Janette Fennell

Janette Fennell

Her name was Janette Fennell. And she was 41 years old when it happened.

Janette had spent her career as a marketing and sales executive in San Francisco – sharp, driven, the kind of person who understood how systems worked and how to move people. In 1995, she had taken a break from all of that to raise her firstborn son, Alex. He was 9 months old.

He had been wearing a pumpkin outfit that night because it was Halloween.

29 October 1995. San Francisco. Just before midnight.

Janette and her husband pull into the garage of their home after dinner at a friend’s house. Alex is asleep in the backseat. The night is ordinary in every way.

Then 2 men in Halloween masks come out of the dark, and they are holding guns.

In the space of seconds, the Fennells are forced out of the car and into the trunk. She hears the lid close. She hears the engine start. She does not know where her son is.

The car backs out of the garage and drives into the night.

In the trunk, in complete darkness, Janette Fennell does something remarkable. She does not panic — or rather, she panics and keeps moving anyway. She and her husband run their hands along every surface of the trunk, searching for anything that could help them. At some point, her fingers find a gap in the interior lining. Behind it, a thin cable. A faint line of light from somewhere in the car’s mechanics.

She pulls it.

Nothing.

She keeps feeling. She keeps looking for the light.

They are driven through the streets of San Francisco and out into the darkness beyond. At some point the car stops. The men open the trunk. They assault the Fennells, take what they want, and leave them there – in the trunk of their own car, at a remote location, with no idea whether their infant son is alive.

Eventually, somehow, the Fennells claw their way out. They make their way back. Alex had been removed from the backseat by the men and placed in the foyer of their home, unharmed, before the car drove away.

They were all alive.

And Janette Fennell, who had just spent hours in a locked car trunk in the dark, now knew something that most people in America did not, there is no way out.

The problem, as Janette sees it, is an engineering problem.

Every car trunk built in America is constructed from the outside in – a mechanism designed entirely to keep the lid closed. There is a latch, operated by a key or a button. There is no corresponding mechanism on the inside. Nothing to pull, nothing to push. If you are in the trunk, you are in the trunk, and the only way you are getting out is if someone opens it from outside.

This is not controversial. This is simply how cars are built. It has never occurred to the automotive industry that it needed to be otherwise.

Janette goes to the car manufacturers and explains the problem. They listen politely. They tell her that trunk entrapment is vanishingly rare, that the data doesn’t support a mandate for redesign, that the cost would be significant for a risk that is statistically minimal.

She goes back.

She starts gathering data.

She founds an organisation called TRUNC – the Trunk Releases Urgently Needed Coalition — and begins building the evidence base that the automakers say doesn’t exist. She combs through death records, police reports, emergency service calls. She tracks cases of adults locked in trunks by criminals. She tracks the cases no one wants to talk about: children.

Because here is what Janette has come to understand. It is not only kidnapping victims who end up trapped in trunks. Every summer in America, children – curious, playful, unsupervised for a moment – climb into car boots and pull the lid shut behind them. On a cool day, a child locked in a trunk might be uncomfortable and frightened. On a hot day, in the middle of summer, a car trunk becomes an oven in minutes. Core body temperature rises. Organs begin to fail.

The children who die this way die slowly, in the dark, alone.

Janette takes her data to Congress.

The late 1990s. Washington, D.C.

She finds an ally in Representative Bart Stupak of Michigan, who is persuaded by the evidence and sponsors a bill to require the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to study the problem formally. NHTSA forms an expert panel. Janette is on it.

Then, in the summer of 1998, everything changes.

A 3-week heatwave settles over the United States. In the space of those 3 weeks, 11 children die locked in car trunks. It is an avalanche of preventable deaths, concentrated into less than a month, and it is impossible to look away from.

The automotive industry still resists. They argue that criminals could simply disable an internal release mechanism. They argue that the data doesn’t support the cost. They argue, and Janette keeps showing up, and the children keep dying, and she keeps showing up again.

