million different medical related topics that we could be covering, Nicotine, it's funny because, you know, we've done multiple shows on nicotine, but even this morning, I saw this mega thread on nicotine going viral with clips from Andrew Huberman and all this other information on there, and it just seems like it takes time as you're probably familiar with when there's something that's, like, very deeply ingrained. You know, they say that if if a lie is told often enough, then it becomes truth. Right? It's also well, if the truth is told often enough, it takes then become the lie becomes dispelled. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

And so it's taken a lot of information, a lot of, you know, knowledge and time for us to kinda break this down. But diving into nicotine, where where are you at with it? I can tell you that since we started since I first interviewed you about nicotine, I found I've done some research and found some nicotine patches that that are great, and it's it's wonderful, and it's the crazy thing is is that most people I meet, I wouldn't I would never tell them, oh, I'm wearing a nicotine patch because they'd be like, like, what's wrong with you? It's like, well, you're drinking a double latte from Starbucks. What's wrong with you?

Seth Holehouse:

Right? Caffeine. Right? So it's the thing is is that people look at it and say, nicotine. Nicotine.

Seth Holehouse:

It's like, well, how is it different than coffee? Or they say nicotine's addictive or whatever. So, anyway, let's just let's just dive in wherever you wanna dive into as it relates to nicotine. I will follow you on this journey.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Yeah. It's very, very exciting, actually, over the last three years since a documentary went viral around the world called watch the water. During the COVID nineteen pandemic, I had placed at the end of that documentary a list of all the antidotes for all things COVID. And the very first thing and the first time most people even heard about this was nicotine is the perfect antidote for almost every symptom called COVID nineteen. And this was published by research scientists who did DNA confirmation testing in all people who had COVID nineteen symptoms and PCR tested positive when they analyzed their blood, urine, and feces, all of them had these very toxic deadly spike proteins that they discovered were targeting nicotine receptors.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And as early as April of twenty twenty, research scientists starting in France started telling the whole world and publishing these, in medical journals, nicotine could be the one thing used to stop the pandemic within one week if all governments around the world would just make sure nicotine gum patches and other agents were circulated to their their citizens. And then that was completely ignored by the American federal health agencies, doctor Anthony Fauci. They continue to this day to promote a lie that smokers and use users of tobacco products and nicotine are the highest risk group for getting COVID and dying from COVID when the very opposite is what has been published by every medical journal and scientific paper for the last four years, shockingly.

Seth Holehouse:

Yeah. Imagine that. Right? It's the opposite of what they're telling us.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And as a result of that interview going out three years ago, by myself with the interviews I did with you here on, man in America with Stu Peters and with Mike Adams, the health rangers, and others, These presentations about nicotine and continuing to show the research and the evidence that even nicotine patches, the smallest of all doses of nicotine patches you can buy in any CVS, Walgreens, or any kind of pharmacy in America, it's over the counter. Those patches have been confirmed in studies. And for the last two years that all long COVID symptoms improve within minutes to days of just using a seven milligram nicotine patch. For and every study was just for six days, and they asked nobody to wear it after that. And all research studies concluded with a six month follow-up after they stopped the six days of nicotine patches.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Still, there was a 100% removal of all of their symptoms they struggled with for one to two years called long COVID simply using a small nicotine patch. Now fast forward there. Just this morning, I'm getting texts from people in Australia that nicotine agents are now banned in Australia over the counter. Now this is true. However, three months ago, Australia decided to make all nicotine agents by prescription only.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So you can still get them, but a medical doctor has to write you a prescription for them. So there has been many, many countries since that documentary, Australia included, New Zealand, America, Canada, and England have all announced new health agendas within one month of the watch the water documentary. Within one month in the middle of a global pandemic, Seth Holehouse, all these countries in unison decided to gather together again amidst a global health crisis and announce a new national health agenda for our country in the middle of the pandemic. And that agenda is for all countries, we are going to ban access to all of our citizens of tobacco and nicotine products by the year 2030. And all these countries in lockstep are now trying to figure out ways to get nicotine out of circulation because the fact that your interviews, Seth Holehouse, with me about nicotine and all the now hot topics being shared on social media around nicotine and its health benefits, oh my goodness.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

This is gonna be a massive challenge to big pharma who literally is creating and investing in pandemics around the world. They've already named their next 10. And one of those I just learned this morning is the rabies virus pandemic that's about to unleash on top of the bird flu that's already been announced, and Newsmax just announced will be a hundred times deadlier than COVID, which is ridiculous and absurd. It will not be. And then, number three, they're announcing, bird flu, obviously, Marburg, and Ebola viruses that all of us need to be scared and something called monkeypox.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And the truth is nicotine's the antidote for all of those. This is the reason why all of these government agencies and politicians are introducing legislation to now ban access to or make it harder for you to get them. So, anyway

Seth Holehouse:

Well, I

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

know this is what you need to know.

Seth Holehouse:

Harris and Waltz, that was one one of their big things, right, was they wanted to they wanted to basically ban nicotine products in America. Is that correct? Was that one of the one of the the aspects of their platform? Right?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Yeah. Very, very close. The week Tim Walls was selected as VP candidate for Kamala Harris, He announced in all of his media interviews that first week that one of the first things this administration will do when I and Kamala get into the Oval Office in January is we will apply a 98% tax on all nicotine agents that are over the counter. So that was their first step was to start increasing the cost to the American people to get access to these, and we think this will make people not wanna buy these if we just double the price. Dollar for dollar tax almost.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Okay. Well, that might affect a a few people, but it's not gonna affect the majority. Would you rather spend twice as much for a nicotine patch or go to Home Depot and get the next bird flu, Marburg, Ebola, monkeypox, mRNA vaccine, which is what you're gonna be told is the only solution for these upcoming pandemics. Would you rather pay a little extra for a few days of nicotine patches? I think you would.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Or nicotine gum or suckets. You will. However, they didn't win, so we don't have to worry about that. However, if Donald Trump does put this 98% tax on there, we should all be worried. But until then, don't worry.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

We're in good hands. So With Seth Allhouse.

