Transcripts for WCBM 680 AM [Talkradio 680] WCBM 680 AM [Tal

WCBM 680 AM [Talkradio 680] WCBM 680 AM [Talkradio 680] January 23, 2018 080000

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell still most House Democrats were no votes including Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi we have not yet protected our courageous young dreamers not only should we protect them we should embrace a statement from President Trump says we will make a long term deal on immigration if and only if it's good for our country foxes Jared Halpern of the capitol President Trump signed the spending bill last night extending government funding through February 8th President Trump sent Vice President pence to Israel through the Middle East and he told the Israeli Knesset us will move its embassy to Jerusalem next year ahead of schedule by making the embassy move by setting a hard deadline on it and President Trump wanted to make it clear that he meant what he said said what he meant and we're going to follow through and strengthen the relationship that we have with this wonderful ally the speech in the Israeli parliament yesterday Drew angry comments from Palestinian lawmakers in the chamber who were forcibly then removed skiing was never so dangerous a volcano in Japan erupted at a ski resort north of Tokyo causing an avalanche and sending rocks and boulders flying at least 9 people injured on the slopes of Mount Cosatu she running the Philadelphia Eagles head back to the Super Bowl for the 1st time since 2004 they dominated the Minnesota Vikings 38 to 7 with incredibly strong support from Philly fans just asked disliking fans the Philadelphia. Are something I've never experienced in my life and I did a lot of things. That are horrendous Fox News fair and balanced. Wildfires burn millions of acres across the country each year and each year wild land firefighters battle to contain them but they can't do it for some communities it's not a question of if wildfires strike but when and a single ember can travel more than one mile as it twists and turns and floats through the air that single ember can find its way to where you live and can ignite and destroy your home or your community that single ember can be just as dangerous as the wildfire itself you can't control where the Emerald land but you can control what happens when it does you can take action out of repair your home and your community for wildfire get fire adapted learn what you can do now to reduce wildfire damage later at fire or work or pare protect prevail a public service message brought to you by the u.s. Forest Service and the Ad Council learn more fire could work sentencing for this crazed Michigan sports doctor in its 6th day Fox's Jeff Toobin also with more a 15 year old girl told the court and when saying that in addition to being sexually abused by Dr Larry Mauser that Michigan State University is still billing her for Nasser's so-called treatments the schools under fire accused of looking the other way 3 top USA gymnastics officials have quit this plus dozens more victims in courts who will be silenced no more way to take advantage of your position the only interested to nest 6 Dr seaman you Larry was seen as a Roe v one of over 140 girls and young women that will speak in court before Larry Nasser learns his fate Hollywood loves the world know today who's Oscar worthy it's Oscars time with girls trip breakout star Tiffany Hadash joining Lord Of The Rings actor Andy Serkis to announce the nominees at $822.00 Eastern time. To put up a. Front runners are 3 billboards outside adding Missouri in the shape of water while best actress and actor leading contenders include billboards Frances McDormand who won the Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Award and darkest hours Gary Oldman the ceremony comes as Hollywood faces a sexual harassment scandal and the nation deals with a similar movement with actors sporting pins to support the time's up Initiative which gave birth to a legal fund for women Michel pulling out Fox News and cities in the running for Amazon 2nd headquarters porn on the incentives Maryland's offering $5000000000.00 worth of the company to build in Montgomery County just north of Washington d.c. . County Executive Ike Leggett I'm Carmen Roberts Fox News Radio. Show that you c.b.s. Baltimore. Thunderstorms rumbling in from the west there were like tonight as a fraud sweeps on through the east showers and thunderstorms of 48 degrees very mild overnight low temperature 61 with thundershowers early Tuesday morning in the colder weather Tuesday night down to freezing at 32 when say sunshine with highs in the middle forty's and nighttime lows in the twenty's that's your average high and low to some of your and recovering into the fifty's likely a meteorologist Scott Larimore the Weather Channel for Talk Radio 6 a.t.w. C b m w c b m studios are brought to you by safer term solutions color of run rubber Roy at 41261120 are on the Web site for time and Solutions dot com Rush has been at this for a while doing battle with the left every day and you may think you know what to expect you say I've heard this before stick when there's more to hear there's always something that we teach you to dream on talk radio 6 h.w. C.p.m. . We're going to talk with a medical anthropologist That's right you don't want a lot of things so get ready for that and I'm sure you'll have a lot of questions when the time comes as well have you ever heard of Deitrick oxide while nitric oxide is one of the most important molecules in your body it promotes healthy circulation it gets the oxygen and nutrients flowing throughout your entire body and it helps support healthy blood pressure too now you can help your own body produce nitric oxide naturally by simply drinking super beads so. 