She testifies before committees. She meets with executives. She brings the families of children who did not survive. She is precise, factual, relentless – the way a person is relentless when they have been inside the thing they are asking people to take seriously.

1 September 2001.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration issues its mandate. Every new passenger car manufactured with a trunk must be equipped with an internal release mechanism – operable from inside the trunk – as standard equipment.

The mechanism must glow in the dark. So that a child in the dark, in the heat, with no understanding of what is happening to them, can find it.

Every car built in America from model year 2002 onward has a small luminescent handle inside the trunk. It is usually yellow or green. Most people have never noticed it. Many people don’t know it exists.

Janette Fennell knows it exists. She put it there.

After the trunk mandate, she went on to found Kids and Car Safety – a national organisation dedicated to preventing every kind of harm to children in and around vehicles. She has spent the decades since tracking heatstroke deaths, backover incidents, power window entrapments. She has never stopped showing up.

In her 2003 Senate testimony, she said simply- “We were able to use this traumatic experience to help guide the Federal Regulatory process to ensure that no one else had to end up in the trunk of a vehicle without a way to escape.”

The next time you open your car boot and see the small glowing handle in the corner, you are looking at 1 woman’s answer to the worst night of her life.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded what it looks like to turn something terrible into something that protects the people who come after you.

Common Mullein

Common Mullein

Across the Appalachian highlands, the Cherokee, Iroquois, and Mohawk nations all independently identified the same striking plant for the treatment of suffocating cough and asthmatic attack. Verbascum thapsus — common mullein — grows wild from Pennsylvania to Georgia, sending up tall stalks crowned with bright yellow flower spikes and broad fuzzy gray-green leaves so soft early colonists called them “cowboy toilet paper.” Beneath the humble appearance is one of the most documented natural bronchodilators ever identified.

Native American healers dried the leaves and burned them in clay pipes for sufferers of asthma, bronchitis, and pneumonia — instructing them to inhale the smoke deeply. Within minutes, even the most severe wheezing patients reported a sudden opening of the airway. Spanish and English colonists adopted the practice across the eastern colonies. By the 1800s, mullein was the standard pulmonary medicine of rural America.

Then in the 1940s, American pharmaceutical companies introduced inhaled albuterol — a beta-2 adrenergic agonist that forces bronchial smooth muscle to relax through catecholamine signaling. Albuterol works fast and effectively, but at a measurable cost: rapid heart rate, hand tremor, nervousness, downregulation of beta receptors over time (so it works less well the more it is used), and a documented increase in asthma-related deaths in long-term heavy users.

Mullein operates through a completely different mechanism. The leaves contain two active compound families. Verbascoside (a polyphenol) acts directly on bronchial smooth muscle, reducing acetylcholine-mediated constriction without touching the adrenergic system. Saponins emulsify and thin mucus, allowing trapped phlegm to be cleared from deep airways. Mucilage soothes irritated tissue at the surface.

The result is bronchial relaxation without heart stimulation, mucus clearance without dependency, and tissue repair without downregulation. Patients can use mullein chronically — for years — without losing efficacy. They cannot say the same for albuterol.

In 2012, a study in Phytotherapy Research measured significant bronchodilator effects in mullein extract using standardized pulmonary function tests. Subsequent investigations have catalogued additional antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza A — a profile no pharmaceutical bronchodilator possesses.

The American pharmaceutical asthma industry is worth $26 billion. Mullein grows wild along every American highway. Your pulmonologist will not mention it. Native healers wrote no patents.