Seth Holehouse:

Yes. And and doctor Brian Artis. So pulling up the rabies things. Right? So there's got a couple we've got a few links.

Seth Holehouse:

So here, this is an abstract. This is nature.com right here. Okay. Rabies virus modifies host behavior through a snake toxin like region of its glycoprotein that inhibits neurotransmitter receptors in the central nervous system. So now that that's kinda strange.

Seth Holehouse:

Okay. Rabies, virus, snake toxin. You know, I knew this one guy that did this show talking about how venom was in a lot of these things, and oh, wow. So is rabies

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

How how many of you knew? I had to share this with you just for fun. How many out there listening right now, including you, Seth? How many of you knew that the rabies virus, just like COVID nineteen, had spike proteins on it, and the word in the title of this paper is glycoprotein. That's the word for spike protein of a virus.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Just read the title. The rabies virus modifies host behavior. The host is the person that gets it sick or the dog or the animal that gets rabies. So rabies virus affects the one infected through a snake toxin like region. Did you know that rabies also had snake venom toxins that were spike proteins to make the animal sick and the human sick.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And I had to just show this to you because the only thing that all viruses have in common is snake venom spike proteins. And this is interesting. All of them have them. And what's interesting about that is even if you read any of the Latin to English dictionaries, the word virus in Latin has a very specific forever written definition. The word virus means in Latin, poison, comma, especially snake's venom.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So when you look at the fact now you're looking at a study that says, oh my goodness. There's reference to rabies virus and snake venom. COVID nineteen had the same thing. There was over 36 different snake venoms and other venomous creatures in the ocean whose venom proteins were on SARS CoV two's virus that they that caused COVID nineteen symptoms. And for most scientists, most medical doctors, they were shocked to hear these claims by me that DNA evidence was pointing to snake venom proteins causing all COVID symptoms, and that's why nicotine was working.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

That's what all the scientists figured out was snake venom proteins primarily target nicotine receptors. And the moment for the scientist in France was, oh my goodness. DNA evidence shows these are identical to snake venom proteins, and the majority of them target nicotine receptors. And this finally explains four years ago, Seth, April of twenty twenty, why people who use tobacco products are seemingly immune to getting COVID. Oh, yes.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

They still are to this day the least likely to ever get COVID. The only smokers that even got COVID symptoms or ended up hospitalized already had diabetes and had heart failure, diagnosis. So they all had to have those issues in order to see complications because if you were simply someone using tobacco products, chain smokers included, they were the least affected by COVID nineteen, which is interesting since they tried to tell you it was a respiratory infection. Well, smokers supposedly have bad lung functioning and diseased lungs. They should have had the worst outcomes, period, and yet they were the least affected demographic of humans in any category ever, age, sex, gender, races, doesn't matter.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Smokers had the least infections of COVID and least to die of COVID of all peoples on earth. Pretty pretty amazing. So that sharing that study just to show you guys, I've already had people who have texted me and said, after your presentations over the last three years, my vet confirmed that my dog got bit by a rabies dog. And to treat my dog, they just shaved a part of its hair, put on a nicotine patch, and actually protected my dog. And he got no rabies, no symptoms whatsoever, and is now clear.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Just using a nicotine patch. And the reason for that is the reason why the nicotine patch works for rabies is because of this snake venom spike protein on rabies that, by the way, Seth, the exact same snake toxin region of the spike protein for rabies you just read in that title is actually published about HIV also. There is on every HIV virus a glycoprotein spike protein identical to SNP venom. And did you know nicotine is also a cure for HIV? So if you show the next article, the next one I sent you, I was like, oh, just show this.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

I just need to show you a highlight. The title of this paper about rabies is interactions between the rabies virus and nicotine receptors. A potential role in rabies virus induced behavior modifications. How do we reduce the disease process in people or animals with rabies? If you scroll down a little bit, you'll see the highlight section here and just read the third no.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Sorry. Fourth actual highlight from this research study. This is all about rabies. Let's read the first one. First bullet point.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Rabies virus' spike protein binds to nicotine receptors called NACHRS, just like COVID. Now read the fourth bullet point.

Seth Holehouse:

The nicotine and genetic deletion of a seven nicotine receptors receptors. Modulates pathological aggression.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Good. So nicotine, you're learning here. These are big science words. Nicotine to all people watching. It says nicotine and deletion of alpha seven nicotine receptors in an animal.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So they can make mice and rats and clone them to have no nicotine receptors in their body. That's what they're telling you. If you create an animal from genetic deletion of their nicotine receptors so they don't have any, and you put rabies inside of that animal, it won't get rabies. If you use nicotine in an animal, nicotine modulates pathological aggression, meaning advancing of rabies infection to death or disease. It's completely halted by only two things, nicotine and the animal not having any nicotine receptors from cloning and genetic engineering.

Seth Holehouse:

You know, it's it's crazy.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So I just want y'all to know. It's amazing.

Seth Holehouse:

The other day so I've got two puppies. Right? They're two Labrador puppies. They're probably 12, 13 weeks. The other day, I walked out, and I found them both smoking cigarettes.

Seth Holehouse:

And I I sat down. I said, look. You you're too young for cigarettes. Like, we're not gonna do this. And they explained to me how there it was anti rabies.

Seth Holehouse:

And so just kinda funny that my my dogs now I let them smoke cigarettes and cigars, and I think they're they're doing some chew, and anyway, how funny is it though that a veterinarian shaved a dog and put a nicotine patch on there and cured rabies? But I I want you to explain to me though what it means that our body inherently has nicotine receptors. Right? And how those receptors so let me give you my kind of my kind of simple hypothesis of what this means, and you can tell me if I'm correct or not, that a cell let's say a cell has these receptors that are, like, keys, right, keyholes. And so a certain substance have to has to have the matching keyhole to get into the cell.

