84 Comments
Dec 16, 2023·edited Dec 16, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

We get most of our eggs from friends who raise the hens RIGHT. Their hens are let out to forage all day with Livestock Guardian Dogs looking on. They get sun, vitamin D and eat weeds, seeds & bugs. They’re safely cooped at night. The eggs are tastier, the yolks are far more yellow, to the point of being orange. Grocery store yolks look downright anemic next to them. They taste far better and I understand they are anti-cancer!

Expand full comment

Problem is that most cities outlaw chickens to be raised in the backyard. In US we consume over 70 billion eggs per year and 99% are deficient in Vitamin D! Read my comments below!

Expand full comment
Dec 17, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

This is exactly how my daughter in rural Colorado takes care of her hens. And the eggs reflect it as you describe.

Expand full comment

When a government treats its own citizens like laboratory rats, injecting untested drugs into populations, isn’t this another untested trial by the powers controlling the safety of our food? Is it not ironic the same fda that called the mRNA shots safe and effective be the group we allow jurisdiction over poisons sprayed on our foods? The best way we are to survive and have a healthy life, like the good doctor says, is to advocate for our families and our selves and this should definitely include the food we eat. When many of us said hell no to the untested fda approved experimental shots we all should question the fda approved foods put on the shelves in our grocery stores. It’s a matter of sickness and health. J.Goodrich

Expand full comment

Excellent Discussion except no mention that factory processed eggs have little or no Vitamin D, which the chickens acquired when they were raised outdoors and were in the Sun! . Check the egg cartoon label and it is minimal or not listed. In fact, the chicken farmers know this and ADD calcitriol (Vitamin D source) to the feed so they don't break their legs! The following is an excerpt from an article I wrote that explains more!

Vitamin D is the Canary in the coal mine that is signally that medicine doesn’t understand the true role of nutrient rich food void of toxins that is required to stay healthy. What if we had a valid test for Vitamin D in 1955? What would it tell us? it would have told us that 50 ng’s was the norm for Americans. This was before sunscreens, sun avoidance, eggs with little or no Vitamin D, over medicating, fast foods, drinking 200 liters/capita per year of pop containing phosphoric acid and other lifestyle habits that are detrimental to good health and the depletion of Vitamin D in the body.

Instead, the blood test was not common until 15 to 20 years ago, when the average American was now deficient due to the “modern” lifestyle that has been adopted. So now, the new norm is a sub-normal blood value for Vitamin D and is embraced by medicine as being the gold standard.

IOM (now called NAM- National Academy of Medicine) also said that pregnant mothers need no more Vitamin D than the average adult. Shocking that there is a lack of understanding that pregnancy requires ample nutrient intake during pregnancy to avoid delivering an infant with health issues.

The GrassrootsHealth research initiative called “Protect our Kids NOW!’ has demonstrated that preemie rates will drop 60% if the mother has adequate Vitamin D intake during pregnancy. WHO has declared that pregnant mothers don’t need Vitamin D for a healthy baby. WRONG The other grassroots research program has determined that women’s chance of acquiring breast cancer would drop by 80% if the blood value of Vitamin D was above 50 ng’s. Today, 1 in 8 women will experience breast cancer. Shameful.

IOM’s pronouncement in 2011 on the new Vitamin D guidelines was totally flawed and Dr. Baggerly who is a biostatistician has informed NIH of the error which indicates that Vitamin D is ten times safer than what several million medical students have been taught for the last 60 years.

If IOM/NAM continues to believe as well as the medical establishment that only 20 ng’s of Vitamin D are required to turn 3000 plus genes on in the human body and the detrimental American lifestyle continues to be in vogue, medicine will never ever embrace the fact that cellular health starts with rich nutrient intake void of trace toxins to live a full and vibrant life.

One last comment: Few if any who acquired Covid and had a blood value over 50 ng's died!

Expand full comment

When the plandemic was released, I clearly remember reading an article which was about the post mortem findings were for people who died from this novel "cv19" disease taking over the minds of everyone on this planet who listened.

All of these cadavers had one thing in common: low vitamin d levels. Doctor Zelenko was one of the driving forces which had me upping my vitamin d intake.

I never had covid (as far as I know) as I didnt get sick during that time in history.

Maybe I was sick with covid 19, but not in the physical sense. I was sick of hearing the words "covid nineteen", similar to a california young girl giving a speech with the word "like" injected in between every other word of her salad.

I'm like so like tired like of like this like shit !

