Topic: Disease

4 chapters across the catalog

97: Flowers for Fuller
1:01:56 - 1:08:03

97: Flowers for Fuller

Medical Gaslighting and the Oprah Ozempic Special

The hosts examine "medical gaslighting," specifically how women's health concerns are often dismissed by doctors. This leads into a critique of Oprah Winfrey's special on GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic. They argue that Oprah acted as a paid promoter for the pharmaceutical industry, reframing obesity as a "brain disease" to absolve individuals of responsibility and ignore the role of the "sugar cartel."

97: Flowers for Fuller
2:32:00 - 2:34:58

97: Flowers for Fuller

Population Tailoring and the Replacement Theory

Mo Facts explains "Racial Population Tailoring," which involves managing the size of specific populations through disease, gun distribution, or cultural manipulation. He suggests that "orange" people in red states are being targeted for replacement, noting that nuclear silos are often located in these areas. The hosts argue that AI and other tools are being used to eliminate "undesirables" who do not serve the master class.

32: Nocebo
1:49:01 - 1:52:47

32: Nocebo

Chronic Stress, Cortisol and Health Disparities

A professor from Virginia Commonwealth University explains how chronic stress leads to elevated cortisol levels, which can cause diabetes and heart disease. The data shows African American men are significantly more likely to suffer from these conditions. The hosts argue that media figures like Charlamagne contribute to this stress by peddling fear and "Blackanoid" narratives every morning.

30: School of Thought
46:42 - 51:00

30: School of Thought

Kanye West, Housekeeper Analogy and Mental Freedom

Kanye West's "housekeeper" analogy is used to discuss the social pressure on black Americans to maintain a certain "volume" and not disrupt the status quo. The hosts advocate for a "ruling class mentality" and freedom of thought, criticizing the shaming used to enforce groupthink. They also note how China successfully pressured CNN to change the narrative around the "Chinese disease," contrasting it with the lack of pushback against negative black stereotypes.