Seth Holehouse:

And so if am I correct that if a cell has a nicotine receptor and the snake venom, you know, spike proteins bind to the nicotine receptor, that it's actually that receptor that allows the venom and the poison into the cell, which causes, you know, cell death or whatever, mutation, etcetera? And so if I, say, put a a nicotine patch on, does it then occupy that nicotine receptor, and therefore, that snake venom can't actually even get into the cell because the nicotine is blocking the receptor? Is that how it works?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

That's exactly how it works there, Seth. Whole house, PhD. Great job, buddy. You exactly described how it works. Okay.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So a few keys here. So every cell in the human body, all of them that God designed, and, yes, he designed you perfectly. For some reason, God put nicotine receptors on every cell of the human body. Now what's amazing about these receptors are so on your cell so you have, like, picture a ball has a is a cell, and then there's these little receptor sites, little docking stations on the outside of the cell. And they have shapes that actually are perfectly equipped to either receive a poison or a nutrient, and then it tells the cell to do something based on what binds to those receptors.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So the most common receptor in COVID that was affected by the venom of COVID, the spike proteins or nicotine are what are called alpha seven nicotine receptors for short. NACHR is what you will see. And that whole long word for everybody is nicotinic nicotine nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Acetylcholine is what is abbreviated a c h r is the receptor. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

What y'all don't know most of you probably is that for your brain to remember a phone number or to remember a name of a face when you run into somebody or to try to recall something, in your brain from one nerve to the next, you have to have acetylcholine transferring the information from one nerve cell to the next nerve cell for you to remember or do anything with your body, okay? All the nerves need acetylcholine as the neurotransmitter. It's the chemical that shares or relays information from one nerve cell to the next. The nicotine receptors actually control, for example, in this scenario with nerves in the brain, the nicotine receptors on the neurons, nerve cells actually allows acetylcholine to go from one cell to the next. Or if the receptor has something that turns off the nicotine receptor, you no longer can send acetylcholine from one nerve to the next.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So now you can't remember stuff you're gonna experience Joe Biden it is or Alzheimer's or early onset dementia or brain fog, this is where it comes from. So acetylcholine has to move in order for you to your brain to function normally, to control your body or to remember things or to speak even. So when something hits a nicotine receptor, it either has what's called an agonistic effect. It turns on that cell's function, or it has an antagonistic effect and shuts off that cell's function. The function is controlled by acetylcholine either moving or not moving between cells.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Follow me? Yes. So this nicotine receptor called alpha seven nicotine receptors that most of the venoms of COVID nineteen target and the rabies virus, as I just showed you in that study, they referenced alpha seven nicotine receptors. Snake venoms, most of them target alpha seven nicotine receptors. For a tobacco user, and not just a tobacco user, if you ate a lot of eggplants every day, tomatoes every week, potatoes every week, cauliflower, celery, all of these vegetables have nicotine.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

If you were eating those during COVID, you most likely didn't get COVID either just like the tobacco users. The more of those vegetables you eat with nicotine, the less likely you're gonna get sick because there's nicotine from tobacco use or those vegetables you're eating. Those actually are perf. Nicotine in those foods, 100% is shaped in the exact same shape of the receptors of nicotine on every cell in the human body. Nicotine is perfect.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

You know what else is really close to the shape of nicotine that also provided benefit in COVID nineteen? Ivermectin. Ivermectin is almost the same shape as nicotine, and for most people, it would bind to the same nicotine receptors. And as COVID was circulating in the blood with its spike proteins that would bind to those nicotine receptors, they couldn't bind to them because something, like you mentioned, was already occupying that space. So for people who have long COVID, what's amazing is the snake venom proteins called spike proteins of rabies, HIVs, COVID, all of these nicotine receptors targeting venom proteins.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

If you add nicotine to your body and you don't have any, but you already had been diagnosed with those things, your human body knows it will take on and grab on the cells. That receptor will grab nicotine instead of any of the venoms and release them because those nicotine receptors want an agonist to turn on the cell's function. As long as a venom protein's there, the whole cell's function's turned off. So for all of you at home going, how's this I don't understand this. Your tongue right now, god put in it nerves that attach your tongue to your brain.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So when you put something in your mouth, you have a taste profile. Salt, sweet, bitter. You have parts of your tongue that have different nerves that taste different things. Every one of those taste buds, those cells actually send the signal when you chew on something that's bitter. Acetylcholine's going from that neurotransmitter's going from your tongue taste buds, going from your tongue and transferring signals and signs to your brain to go, remember what bitter tastes like?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

This is a bitter food. Okay. Got it. Now I can taste it. When snake venom is put in your mouth, it would bind to the nicotine receptors on the taste bud nerves.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And when it hits the receptor, it shuts off. It switches off the cells.

Seth Holehouse:

Lost a sense of taste if they got COVID.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Exactly right. And then when people chewed nicotine gum, it released the snake venom because it prefers the nicotine from plants or a synthetically very similar nicotine, like a nicotine gum, nicotine patches, you name it. It will grab that molecule and release the venom, and that nicotine is an agonist that turns the cell back on. Now acetylcholine can transfer along the nerves, and you have your sense of taste restored. That's how this all works.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Very good. I'm very proud of you.

Seth Holehouse:

So this little graph I found that I pulled up was, kinda showing, let's see what they call this. They call this receptor by, you know, biochemistry. So is this kind of a very simplistic way of looking at, like, oh, there's this receptor that is for triangles, and only a triangle can fit in there. And this is, you know, like, my my my, you know, one month your 10 old you're you're you start these little games. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

Okay. Put the the round one into the round hole, the square one into the square hole, etcetera. So that's kind of what this is. Right? We're showing that, okay, the circle can fit into the circular shaped receptor, the triangle.

Seth Holehouse:

And so basically, what you're saying is that let's imagine that the triangle is say that the receptor on the left is the nicotine receptor in on the cell, and that it will only accept the triangle because triangle is nicotine. But the snake venom is also a triangle. And so if your body if you're not giving your body the nicotine, then that receptor's open. The snake venom receptor or the snake venom, which is a triangle, will fill that receptor up, and it'll screw things up. But let's just say that you have some nicotine, say you have a patch on or whatever, your body then spits out the snake venom receptor snake snake venom triangle and says, no.