Expand full comment

Understand! The Big Pharma pushers have been discrediting the true value of Vitamin D for decades so they can sell more drugs!

Expand full comment

I cannot help but wonder what other things the pushers are pushing on us, on a daily basis. I got a call from a friend today telling me he watched all day long yesterday, when he witnessed over 100 jets flying over his house dumping chemicals on us from 30,000 feet. This was only when he was looking up, as I'm sure it was way more than 100.

His next statement was "It will now rain here in two days".

Geoengineering is repulsive, and against the will of the people.

Expand full comment

AOC tells me all food is created in the grocery store ;)

Expand full comment

I wonder, are there any unretouched photos actually showing AnotherOddCommie in a grocery aisle?

I can’t remember one 🤨

Expand full comment

Just as home garden gifts the best veges and fruits, local pastured eggs are best. Wisconsin State closed down two restaurant/cafe that raised pastured chicken and eggs because of health concerns of having production near restaurant. Persons would drive long distances to eat at these establishments. Sadly shut down by the State.

Expand full comment
Dec 17, 2023·edited Dec 17, 2023

All the same bullshit reasoning:

In the name of SAFETY!

Oh, i can go out, get piercings, tatoos, purchase legal weed, smoke cigs, drink grain alcohol, yada, yada..

But Nooooooooooooooooo fresh eggs ! They're too dangerous because WE say so !

Expand full comment

Big Agra and Big Pharma want to be in control! $ rein supreme!

Expand full comment

I feel really blessed with my goofy 8 hens, they slow egg production during the winter months but any excess eggs we give to our neighbors. So that we could name them and tell them all apart, I got 5 different varieties. So far, the Sapphire Gems (which I had never heard of) are the friendliest.

Expand full comment

But we can't go back to family farms. That would be too inefficient and would take more people to operate = Ya mean like the Amish? Ya mean like people living closer to nature in a sustainable lifestyle? Um, YES!

Expand full comment

After the w.e.f finishes thinning the herd there will no longer be300M of us so may become not only more feasible but necessary to survive.

Expand full comment

If you do that, good chance you won't produce overweight, unhealthy children. We can't have that, now don't you know

Expand full comment

I’m deeply concerned with all the sick horses I’m seeing. I’ve had and boarded horses for decades. It seems more and more horses are getting Cushings, osteoporosis, kissing spine and many other maladies, and not recovering as well and quickly from (recoverable) ailments. I blame glyphosate/ Round Up sprayed on pastures and grains as well as smaller

farms where horses are stalled way more and get less grass and fewer beneficial weeds. What say you, Dr. Malone? Have you seen similar things?

Expand full comment

I have been worrying about my own four horses for a couple of years. They seem more lethargic, carry their heads much lower, and unnecessarily trip a lot even though I keep their hooves trimmed regularly. I do not use, and neither does my neighbor, GBHs on the pastures. I do give them 1 to 2 lbs of Safechoice product and that certainly could contain GHBs. They also get whole oats which could contain it also. The man I purchased hay from (use between late Dec and mid April) about 12 miles away may use herbicides. Personally, I think it is a combination of 1) the constant fallout from the chem trails that have become much denser and more frequent, like in daily, over the last five or so years. I believe, as I have read, it is causing drastic changes in soil PH and polluting the water supply; 2) GHBs in the feed and 3) possibly possum dung on the pastures that may be ingested when foraging in the dormant periods. My horses are rotationally-dewormed, this year I decided against any vaccines given they never leave my property and no other horses are nearby or on my property, and their teeth are routinely floated as needed. They are only in their stalls when they want to be.

Expand full comment
founding

Maybe consider a blood check on one of them to see if there are any deficiencies or other pathologies?

Expand full comment

Next time I have the vet out for those floats I will ask him about blood work. I heard about that mane hair analysis that can tell about deficiencies, but my other vet told me a few years back it is not reliable because of when the hair is pulled. I thought that was rather strange.

Expand full comment
founding

Guess one would also like to know about whether hair analysis would turn up disease and toxicities which as you note are of valid concern

Expand full comment

I can say this abt possum poop. For SURE rotate your pastures and if you see horses nibbling at very low blades

of grass regularly, consider

putting them on another field for a couple of months if possible. If they only

have “a hangnail’s length” of grass they are much more

prone to eat possum

poop than if the blades are

longer and have grazing breaks here & there.

Expand full comment

I do have three separate pastures so they can be rotated. They normal just eat the clover down to the dirt level. But in the winter months like right now as the grass is going dormant they would rather hunt around for snippets of grass rather than eat the hay I put out for them.