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My dad didn't want to touch him like I do get the stinky dog away from me even after we'd give her a bell she would still stink very stinky both bad breath and bad gas I asked the vet and he said some dogs are just stinky Does your dog it's scratch stink or shed like crazy come to dynamite for help d i n l v i t e back at them via maggots refasten waxy think I'll sell the digestive enzymes that are cooked out of regular dog food ingredients convince me that it was definitely worth trying after about a week he started smelling normal My husband and I were really kind of astonished guided by is attrition 854281000 D.I.N.O.'s V.I.P.'s back out them. Mark Levin the Great One weekday evenings at 71 talk radio 680 w c d m w c b m dot com. Welcome back to coast to coast George Norry with you said the Ross singer back with us a medical anthropologist now he received a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Utah in biology that was back in 1979 he spent a couple years in the biochemistry field he got a speech d. At Duke University followed by another couple years of Duke in the after apology ph d. Program and he also got a master's degree he then attended the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston on a full academic scholarship he is a pioneering new field of health research called applied medical anthropology shedding light on the many ways our culture is simply making us sick Sidney Ross with singer with us on Coast to Coast City welcome back well thanks for having me back George it's good to be back with you a whole Aloha I should say to you to our things out there's a guy here it's been cold out there like well I'm not going to complain a lot of people listening to this show have a lot colder than we do here in a way not sure were you there during the missile ballistic launch alert I was it was one of those things where my son came running up and he said look when I just saw my phone and and I was incredulous at 1st I wasn't I didn't believe it it just didn't make sense but everybody was it was young people I think were more panicking that older people who've been through a few false alarms in life but you know what it was a doggle thing that was and then and then it happened to Japan a couple days later I know everybody's on edge and and the thing is you don't know what to do if it's true anyway I mean what do you do hide under a coconut tree yeah yeah that's that's a good point so what is a medical anthropologist. Well when I when I started doing this work I mean there's a lot more now but it was pretty rare when I was doing this back in the in the late eighty's and I pioneered the field of applied medical anthropology so what I do is you know anthropology if you would go to other cultures and try to figure out what's going on in those cultures I look at our own culture and I look at how the things we do cause disease and if you understand how the body works. And its basic design then you could easily see how some things can interfere with that operation and you know you can then point out how certain diseases are caused by certain lifestyle factors and it's it's not just the things we do it's also that our attitudes you know our institutions the way we approach things you know for food how it's grown I mean the culture is everything that we're about and it determines everything we think do and say and when those things are in conflict with our natural. Mechanisms for health then we end up getting ill so we try to point those out let people know these made these lifestyles may be leading to these diseases and then people can make choices informed choices on how to change their lifestyles and prevent disease and that's the thing that's important to me I mean when I was in medicine in medical school it was really obvious that it's all about treatment detection and treatment of disease and I I just was never really fond of that approach because it doesn't really help the person prevent disease and to me prevention and to most people obviously prevention is a lot better than trying to detect disease once once it's in appears because that means you have it and then hope you can possibly cure it so prevention is very important but to do that you really need to be aware. Of how the things you're doing can be harming you and we're usually oblivious to the obvious right but when you when you're doing things every day normal it's normal stuff you don't think about it and everybody else is doing it too and it takes time to reflect and realize hey we have an epidemic of disease maybe it's being caused by these things were you studying to be a medical doctor and decided to stop doing that yes yes I was just I was very disappointed in my medical training I mean it was so. It basically was I think it's changed a little bit over the years I mean we're talking you know 30 years ago now but the training was really like try to look at the figure out what a disease is a person's coming and got diagnosis and it's based upon what kind of drug therapy you're going to give them and that's pretty much what it is I mean they they weren't talking attrition back then they weren't really you know interested we had didn't get any education and attrition and disease prevention is just not something they really care a lot about but that's that's because medicine is a detection and treatment field I mean that's what doctors do and Prevention often if it's a lifestyle issue which it usually is you know the World Health Organization says that that 60 percent of our deaths are because a