Seth Holehouse:

I want the nicotine one because that's what my body wants naturally. It fits. It's even better. Exactly. And so it undoes all these spike proteins that are attaching to your cells.

Seth Holehouse:

It basically kicks them out. You probably pee them out or whatever you would however they they get, released from your body.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Exactly right.

Seth Holehouse:

Right? And then the the they replace it with the healthy nicotine triangle. Right? Is that like, we're kind like a kindergarten, you know,

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

advanced kindergarten studies here. I love it. So keep this the diagram up. So picture that the triangle upside down and that purple receptor, just imagine that is, let's say, snake venom is there, but it's not identical to the other triangles that are in the blood as you see above the diagram. Okay?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So let's say one of those is the perfect shape of that triangle. Your body's gonna release the snake venom, grab one of those other floating nicotine triangles and stick it in there. And now the snake venom gets released. So now picture the other triangles above that cell membrane wall, which is what they're showing right there. Picture that's Donald Trump's wall, and on top of it are all the illegal immigrants trying to jump over the wall.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Those little red circles and I'm sorry. Circles and triangles, those are the venoms now released from the nicotine receptor just floating around in your blood now. There are four things that are published.

Seth Holehouse:

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Seth Holehouse:

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Seth Holehouse:

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Seth Holehouse:

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Dr. Bryan Ardis:

To destroy the shape of those snake venom proteins that are now floating around in the blood that also look like triangles. Because now that they're in their blood, your body has to poop them out or pee them out, but they're circulating in your blood and floating around. But your pancreas also has nicotine receptors. And what if it gets inside your pancreas, hits one of those nicotine receptors? It's gonna shut off the cells of the pancreas' function.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And what is its function? Every cell is designed to produce insulin to break down blood sugar. If you get enough of those triangles that went from whatever cell they were on before, nicotine released them and now they end up in your pancreas, you're gonna start developing prediabetes symptoms and elevated blood sugar because your insulin cells have Nick snake venom on them, and it hasn't released them yet to turn on those cells. Okay. There's four things I'm gonna state right now are published to change the shape of the venom proteins or the spike proteins if you feel better hearing it that way.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Change their shape so they can't bind to those same receptors or anything that looks like them, the nicotine receptors. Those four things are vitamin c, glutathione, I'm not joking, n acetylcysteine. And the only thing that totally destroys its shape so it is no longer recognizable by any of your cells is called EDTA. So ethylene diametric acid. It's a long word, EDTA.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Each of those, just so you know, I'd the only thing I don't actually promote or give away or sell to people is the glutathione because your liver makes it. So I just educate people on how to make more of it if you wanna learn how to do that. But the N acetylcysteine is a supplement. Vitamin C is acquired by any company out there, including the Doctor. Artis Show.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Use your set discount code if you want to. But N acetylcysteine, the vitamin C and the EDTA, I have those at my site because they are published to change the shape. So as we're using nicotine or agents to release the venoms, just so you know, nicotine and ivermectin release the venoms. Nicotine is more potent. Ivermectin is not as potent.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It's not the perfect shape. It's pretty close, but it ain't identical. Nicotine is the most potent. The second most potent releaser from the receptor site is actually a plant called labellia. And inside of labellia, this plant, this flowering plant is something called lobulin that is almost identical to nicotine shape.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So that's why that is the first ingredient in my foreign protein cleanse product.

Seth Holehouse:

Okay.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So that's why I don't use a nicotine product. There's tons of companies that do that. I chose a plant source that I could get from around the world that had a almost perfectly mimicking action and shape of nicotine called libellia. Okay. So let me out of having to work with the FDA about nicotine stuff.

Seth Holehouse:

Oh, there you go. Okay. So the nicotine, among other things, basically, it it say you you're you're going on an airplane. You're like, hey. This is my seat.

Seth Holehouse:

Here's a ticket. Get out. Right? The so you you you throw them out of your seat. Now that now that kind of bad poison guy is like, okay.

Seth Holehouse:

I'm gonna go find another seat that's open that can cause trouble there. So what the foreign protein cleanse, which is just a compilation of the ingredients that you've told. So people could you know, people don't have to get this through you, but what you've done is you've formulated this foreign protein cleanse so that once the nicotine releases the it kinda kicks those spike proteins out of the cell receptors, they're floating through your bloodstream. Now if you have enough nicotine or circumstances, maybe eventually they get pooped out or peed out or whatever, but, ideally, what you're doing is as soon as they get kicked out of there, you're actually destroying them. So that way, they they don't have a chance of re you kind of reconnecting the cells elsewhere in your body such as your pancreas.

Seth Holehouse:

Right? So the foreign protein cleanse, once they're floating around in your blood, it goes in and it basically just zaps them. It it turns these these triangles into, you know, a star, for instance. And no cells have a star receptor, so now they're useless and your body they'll never actually interact with your body in a negative way. Is that a correct understanding?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It's exactly right. The goal is to change its shape so it can't hurt any more organ cells in your body to create a myriad of symptoms or diseases. Any of those venom proteins or spike proteins, if they got into your pancreas, I mentioned already, you'll have blood sugar handling issues forever until you get them out of the pancreas.

Seth Holehouse:

I see.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

If it got into your prostate if you got if it got into your prostate, you'll start having prostate enlargement. Your PSA level will go up. They'll even think you have cancer. If it gets in an ovaries of a female, they're gonna be diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome. Not a joke.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And the truth is there's nicotine receptors in there too. If somebody actually has now from the spike proteins, let's say it made it into their bone marrow, Seth, do you know what happens if those proteins make it into the bone marrow? You now can't produce red blood cells. I'm not joking. Your body can't produce white blood cells, which are your immune system's defenses against bacteria, viruses, fungus, and parasites, and all toxins.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So you actually get immune suppression depending on where those venom proteins end up. So our goal is to provide you solutions to not only release the venoms to restore your normal function of your body, taste and smell restored. We wanna make sure those venom proteins exit the body through your sweat, through your coughing, through your peeing, and through your pooping. So the goal is to just make sure you're supporting these other ways to destroy those proteins, change their shape so they can't bind any other cells in your body. I see.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Great. Great. Great presentation, Seth.