I trap a possum about five times a year on my deck where I feed the birds. They also come around for the water and food I leave out for my cats. If they won't go in the trap I shoot them.

Expand full comment

Everything you said

Expand full comment

I love eggs, and if I were creating a new residential setup from scratch, I'd plan it with chickens in mind. Figuratively. As things are, it would be impractical to keep chickens in the back yard. I can't bear the thought of walking back there and finding them all just laying around the pool.

I'll blame my total deficit of personal charm on toxicities from corporate farms. Fortunately, my wife charms everyone, and she works with a fellow who runs a family farm. We buy from the grocery store, but I encourage her to supplement our supply with family farm eggs, which are typically smaller and more expensive. I tell my wife the extra cost is worth it. If/when things really fall off a cliff, it'll be good to know such people. And in the mean time, I can eat locally-produced eggs, comforted by the knowledge that they are probably untouched by the "philanthropy" of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Expand full comment

Funny you should land on this topic, I just changed the eggs I had been eating from good to really good. The organic, free range, free to forage to organic, forage outdoors year round, both small family farms. The second producer's yolks were noticeably more yellow. I will probably use both, as one is from Wisc. and closer to my state. I have been harping about glyphosate for years now, since I heard from Zach Bush M.D. in his deep dives about the use and ills from glyphosate. Especially in Mn. where the runoff from farms using it ; it is everywhere, water, air, and soil. What a pity.

Expand full comment
Dec 16, 2023·edited Dec 16, 2023

We really enjoy the eggs we purchase from a local women who is dedicated to ‘clean eating’ for her animals (including the hens) and no toxic chemical lifestyle. The yokes are typically ‘marigold' color, except during the very hottest and coldest months when the hens tend to fall off on egg production.

Expand full comment

Yes, the marigold color is a tip-off to good quality. Also, fresh eggs will "sit up" in the pan, and not spread out (not at all watery).

Expand full comment
Dec 16, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

We love our little ladies . They are great producers. We feed them bought food but also our leftover fruits and vegetables. They love watermelon. We have a coop but also a fenced area they can roam in. It gets really cold here so we keep a heat lamp in the coop in the winter. The eggs make higher cakes. They are bright yellow not pale yellow.

When I was pregnant with my babies I tried to eat healthy foods. I didn’t take any medicine like cough medicine or pain relievers. I didn’t want anything to harm my precious babies. My children have always been very healthy. Rarely if ever sick. I think eating right during pregnancy and feeding them homemade baby food helped with their good health. My youngest daughter started to eat a lot of junk food during Covid and after. Stupid high school boys. She started to get sick with colds and sinus infections. I kept telling her she needed to eat better but what teenager listens to their parents about eating. I think the answer would be zero. She is now on a health kick and eating good food. She is never sick. Yay!

My grandson who is now 18 developed Addison’s disease at age 14. He hasn’t been able to eat anything made with gluten. Well I discovered organic flour. I now make any baked goods with organic flour. He can eat gluten made with organic flour. I have to think that it is the pesticides that made him sick. Not the gluten. Just as the doc says eat organic when you can. We just split a whole beef cow with my daughter. Grass feed. Check around keep healthy.

Expand full comment

"They are cheap, can be fed almost anything, are hardy, friendly and don’t stink" This is not really accurate. The chicks may be cheap, but raising them to egg laying age isn't. They will eat kitchen scraps and grass and weeds, etc., but must be fed a steady diet that will benefit their growth and egg production, and is not that cheap. They do not lay year round, as they take breaks when molting and also when the hours of daylight changes in the fall and winter. Not all breeds are "hardy" or "friendly", so do the reasearch, breed matters. And they don't stink? Really? You've never had to muck out a chicken pen then. Also free ranging isn't always an option as there are many predators looking for a quick meal. It isn't as rosey a picture as you paint. It takes time, knowledge, and money to get your own eggs from your own chickens.

Expand full comment
Dec 17, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Conclusion: My poverty-level grandma, with eggs from their personal chicken coop and milk from their cow, ate healthier food than we do. That's progress.

Expand full comment

The label on eggs that kills me is "Vegetarian Fed". Haha! Chickens are omnivores! They require some animal protein to be healthy. If they are truly "vegetarians", by definition they are unhealthy.

Expand full comment
founding
Dec 17, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Which came first...

I'd live to read your comments on the use of growth hormones in animal livestock and its effects on Human growth patterns.

Expand full comment
author

Thank you for the suggestion. This has been put on my list of topics!

Expand full comment