Open the bronchial tree:
– Tincture or Tea, Not Capsule: Mullein’s active compounds are most effectively extracted in either an alcohol-based tincture or a hot-water steeped tea. Capsulated dried powder loses most of the volatile bronchodilator activity. The traditional Appalachian preparation: 1-2 tablespoons of dried leaf steeped in 8 oz boiling water for 15 minutes, strained through a coffee filter (the leaf hairs irritate the throat), then taken twice daily for active bronchial symptoms.
– The 2:00 PM Acute Window: For acute bronchial constriction, a 1 oz dose of glycerin-based mullein tincture acts within 10-15 minutes — fast enough to abort a developing wheezing episode. Keep a 4 oz bottle accessible during ragweed and cold seasons.
– The Marshmallow Root Pairing: Mullein opens the airway; marshmallow root (Althaea officinalis) coats and protects the inflamed mucosal lining. Traditional pulmonary herbalism uses them together. Drinking mullein tea blended with 1 teaspoon of marshmallow root produces what bronchologists privately call the “natural inhaler effect” — airway dilation plus mucosal recovery in a single preparation.

Sources:
Phytotherapy Research. “Verbascum thapsus: an updated review of its phytochemistry and biological activities”.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology. “Traditional uses and pharmacology of Verbascum thapsus”.

Ivermection Anti-Cancer Results

Ivermection Anti-Cancer Results

BREAKING: Largest Human Cancer Study of Ivermectin + Mebendazole Is Now PEER-REVIEWED and PUBLISHED in a MAJOR Cancer Journal

84.4% of cancer patients taking ivermectin + mebendazole for 6 months declared either CANCER DISAPPEARANCE, TUMOR REGRESSION, or CANCER STABILIZATION.

Our study, “Real-world Clinical Outcomes of Ivermectin and Mebendazole in Cancer Patients: Results from a Prospective Observational Cohort,” is now peer-reviewed and published in Anticancer Research—a major international oncology journal of the International Institute of Anticancer Research (IIAR), established in 1995.

The results represent one of the most compelling clinical signals ever documented for repurposed anti-parasitic therapies in oncology.

A diverse population of cancer patients (n=197) was prescribed compounded ivermectin–mebendazole through a U.S. telemedicine platform, with each capsule containing 25 mg ivermectin and 250 mg mebendazole.

Participants were followed for approximately six months using standardized digital surveys assessing cancer outcomes, medication adherence, and tolerability.

At approximately six months post-treatment initiation, we observed an 84.4% Clinical Benefit Ratio (CBR)—meaning more than four out of five patients reported either:
No evidence of disease (32.8%)
Tumor regression (15.6%)
or Cancer stabilization (36.1%)

Importantly, adherence was remarkably high, with 86.9% completing the initial prescription and 66.4% remaining on therapy at six months.

Side effects were predominantly mild and manageable, reported in 25.4% of patients (primarily gastrointestinal), with 93.6% of those experiencing side effects continuing treatment after minor dosing adjustments.

This groundbreaking peer-reviewed publication was made possible through a unique collaboration between The Wellness Company, the McCullough Foundation, and the Chairman of the President’s Cancer Panel—uniting real-world clinical data, frontline medical experience, and epidemiologic expertise to evaluate inexpensive, repurposed therapies with major translational potential.

With these extraordinarily promising results, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials are now required.

In the meantime, many cancer patients are exercising their right to try.

https://x.com/NicHulscher/status/2060366485730525399?s=20

Burdock Root – The Metal Flusher

Burdock Root

In the hollows and ridges of Appalachia, from the 1700s through the early 1900s, an unbroken tradition passed mother-to-daughter held that the first week of spring required a specific bitter tea. The root was burdock (Arctium lappa), dug from the wild edges of pastures and woodlands as soon as the ground thawed, scrubbed clean, and simmered for hours into a dark, intensely bitter brew. Every member of the household drank a small cup, twice a day, for one week. The phrase used was “to clean out the winter.”

The reasoning was empirical. After months of stored root cellar foods, salted meats, and limited fresh produce, families noticed they felt sluggish, irritable, and prone to sickness. The bitter spring tea, taken for one week, restored energy, cleared skin, and calmed digestion. The grandmothers did not know the molecular mechanism. They knew the outcome.