Seth Holehouse:

Okay. So, again, the doctorartistshow.com. We have a coupon set up. Seth is the promo code. Give them a you get they'll get a discount on your on this product, and we take this.

Seth Holehouse:

It tastes pretty bad. Right? I'm sure you're aware of it. It's it's a weird kinda taste.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It's very bitter.

Seth Holehouse:

Mouth, and it's bitter, but, you know, it's it's, it's good. Right? So now now I understand

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Well, I'll just I'll just tell you. We don't even tell people to swallow it directly. We tell them to put it in empty vegetable capsules. So you don't have to take it. One dropper full fits in a double o size empty capsule.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Close it. You swallow it. So we educate people.

Seth Holehouse:

My wife and I were like, oh, this you know, like, get through it. Okay. That makes sense. And my daughter tried it, and she was just like she she you know, my four year old, she was just like, what do you what do you give me?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Kids are gonna hate it.

Seth Holehouse:

I see. It. So Put

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

it in a capsule. Totally don't have to worry about the taste.

Seth Holehouse:

I see. I see. This is this is wild. Right? This is I I I love this stuff.

Seth Holehouse:

And so okay. So that then gets rid of it. Now actually, I will pull up because I did find so I I I'm I've got a a nicotine patch on right now. Right? And and it's, you know, it's a

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Me too.

Seth Holehouse:

Three and a half milligram, I think, as per your suggestion. So I found a website. I'll pull it up. It's actually kinda cool. I I talked to the owner today.

Seth Holehouse:

I told him, I said, hey. I'm gonna mention your website on my interview with doctor Brian Artis. Can you handle a mass amount of orders? Because I don't wanna break your website because I've done it before for certain people. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

Especially your shows. So on the the site, The Secrets of Eden, talked to the owner. Great guy. They actually have a an organic nicotine. So it's just just called miracle patches that heal, and my wife found this.

Seth Holehouse:

Credit to her. And because at first, got one off Amazon, and it was okay. But, anyways, right here, it's, you know, four they're okay. They're four milligram nicotine patches, and they are organic nicotine patches other than the adhesive. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

Because they have to have the adhesive, which is okay. It is what it is. And funny enough, they've got one of your videos, which maybe even one of our interviews that's on their on their website site.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

People repost my clips. That's awesome.

Seth Holehouse:

I know. I love it. And so and it's so anyway, so we do have there's a promo code for this site, Seth. I think they get 20% off on here as a way to get the actual patches. So these are the ones that that I'm that I use that I got, and I have also some little lozenges that, you know, like, I'll break them up, so a little one milligram.

Seth Holehouse:

So if I'm gonna do an interview or something like that, I'll I'll, you know, kinda toss one in. It's just a little bit of extra brain function, but it's so, again, I'll put all these links in the description because I wanna make sure that people have your website, promo code, all this because we wanna save people money. But one question I have for you is the effect on mental clarity because that's something that I've noticed that I'm a I'm a heavy coffee drinker, you know, and and I I know that caffeine taxes your adrenal system. There's some things that I don't like about it, but to me, it was just the one thing that, you know, like, if I'm up at four in the morning because my, you know, little 10 old, she's not sleeping that night, and so Kate comes in. She's like, here.

Seth Holehouse:

She's yours now. I'm going back to bed. Like, okay. You know, I I need different ways of kinda pick me up. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

And so I'm not gonna be doing, you know, doing hard drugs to, like, you know, be doing these shows. And so a lot of times, I'm drinking drinking coffee, but I don't like drinking that much caffeine. It it gets me all jittery, but I tried one of those nicotine patches, which I think is a four milligram nicotine patch, and it was interesting because it was a very different experience of just it was like so I've in the past, I've drank Yerba Mate before, which is a pretty powerful potent thing. You know, I used to have a gourd with a a little kind of special straw for drinking it. It's really potent, and it it I think it has what's called mottine.

Seth Holehouse:

It's not not actually caffeine, but the nicotine was so similar to that that it was almost like a a 20% boost in energy and mental clarity throughout the whole day with no crash and no jitters. Like, so how is it that obviously, we have nicotine as this kind of the healing properties from the perspective, which we've we've now broken down how that works. But I've also noticed that nicotine is is used in a lot of circles as what you call a nootropic. Right? As something that enhances your mental and cognitive function.

Seth Holehouse:

So and I've absolutely experienced the the benefits of that, where even a little one milligram lozenge or a four milligram patch earlier in the day, it makes my mind just that brain fog is not there. I'm more productive. You know, Kate calls it Seth three point o. Right? She's like, oh, you're a Seth three point o today.

Seth Holehouse:

I'm just like, I'm cleaning the house and doing to get stuff done. So how is it that nicotine also plays this role of improving cognitive function? Is it had to do with the Acetylcholine. Yes. Exactly right.

Seth Holehouse:

So walk us through how nicotine affects brain function and brain fog.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Yeah. You could actually type in right now in any online search engine or any published medical journals website. You can type in nicotine cognitive improvements, and you will just see tons of articles. Nicotine is a known neurological stimulant just like caffeine is. Ironically, both are found in plants, and god gave us plants and then developed in our body caffeine receptors and nicotine receptors from these plants.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So nicotine is called a nootropic, n o o t r o p I c. This is a very new term in the last ten years of any substance from nature that can increase brain function, focus, mental acuity, vision acuity, improvement of vision. There's all kinds of things that nicotine has a benefit for. And the reason why it is so potent is you have billions of brain cells, and all of them have nicotine receptors. What you just learned from our discussion about nicotine receptors and how venoms and nicotine impacts those nerves and cells in your human body, when it comes to the brain's function, when you introduce more nicotine to the brain through the bloodstream, even through a patch or through a gum or a socket, when you put nicotine in the body, it's going to reach the brain through the blood brain barrier.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And anywhere there's not cells firing to actually increase information, remember, recall, focus. That nicotine's gonna bind to those nicotine receptors and increase how much acetylcholine is now flying between nerves. It increases the speed at which that chemical called a neurotransmitter, how fast they relay information. And absolutely every afternoon, Seth, Nicotine, I have found, is not addictive whatsoever as Harvard is published because very often, I will forget to even think about putting a nicotine patch on, but I'll want some caffeine in the morning if I'm not up by a certain hour mentally. And then I'll go, oh, wait.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

