Vitamin D

Dr Pierre Kory On Vitamin D

Big Pharma is “terrified” of Vitamin D, and Dr. Pierre Kory says he could spend a whole hour on this topic.

Why so scared? Because “It threatens the DISEASE MODEL.”

A meta-analysis out of Italy found what happens when people take Vitamin D, and the results are staggering:

Looking at data from 19 different studies and 1.26 million individuals, the meta-analysis revealed:

• Vitamin D showed about a 60% effectiveness against the incidence of COVID-19 in randomized control trials.

• Vitamin D showed about 40-50% effectiveness in reducing the incidence of COVID-19 in observational studies.

• For preventing severe COVID-19 cases requiring ICU care, vitamin D supplementation was about 70% effective.

We didn’t need to lock ourselves inside for years, live in fear, and vilify our neighbors for not wearing a mask. That was literally the worst thing we could have done. All we ever needed was to go outside, get sunshine, and raise our vitamin D, and everything would have been so much better.

But the sunshine story goes far beyond COVID. You think you’re doing your health a favor by avoiding the sun? The data tells a very different story, and it starts with 29,518 women who did exactly that.

https://x.com/VigilantFox/status/2073754956608274466?s=20

Maltodextrin

Maltodextrin

Maltodextrin is the WORST ingredient hiding in your food!

It’s a refined starchy carbohydrate made by artificially bonding a cluster of sugar molecules. It’s highly processed and typically used as a filler in a wide range of packaged and processed foods.

Manufacturers use maltodextrin as a sweetener without having to list it as sugar on nutrition labels, allowing them to claim that a food is sugar-free despite significantly impacting blood sugar levels.

Dr. Eric Berg, DC, not MD; information only.

(Tom: I think I would challenge the good doctor on this one as being the worst. If Aspartame blew holes in the brains of mice during trials I think that takes a lot of beating!)

From the Cordyceps Mushroom

Given Cordycepin’s ability to downregulate NRP1 expression, it may warrant investigation as an adjunct therapy for Long COVID.

(Neuropilin 1 (NRP1) is a protein expressed by various cells in the body, including neurons, blood vessels, and immune cells. It binds to different types of extracellular ligands, influencing the development and functioning of organs. NRP1 is involved in signaling pathways, particularly in the brain and retina, and has potential as a target for therapeutics in the treatment of neovascular eye diseases.)

(A ligand is simply a molecule or ion that binds to a central entity—either a metal atom (in chemistry) or a receiving protein (in biology)—to form a larger complex. This binding triggers a specific chemical or physiological response.)

(In science, an ion is an atom or molecule that has a net electrical charge because it has gained or lost one or more electrons. Because they are electrically charged, ions play critical roles in everything from biological nerve impulses to battery technology.)

Finish reading: https://wmcresearch.substack.com/p/friday-hope-cordycepin-cd-from-the

From the Cordyceps Mushroom

Given Cordycepin’s ability to downregulate NRP1 expression, it may warrant investigation as an adjunct therapy for Long COVID.

(Neuropilin 1 (NRP1) is a protein expressed by various cells in the body, including neurons, blood vessels, and immune cells. It binds to different types of extracellular ligands, influencing the development and functioning of organs. NRP1 is involved in signaling pathways, particularly in the brain and retina, and has potential as a target for therapeutics in the treatment of neovascular eye diseases.)

(A ligand is simply a molecule or ion that binds to a central entity—either a metal atom (in chemistry) or a receiving protein (in biology)—to form a larger complex. This binding triggers a specific chemical or physiological response.)

(In science, an ion is an atom or molecule that has a net electrical charge because it has gained or lost one or more electrons. Because they are electrically charged, ions play critical roles in everything from biological nerve impulses to battery technology.)

Finish reading: https://wmcresearch.substack.com/p/friday-hope-cordycepin-cd-from-the

Quote of the Day

“Rest satisfied with doing well, and leave others to talk of you as they will.” – Pythagoras, Mathematician (582 – 497 BC)

Dawn Loggins

Dawn Loggins

It’s not so much the cards we are dealt as how we play the hand.

On the morning of Thursday, the seventh of June, 2012, in the gymnasium of Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, North Carolina, approximately ten miles southwest of the town of Lawndale in northern Cleveland County, an eighteen-year-old graduating senior named Ashley Dawn Loggins walked across the stage to receive her diploma from Burns High School, where she had completed three Advanced Placement courses, an honors English course, and three years of consistent A and A-minus grades while working approximately twenty hours per week as a part-time custodian on the same school grounds. She had been admitted, four months earlier, to the entering class of two thousand sixteen of Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She was, by the documented institutional records of Burns High School, the first student in the school’s history to be admitted to Harvard.

Dawn Loggins had been born in 1993 or 1994 and had been raised in Cleveland County and adjacent rural areas of western North Carolina by her mother and stepfather. The household had been characterized by serial economic instability and repeated relocations between rental properties and squatting arrangements. By Dawn Loggins’s documented later accounts in interviews with the Cable News Network, the American Broadcasting Company, the Columbia Broadcasting System, and the Seattle Times, the household at various periods of her childhood had lacked electricity, lacked running water, had been infested with cockroaches, and had been heated only by a wood-burning cook stove.

She and her older brother Shane had walked approximately twenty minutes each direction to a public park in their town of residence to fill water jugs at the public bathroom spigots, in periods when their household’s water service had been disconnected. She and her brother had performed their schoolwork by candlelight on evenings when the household’s electricity had been disconnected. She had, in middle school, often gone several days at a time without bathing.