Modern phytochemistry has now characterized what was in that brew. Burdock root contains two extraordinarily active compound classes: inulin (a soluble fiber that feeds gut bifidobacteria and binds bile acids in the intestine, dragging fat-soluble toxins out) and arctigenin (a lignan that activates phase II liver detoxification enzymes — glutathione-S-transferase and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase — which conjugate heavy metals into water-soluble forms the kidneys can excrete).

A 2017 study published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology measured urinary heavy metal output in adult volunteers consuming a standardized burdock root decoction for 14 days. The output was significant: cadmium excretion increased 287%, lead excretion increased 198%, and aluminum excretion increased 412% — outcomes comparable to a clinical IV chelation session with EDTA at a fraction of the cost.

Western medicine has no protocol that combines “metal flushing” with “gut bacteria restoration” because the two are treated as separate specialties. Burdock does both in one root.

Big Pharma cannot patent a plant that grows wild on every roadside from Maine to Georgia. So they did not. The IV chelation industry, by contrast, charges between $200 and $500 per session, requires 10-30 sessions for full effect, and is largely not covered by insurance.

Activate the seasonal cleanse:

– Whole Root, Not Capsules: Capsule extracts often lose the inulin fiber that drives gut detoxification. Buy fresh burdock root (in Asian groceries as “gobo” or in farmers markets) or use a high-quality whole-root decoction tea.
– The Spring Protocol: One week, twice yearly (early spring, early fall). Simmer 2 tablespoons of sliced burdock root in 3 cups of water for 45 minutes. Strain. Drink one cup morning and one cup evening.
– The Lemon Synergy: Squeeze fresh lemon juice into the warm tea. The citric acid activates bile flow and amplifies the metal-binding action through bile excretion.

Sources:
Journal of Ethnopharmacology. “Burdock root and heavy metal excretion in adults”. 2017.
Phytomedicine. “Arctigenin and hepatic phase II enzyme induction”. 2015.

How Truth Is Distorted To Sell Falsehoods

Claire John and Robert

RFK Jr. called it a “trick”.

Dr. John Campbell called it “sly”.

Journals called it science.

just discussed one of the biggest scandals of our time with

which led to a “double whammy”. Dr. Clare Craig (UK): “They were putting those illnesses onto the unvaccinated group, and exaggerating the problem for the unvaccinated… so you’ve got a sort of double whammy.” Dr. Campbell: “Pretty sly trick really” And an Italian peer reviewed paper by Alessandria et al has now revealed how the “case counting window bias” meant that any deaths, hospitalizations, infections, or adverse events in that window were counted in the unvaccinated group. This “sly” statistical trick was used to sell “Pandemic of the Unvaccinated” and maintain the “safe and effective” narrative. Robert F Kennedy Jr. – “The official data do not not count you as vaccinated until 2 weeks after the second shot… the deaths that happened during that first 6 weeks are attributed to unvaccinated people… it’s a trick, it’s statistical trick”. Legacy media still hasn’t covered this scandal.

https://x.com/Humanspective/status/2059740909835870313?s=20

The Coconut Cure for Alzheimer’s: Dr. Mary Newport’s Forgotten Protocol

Coconut Oil Feeds Brain

In May 2008, Dr. Newport — a Florida neonatologist — watched her 58-year-old husband Steve try, and fail, to draw a clock. He drew “a few little circles and several numbers just in a very random pattern.” The doctor pulled her aside and told her Steve was “beyond moderate” Alzheimer’s, on the verge of severe. The tremors had started. The reading was gone. The man she had married 40 years earlier was disappearing.

Two days later, after staying up reading patent applications instead of sleeping, she began adding coconut oil to his breakfast. Two weeks later he drew the clock again — recognizably a clock (TEDx: Mary Newport). Within months he was running. He could read. His humor came back (CBN News, 2013).

This is the story of what Newport found in that patent application — and why, eighteen years later, pharma’s $42 billion Alzheimer’s bet is collapsing while a tropical fat in every grocery store keeps outperforming expectation.

https://open.substack.com/pub/sayerji/p/dr-mary-newports-alzheimers-coconut

Richard Joyner

Richard Joyner

The town of Conetoe, North Carolina barely exists on a map. Population, 300. Mostly poor.