I forgot to put a nicotine patch on. Then I'll go into the the bathroom, take my three and a half milligram nicotine patch, put it on. And within thirty minutes, I can already tell my vision's improving, my memory and focus is improving. Every afternoon, I if I don't wear it, I can tell a difference in the length of time at which my focus and attention is really good. And the moment I put on a patch within thirty minutes, you'll see the difference.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It's even faster with things orally because the blood vessels in your mouth are directly located next to your brain and very quickly get that supplement or that nutrient to your brain. So that's exactly how nicotine works to improve not only cognitive function, but let's talk about neurological diseases. Did you know nicotine is a published antidote to improve all schizophrenia symptoms, which is a mental problem? Did you know that nicotine's also proven to improve, reverse, or cure Parkinson's symptoms, which is a central nervous system problem. Did you know nicotine's published to be a cure and improver of all symptoms of Alzheimer's?

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Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And did you know that nicotine is a published cure for MS? They all work the same way, whether it's a region of the brain creating MS symptoms or Alzheimer's, which is more memory issues or Parkinson's, which is more gate control of your body. It doesn't matter. All those nerves need nicotine, so you're either gonna eat it. I'm not kidding.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Look up medical news today right now. Medicalnewstoday.com. They have an article right now titled can dietary nicotine reverse or prevent Parkinson's? Now what do they mean by dietary nicotine? And they do talk about it.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Dietary nicotine is eating vegetables that have high amounts of nicotine. The highest are eggplant, tomatoes, and white potatoes. So you'll see right there. Can dietary nicotine help fight Parkinson's disease? And you'll read the subtitle.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

A number of studies suggest that dietary nicotine might have the ability to slow the progress of Parkinson's disease. Not only that, they've actually proven it can reverse Parkinson's. So when you're talking about improving your brain's function just for focus, mister Seth three point o, even a more incredible husband and father in that house to Kate, just so know if nicotine could do that for him, but you've got people who are struggling with diagnosable struggles that are actually caused by a central nervous system deficiency. Your brain's not controlling the rest of the body the way it should. Nicotine is a published improver of all things neurologic.

Seth Holehouse:

Incredible. Well, actually, here's the other article I found, molecular insights into the benefits of nicotine on memory and cognition. And then here

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Yeah. Read that highlighted sentence. Yep.

Seth Holehouse:

This is this is on nih.gov. So I'm not on, like, you know, this isn't alexjones.com or, you know This is

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

the National Institutes of Health. Right there. Anthony Fauci. Trust me. Blah blah.

Seth Holehouse:

Yep. So it says that, here in AD I'm not sure what that means in AD.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Alzheimer's disease is AD.

Seth Holehouse:

Okay. In Alzheimer's disease, nicotine improves cognitive impairment by enhancing protein kinase b, also referred to as AKT, activity in stimulating phosphonosatide, three kinase AKT signaling, which regulates learning and memory processes. So nicotine may also activate thyroid receptor signaling pathways to improve memory impairment caused by hypothyroidism. In healthy individuals, nicotine improves memory impairment caused by sleep deprivation by enhancing the phosphorylation

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Phorylation.

Seth Holehouse:

Okay. There you go. Of something cal you know, calmodulin dependent protein kinase two.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

That's all the scientific reasons it works for improving memory in the sleep deprived young people.

Seth Holehouse:

Well, that's what I realized. It was actually the first day that we got these patches. I tried it. Oh. And I think I got, like, four hours of sleep that night because I was up late working, and then Grace just was partying all night.

Seth Holehouse:

And so Kate came in at 4AM. So I think I got four hours of sleep, and I had a nicotine patch on, and I realized I got to in the day, I was like, I wasn't even tired today. Like, typically, if I get four hours, like, I'm you know, but by afternoon, I'm like, I'm dragging. It's a tough day, but I was just just just popping around like a like a not a madman, but a like a good man.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

That's incredible, Seth. Seth, you gotta put up that that, slide one more time, that summary from that research study. Yes. You gotta stay there. There's a sentence that starts with furthermore, about three sentences down from your highlighted statement.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Everybody pay attention to this sentence. This is actually in a presentation I did called the other n word and all of the things nicotine is published to be a cure or antidote for. Now this is very important. Before Seth reads this, there might be some words in there that might be real scientific, but I need everybody to focus who's listening right now. Everybody you've ever heard of or known who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's, Parkinson's or MS have all been told you inherited this genetic autoimmune disorder, that you inherited this and it's in your genes.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

You could not you couldn't even stop this from happening if you wanted to. This next statement destroys that entire lie you've been told medically. K.

Seth Holehouse:

Go ahead. So furthermore, nicotine may improve memory function through its effect on chromatin modification via the inhibition of histone diaclases, which causes transcriptional changes in memory related genes. So translate that first.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Memory memory related genes. Everybody who's ever had early onset dementia, your neurologist looked at you and goes, do you ever have any loved ones who had memory issues or early onset dementia or Alzheimer's? Well, yes. I had an aunt Susie who did. You most likely inherited these genes.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

There's nothing to do about it. This statement, it has some scientific terms in there, but what you have to know is this statement states, furthermore, nicotine may improve memory function through its ability to overlook your inherited memory related genes. So even if you have genetic predisposition to develop Alzheimer's or dementia, if you use nicotine, nicotine seems to override all of those memory related genes you would have inherited. So anybody who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia and told you inherited it, when they give genetically acquired mammals who have these genes from memory deficits, When they give them nicotine, it overrides all their genetic predispositions, and their memory returns. That's what's amazing.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