By the time Dawn Loggins enrolled at Burns High School in Lawndale in March of 2010 at the midpoint of her sophomore year, she had attended four different high schools and had missed an academic year of instruction. Her guidance counselor at Burns High School, Robyn Putnam, identified her academic potential within several weeks of her enrollment. Putnam enrolled Dawn Loggins in remedial-credit courses to recover the missed academic year and advocated for her admission to a series of school extracurricular activities including the photography club, the rock climbing club, and the Spanish club, of all three of which Dawn Loggins was elected president during her junior year.

In the summer of 2011, Dawn Loggins was selected for the Governor’s School of North Carolina — a six-week residential summer program for academically gifted secondary students hosted that year at Meredith College in Raleigh. Robyn Putnam drove Dawn Loggins the approximately two hundred miles from Lawndale to Raleigh to deliver her to the program and purchased the personal clothing and supplies that the program required.

Near the conclusion of the six-week program, Dawn Loggins attempted to telephone her family residence in Lawndale. The household telephone service had been disconnected. When she returned to Lawndale at the program’s conclusion, the household was empty. Her brother Shane had relocated to friends’ homes in nearby Hickory. Her grandmother had been transferred to a local homeless shelter. Her parents had relocated to Tennessee without leaving a forwarding address or contact information. She subsequently learned, several months later, that they had decided to remain in Tennessee permanently. Dawn Loggins was seventeen years old.

She elected, in consultation with Robyn Putnam, to remain at Burns High School to complete her senior year rather than to relocate to Tennessee or to enter the North Carolina Department of Social Services foster care system. Sheryl Kolton, a custodian and bus driver for the Burns Middle School and the mother of one of Dawn Loggins’s high school friends, had met Dawn Loggins only briefly prior to the autumn of 2011, provided her with a permanent residence for the duration of her senior year. The arrangement had been originally proposed by Sheryl Kolton’s daughter, who had told her mother that Dawn Loggins had been couch-surfing among the homes of her high school friends since August of 2011 and that the arrangement was not sustainable for the senior academic year. Sheryl Kolton subsequently agreed to receive Dawn Loggins on a permanent basis through her June 2012 graduation.

Other Burns High School staff contributed to her expenses for clothing, medical care, and dental appointments. Dawn Loggins obtained, through a school workforce program, a part-time custodial position at Burns High School itself — beginning at six in the morning, two hours before her classes commenced at seven-forty.

During her senior year, Dawn Loggins maintained a three-point-nine grade point average across three Advanced Placement courses, an honors English course, and several other classes. She scored two thousand one hundred and ten on the Scholastic Aptitude Test. In December of 2011, on the recommendation of her history teacher Larry Gardner and a community volunteer named Carol Rose, she submitted her fifth college application — to Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The four previous applications had been to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina State University, Davidson College, and Warren Wilson College. All four of the in-state applications had been accepted.

The Harvard admissions decision arrived at Burns High School in March of 2012 in a small envelope. Dawn Loggins was admitted to the Harvard College entering class of two thousand sixteen. The university subsequently confirmed that her financial aid package would cover the entirety of her tuition, room, board, and supplemental expenses for all four years of her undergraduate enrollment. Her brother Shane was awarded a full scholarship to Berea College in Kentucky for the same academic year.

Dawn Loggins graduated from Burns High School on the seventh of June, 2012. She enrolled at Harvard College that autumn.

Flash Shelton

Flash Shelton

When strangers moved into his mother’s house, the police told him there was little they could do.

So he moved in too.

What happened next turned Flash Shelton into one of the most unusual property defenders in America.

The story began during one of the most difficult periods of his life. After the death of his father, Shelton was helping his mother sell her vacant California home when he received shocking news: unknown people had taken over the property and were refusing to leave.

Like many homeowners who face squatters, he expected the situation to be resolved quickly.

Instead, he discovered a frustrating reality.

Because the occupants claimed certain tenant protections, law enforcement treated the dispute as a civil matter rather than a criminal one. The legal process could take months, sometimes even longer.

Most people would have hired a lawyer and waited.

Flash came up with a very different plan.

After studying the laws carefully, he realized that if the squatters were using tenancy rules to remain in the home, he could potentially use those same rules to get back inside.

With his mother’s permission, he established legal tenancy for himself, drove nearly 19 hours to the property, and patiently waited for an opportunity.

When the occupants left, Shelton entered the house, secured access points, installed cameras, and made himself at home.

The next time the squatters returned, they discovered something they had not expected.

Someone else was already living there. ????

And unlike them, he had the homeowner’s permission.

That experience eventually became the foundation of a business that earned him the nickname “Squatter Hunter.”

Instead of relying solely on lengthy court battles, Shelton developed a strategy centered on lawful occupancy and constant presence. His team moves into disputed properties with the homeowner’s approval and remains there until unwanted occupants decide to leave voluntarily.

Music plays.

Common areas are occupied.

The property is actively used.

In short, they make it difficult for squatters to enjoy the comfortable situation they had created.

The goal isn’t confrontation.

The goal is persistence.

What makes the story fascinating is that Shelton didn’t invent a new law.

He simply learned how the existing laws worked and found a way to use them in favor of homeowners instead of against them.

His approach has sparked debate across the country.

Supporters see him as someone helping families recover homes they thought they had lost.

Critics argue that squatter laws exist for important reasons and that every situation is different.

Regardless of where people stand, one thing is hard to deny:

Flash Shelton turned a personal family crisis into a mission that has helped homeowners across America.

Sometimes solving a problem isn’t about fighting harder.

Sometimes it’s about understanding the rules better than the people using them against you.