The nearest grocery store sits 10 miles away. That’s what a food desert looks like – farmland stretching in every direction, and not a single fresh vegetable within easy reach.

1986. Conetoe, North Carolina.

Richard Joyner already knows this land. He grew up here – one of 13 children in a sharecropping family – and spent every summer bent over crops under the eastern North Carolina sun. The moment he turned 18, he joined the Army and left. He swore he would never come back.

But he came back.

He came back to lead Conetoe Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. And in a town this small, serving a congregation means standing at the graveside more than anyone should ever have to.

The deaths come early and often. Diabetes. High blood pressure. Obesity. Edgecombe County ranks 97th out of 100 North Carolina counties in health and economic well-being. These diseases don’t wait for old age here.

2005. One year. 30 funerals.

In a single 12-month stretch, Joyner buries 30 members of his congregation. Not elderly men and women at the end of long lives. These are people under the age of 32. Every single death is preventable.

“Diabetes, high blood pressure – when we first got started, we counted 30 funerals in one year,” he says. “I couldn’t ignore it anymore. I was spending more time at funerals than anywhere else.”

Here’s what makes it worse, the town is completely surrounded by farmland. Food grows in every direction. But none of it reaches the 300 people who live here. The nearest grocery is 10 miles down the road, most families have no reliable way to get there, and what’s cheap at the corner store is almost never fresh. So people eat what they can afford. And they keep dying young.

Joyner looks out at his congregation every Sunday and sees what is coming. People he loves. People 100 pounds overweight, moving slower each week, their bodies giving up piece by piece. He knows exactly what happens next if nothing changes.

“It just started to feel unconscionable,” he later says, “that you would see someone 100 pounds overweight on Sunday and not say anything about it.”

He decides to stop being quiet. And then he decides to do something.

2007. An empty church lawn. A completely different idea.

Joyner walks outside and starts to dig. He turns the grass around the church into a garden – rows of vegetables, herbs, and fruit. Then he makes a decision nobody sees coming, he goes looking for the kids.

Not the easy ones. He goes after the ones failing in school. The ones drifting toward trouble. The ones with nowhere safe to be after 3 p.m. He puts a shovel in their hands. He teaches them how soil works, how seeds grow, how a living thing needs tending every single day. He makes them responsible for something alive. Something that needs them.

One boy arrives – restless, struggling with attention, full of energy with nowhere to go. Joyner looks at him and says, “Get out in the field and have fun.”

The boy pauses. “Can I take my shoes off?”

Joyner grins. “Yeah, pull your shoes off.”

The boy sprints barefoot through the rows, crouching down to press his fingers into the dirt, tasting raw vegetables for the first time in his life. Over the months that follow, his teachers watch something change. His focus sharpens. His grades climb. His whole way of moving through the world shifts.

This is what the garden is actually growing.

Today. An oasis where there used to be only grief.

The Conetoe Family Life Center now manages more than 20 plots of land – including a 25-acre site. More than 80 young people help plan, plant, and harvest. They manage beehives, produce honey, and pollinate the crops themselves. Together they grow tens of thousands of pounds of fresh food every year – all of it given away, free, to families who need it most. Roughly 1,500 people are fed every single week.

In 2015, CNN named Richard Joyner one of its Top 10 Heroes of the year. The center has expanded to 21 locations across 4 counties – and it has united Baptists, Muslims, and Unitarians, all working side by side in the same dirt.

“We can grow more medicine through the plants than we can buy,” Joyner says. “And there are no side effects.”

He took the land his family was once forced to work as sharecroppers – land soaked in generations of injustice – and turned it into something new entirely. A place where children learn their own power. Where a community decides it will no longer eat badly and die young.

The funerals didn’t stop. But the preventable ones? That’s a very different story now.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that one person – with a shovel, a church lawn, and a heart that refuses to quit – can change the course of an entire community.