So when they tell you there's nothing you can do about it, oh, yes. There is. You didn't just inherit something. No. No.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

You have the ability to turn on your memory cells and turn them off. And if you use nicotine, regardless, it will turn on and retain your memory. That's what it states even if you've inherited genes that will make you forget who your loved ones are. So remember the notebook, this sappy love story about the the most amazing beautiful side of Alzheimer's? No.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Alzheimer's sucks for everybody who's ever had it and been married to someone with it, but they glorify that like they like to glorify autism and TV in Hollywood now with the good doctor on ABC. Oh, okay. Now an autistic adult has miraculous superhuman mental capacities. That's the gift of autism to diagnose and cure all medical diseases. Okay.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

They like to glorify these issues. Alzheimer's is debilitating, and everyone's been told it is genetic. You inherit it, and there's nothing you do about it. When the truth is we know plant nutrients like nicotine, even when you're told you've inherited those genes and they've done DNA testing on you, nicotine doesn't care. It's just gonna turn on those cells anyway, and you're gonna continue to see improvements in your memory, your recall, your speech.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

If you have any of those issues, even your gait issues with Parkinson's and MS, you'll see improvements in all of it if you use nicotine.

Seth Holehouse:

Wow. I wanna throw I know that you've got a you've got a kind of a hard stop for our interview, but I wanna, throw out one quick thing. You mentioned the addiction factor. I can tell you from personal experience, there's been a bunch of days where I'll get to the afternoon. I'm like, oh, I I I didn't put a patch on.

Seth Holehouse:

It's like, oh, okay. It's okay. Who cares? I'll I'll wear one tomorrow. I I've never had the experience of thinking I wake up, and by noon, I'm like, I I need my nicotine.

Seth Holehouse:

I've never experienced that. It's like, well, if I have it, great. You know, I I feel pretty good. But if I don't, maybe I'm little more tired. I'm like, oh, I'm little bit slow today.

Seth Holehouse:

Like, oh, yeah. I forgot that nicotine patch, but I've I've personally never experienced this strong addictive nature of it.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Nope. And in fact, anybody that used nicotine patches for six days to cure themselves of the long COVID symptoms, which it worked a hundred percent of the time for in six days, the authors of those studies reported anybody concerned reading this research study about addiction to nicotine. We've never seen anybody develop dependence on nicotine, not in any of these people. So nicotine was published by Harvard in 02/2016. Harvard published that nicotine and their review of 7,000,000 pages of FDA documents and tobacco giants research and development papers since the nineteen seventies.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

They published their findings in 02/2016 that it's not nicotine that makes tobacco products addictive as we've been told. There's man made chemicals the FDA allows to be added since 1970 to make all tobacco products super addictive. And those chemicals, they name the chemicals off of an FDA document. The FDA has allowed right now every Red Man chewed dip snuff you're gonna put in your mouth, every Marlboro cigarette has 16 man made addictive chemicals called pyrazines added to every tobacco leaf in any commercial tobacco product. And in that paper, they said, we recommend the FDA starts regulating pyrazines instead of nicotine.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Because nicotine is not the addictive substance. It's these chemicals, and the FDA has known it since 1970. Yet they continue to publish, you have to put a warning label on all tobacco products that says it contains nicotine and addictive substance. Remember, they want you to not trust nicotine. What does nicotine do?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

You just learned in this presentation. It can actually get in the way of all drugs being prescribed for Parkinson's. Think about all the L DOPA drugs, codopa drugs being prescribed to all these Parkinson's patients throughout the world. Well, if you knew nicotine was a cure for that and you go get it at CVS or Walgreens for 7 to $10, Yes. This is a huge threat to the big pharma.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Now what about, your viral pandemics that they're declaring? They're gonna tell you a vaccine's the cure. Oh, yeah. Do you wanna know why they're attacking nicotine? Because certain viruses like HIV, rabies, and COVID have all been proven to be cured with nicotine, and those aren't the only one.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Every virus I've ever researched, they know it targets alpha seven nicotine receptors, which means, Seth, nicotine would be a cure for those also. So when you look at the next 10 pandemics, they're all viruses. Marburg, Ebola, monkeypox, bird flu, you name it all of them. Rabies, all of these are viruses. Viruses have a long standing definition.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

They are poisons, especially derived from snakes' venoms. And nicotine and tobacco have been a long standing known medicine for all snake bite victims, animals, humans, you name it. The native Americans would just take tobacco leaves, steep them, and wrap them around their cattle or their people in their village who had received a snake bite, and they use that as the cure. That's because nicotine is the cure to all of these weaponized terrible bioweapons that they find from nature than synthetically manufacture all around the world. Crazy.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Biological weapons labs. They use venoms all around the world in the drug vaccines, cosmetics, and insecticide industries. It's it's insane. Now to now to wrap this up, when you're talking about cognitive improvement in everybody, why would everybody who took a dose of nicotine from a nicotine agent, why do they experience such improved mental clarity? Why would most Americans and humans see this every time they use them?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

I would like to explain it to you. Every single one of us in America included and all around the world, but particularly in America, we know that for the last thirty years, they have been taking measurements of an insecticide used around all farms in America in producing our food. And there is an herbicide and insecticide called glyphosate that has got a lot of attention from Monsanto. It has been published by doctor Stephanie Sinif at MIT that 90% of all farms in America for the last twenty years have toxic levels of this chemical in the soil of all of our farms where all of our vegetables and fruits and nuts are grown in America. I need to explain this to you, why would nicotine help everybody using it see cognitive improvement in America?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

