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Why Were Doctors Pushing Early COVID Treatment Attacked So Hard

This clip looks at the case of Dr. Pierre Kory and Dr. Paul Marik, and the bigger question it raises: why did doctors promoting cheap repurposed COVID treatments face such fierce resistance? Supporters argue the backlash was never just about science. It was about money, control, and protecting a system that had far more to gain from official products than low-cost early treatment.

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Is Curing Patients A Bad Business Model

One question says everything: “Is curing patients a sustainable business model?” This clip goes straight at the incentive structure behind modern pharma, where long-term dependency is often more profitable than real recovery. Add in the billions paid in civil and criminal fines over the years, and the bigger point gets hard to ignore, this is not a system built to lose customers.

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Why TTFD Gets So Much Attention For Gut And Brain Issues

Not all forms of vitamin B1 do the same job. This clip breaks down why TTFD stands out, especially for gut dysfunction, SIBO, low stomach acid, enteric nervous system issues, and more brain-based problems like anxiety, Parkinson’s, MS, and other central nervous system symptoms. What makes it different is not just that it gets into the cells fast. It is that this form appears to do more once it gets there.

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Why Benfotiamine Gets So Much Attention For Nerve Pain And Fatigue

Benfotiamine is one of the most talked-about forms of vitamin B1 for a reason. This clip breaks down why it keeps coming up in conversations around neuropathy, chronic pain, fibromyalgia, and chronic fatigue, and why interest in it has expanded into brain health as well. If different forms of B1 really do have different strengths, benfotiamine is one of the clearest examples.

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Why TTFD Can Hit Much Harder Than Benfotiamine

Not all forms of vitamin B1 work the same, and this clip shows why that matters. TTFD appears to be far more potent for some people, which means a much lower dose can create a similar effect to a much higher amount of benfotiamine. That is why getting the form right matters just as much as getting the dose right. If B1 has not worked the way you expected, the issue may not be thiamine itself. It may be the form.

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Why Vitamin Tests Can Miss The Real Problem

This clip breaks down one of the biggest blind spots in how vitamin status gets assessed. Just because a test does not show a clear deficiency does not mean the problem is not there. If the issue is localized to one region, especially in the brain, or the body is not using that nutrient properly, standard markers may look normal while symptoms stay severe. That is why some people do not look deficient on paper, yet respond in a major way when the right nutrient is finally used in the right dose.

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Why Thiamine Can Make Some People Worse Before It Helps

Thiamine is not always the right move at the right time. This clip breaks down why B1 can sometimes backfire in people stuck in severe inflammation, major mitochondrial dysfunction, active infection, or ongoing mold exposure. The bigger point is that timing matters. In some cases, thiamine is not the problem, the body is just too deep in danger mode to respond well to it yet.

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Why The People Who Need B1 Most Can React Worst At First

This clip breaks down the paradoxical reaction with thiamine, why the people who may need B1 the most are often the ones who feel the worst when they first start it. The bigger point is that this does not always mean thiamine is the wrong fit. Sometimes it means the system is so compromised that a strong dose or a highly bioavailable form hits like a shock. That is why starting lower and using gentler forms can matter so much.

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Why Thiamine May Help Anxiety Before It Helps Your Gut

This clip breaks down something a lot of people miss with thiamine: not every symptom improves on the same timeline. In some cases, the first signs of change show up in anxiety or mood, while bigger gut issues like constipation and gastroparesis can take several more weeks to start shifting. That matters because people often quit too early. If something starts changing in the first couple of weeks, even in a smaller way, that may be the signal that the deeper gut improvements are still coming.

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Why Staying Up Late Wrecks Your Nervous System

Staying up deep into the night does more damage than most people realize. This clip breaks down how late nights can hit recovery, stress resilience, heart rate variability, and autonomic balance, and why getting your circadian rhythm right matters so much. It also gets into why thiamine is starting to come up in conversations around sleep onset and maintenance insomnia for people who are exhausted but still cannot switch off.

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