There's a reason. All of us have been to fast food restaurants, regular restaurants. We've been, in showers and drinking water in hotels and restaurants for years. We've all been exposed to poisonous runoffs and in our food pesticides like glyphosate. Why is this important?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Because all of us have glyphosate in our bodies. Did you know glyphosate since 02/2002, it has been published, has the exact same behavior and actions on every cell of the human body that is identical to snake venom proteins actions. Wow. So if all of us have been exposed to a synthetic form of venom or a poison that mimics all snake venom actions, which it does, identical identical to snake venom actions. When we consume them in small amounts as they accumulate in every meal we have and everything we drink and eat and consume, as those venomous like proteins called glyphosate get into your brain and you take any nicotine now, and we've all been laced with these poisons.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Nicotine releases glyphosate just like it does snake venom. So this is one way in which everybody in America would benefit from nicotine, either eating it in your plants. For example, if y'all like green tomatoes, green tomatoes have 10 times the amount of nicotine as red tomatoes. Go eat the plants just like the medical news today article or use nicotine or get organic tobacco leaf, start steeping into teas, do foot soaks, drink it. I don't care.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Anyway, you can get the nicotine into your body. Your body is designed to use nicotine just like it's designed to use caffeine. And if you're wondering about stimulants from plants, in the beginning of this interview, Seth Allhouse talked about him loving coffee. Do you know that the industrial revolution in The United States Of America have you ever seen the documentation and where they place the blame for the advancement so quick of the industrialized revolution that started in The United States. Do you know what it was blamed on?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

The industrial revolution in America had never been seen in any other country before. This vast expansion of of society and culture building technology, all that stuff. It actually was birthed in the first twenty years where Americans were introduced to a higher caffeinated drink from the British tea we used to drink when they started consuming South American coffee, which had higher amounts of caffeine. And there's documentaries literally where they blame the industrial revolution would have never happened if Americans were never introduced to coffee, which stimulates the brain's overall function, increases your strength, integrity, and stamina. So the industrial revolution is credited to coffee.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Well, your health could be credited to nicotine and other plants. Just so you know, it's not a negative. They provide benefit and strength to the human body. Anyway, just wanted to share that with you.

Seth Holehouse:

Final question as we wrap up. Does your foreign protein cleanse clean out glyphosate?

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Yes. In fact, each of the ingredients in there are designed to protect yourselves from the three actions of glyphosate on every cell of the human body and all three actions of glyphosate on the cells in the human body.

Seth Holehouse:

So for everyone that's eating organic and everything, we still have this stuff in this. I grew up in I grew up, you know, in in a little town called Plain City surrounded by farm fields, of course, are being sprayed. So the combination what I'm get gathering from this is a combination of nicotine and foreign protein cleanse. It will basically is what can undo the toxic load that's in a lot of our bodies from chemtrails, pesticides, you know, toxins in our water, etcetera, spike you know, shedding, which has now been proven. Right?

Seth Holehouse:

You know, the the studies are out now that shedding does exist for all these conspiracy theories out there, vaccine shedding, spike protein shedding. So the combination of nicotine and foreign protein cleanse wipes out all that stuff.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Amen. That's exactly why we developed them.

Seth Holehouse:

There we go. I'll pull that up as as we're closing out here. We'll get your website back up there again. Foreign Protein Cleanse. I'll put the links in the description, doctorOtisShow.com, the doctorOtisShow.com, foreign protein cleanse.

Seth Holehouse:

We have a promo code Seth to get that. And then also, as I mentioned before, secretsofEden.com. I'll put the link to this directly in there. Miracle patches here. I know I think they get a 20% discount on this or something like that.

Seth Holehouse:

Again, promo code Seth to save the man in America audience even more money. Doctor Brian Artis, it's always so much fun talking to you, especially when I've had a little bit of nicotine. It makes it even more entertaining to have these conversations with you.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Me too. Our interviews are so much better when I have remembered to put on my three and a half milligram, my nicotine patch, but I do it every day. And just, you know, don't worry even about long term issues. You don't have to worry about those. I have been wearing the same nicotine patch size every day for two two and a half years now.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

My wife's been chewing multiple four pieces of two milligram nicotine gum for two and a half years now. No symptoms. No addictions. If we leave town, the one thing we will forget is like, oh, crap. We're in Missouri.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

We forgot our nicotine patches back home. Oh, man. We gotta go to the grocery store and go get some or go to the go to the CVS or Walgreens. It's just because it's not on the top of mind because it isn't. I guarantee you, Seth.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

You wake up and still think about coffee every day. Can't wait for my coffee. Caffeine does have that more addictive quality, and we do think about it. I found myself thinking about caffeine in the past and sugar when it wasn't in front of me, but I never ever ever ever feel compelled or reminded to do nicotine unless I cognitively think about it. Wait.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

Why am I not so clear thinking right now? Why is it taking me longer to produce this PowerPoint than before? Oh, I think I forgot my nicotine. Oh, I did forget my nicotine patch. Let me go put it on.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

And within thirty minutes, all things better.

Seth Holehouse:

There we go. I can't wait till next time. Let's do it again soon. Thank you for everything you're doing. I encourage folks to check out your website, check out your show, everything doctor Brian Artis.

Seth Holehouse:

Thank you so much for everything you're doing. I I feel so honored to call you a friend, to have met you in person many times, and to have you as a guest on the show. It's it's it's always a pleasure.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

It is a pleasure always to spend time with you in person or digitally. I love man in America, and you should too. God bless you all, and I hope you all have a great holiday season. This is being recorded in December of twenty twenty four. May God bless you and your family during this holiday season.

Dr. Bryan Ardis:

God bless you. We love you.

Seth Holehouse:

Thank you. Look. I'm gonna be realistic about my diet in December. It's gotta be the worst month of the year in terms of eating right. I'm inevitably gonna find myself stuffing treats, meats, and dishes into my mouth, leaving very little room for the right stuff, but I will take balance of nature every single day.

Seth Holehouse:

Balance of nature is made from whole fruit and veggie ingredients, and I will not skip taking those daily supplements. It's the one thing that I will get right because feeling good is important to me, especially in December. So, folks, join me in pushing back against the dreaded December diet crash. Get balance of nature today. Use my discount code Seth, that's s e t h, and sign up as a new customer to get 50% off plus free shipping and their money back guarantee.

Seth Holehouse:

So folks, this is an awesome December discount, but you must use my promo code Seth. So call them at 802468751 and use discount code Seth, or order online at balanceofnature.com. Use discount code Seth to get 50% off plus free shipping.