lifestyle and you know that means to me that means if you really want to help people as a healer you want to look at their lifestyles but people get very invested in their lifestyles we have industries that make products that could be harmful and we still consume them if we know that they're harmful sometimes we still consume them anyway some of them are addictive things I mean obvious things like alcohol tobacco I mean these are obvious lifestyle factors that cause disease and we all know about it. And yet we still do it. We even have the government making money off of it with taxes so these become institutionalized and the medical field treats the disease because they're not going to change these these habits and behaviors I mean they have enough trouble trying to get people to quit smoking so you know it's that's the problem and that's what I call a cultural genic disease and that's a term that we coined and that means culture caused because if you think of people as cultural entities you know we're we're not just biological we're not rats or dogs or cats that you can do research on and and think it applies to humans or whatever but we're not just biological entities we are cultural entities we do things to our bodies that no other animals do because of the way we eat and dress and work and sleep and and you know all the things we do that are defined by our culture that people have done different ways throughout time and you know throughout history these things affect our physiology and that makes us unique among all the animals and so to me the way to study this and this is what applied medical anthropology is about is to look at how these these lifestyles that we're leaving living how they lead to these diseases and I usually you can either go one way or the other you can look at a lifestyle is obviously harmful and say Well can I be causing or you can look at a disease and say Gee I wonder could be causing that and the 1st thing I do is look at what people are doing how much of this is common sense and in terms of living a healthy lifestyle. You know common sense is a strange word because it's very uncommon. But I think some of it is common sense a lot of it is stuff that you know that you would think like don't wear tight clothing. Sets and that's one of our major discoveries which we're going to talk about. Is what happens with tight clothing everybody knows that and we talk about again makes sense but you know people don't think in common sense terms we're not. You know humans are rational animals we think we pride ourselves on our rationality but actually from my experience in studying humanity as an anthropologist we use our our ability to reason to rationalize doing what we want to do in the 1st place it's not like we're logical creatures like Mr Spock from Star Trek where we just make logical decisions we make emotional decisions and then we use our ability to reason to try to justify that to ourselves and rationalize that it's the right thing to do so when people point out things to you that that you might be doing that's harmful to yourself if you're invested in that behavior you find an easy way to rationalize it away and so common sense which might be the logic a look what you're doing yourself that well you know it's all right I'm not really worried about it and and we just cloak our our common sense in. In our in we be disguised what's common sense actually by you know cloaking it in our emotions and we we just want to do what we feel is right and what everybody else is doing want to conform being part of the culture and acting like everyone else and it is an important human trait I mean we are social beings the problem is what happens when your society when your culture is giving you behaviors that make you sick and it's hard to beat that it's hard to get information about it because you have so much invested in those behaviors industries you know and and sometimes it can be you know very fundamental things in our society that we just take so for granted that questioning it seems almost absurd and people go into like denial mode right away so that's that's the challenge of this it seems like it should be a logical commonsense thing but it's in practice it's very hard for people to to live according to common sense when you wrote the book dressed to kill specifically for women with regards to their clothing that they wore creating cancers How did you find this how did you stumble into this and maybe stumble is not the right word it almost is actually my my wife and I went to Fiji to do some field work on a completely different thing and she was pregnant at the time and we we were on a remote island this is back in the early 1990 s. We were on a remote island and the bra was kind of new there and in fact some women didn't even know what it looked like and this adolescent girl came over to us and so my wife and career searcher and co-author she was hanging out one of her bra's on a line to dry and the girl came over and said you know she was like really curious about it and she want to look at it and handle it and and she she says she what do you wear these. And so most for the 1st time at Explain something she took for granted ever since you know puberty eigenvalue where because the that's what's what people do you know she never really thought about us and then she said Well isn't it tight and she said well you know I suppose it is but you get used to it and that was the end of that conversation and then about a month about a week later Soma discovered a lump in her breast Oh my God and you can imagine what it's like being on a remote island in Fiji pregnant with your wife and you have something like that happen oh yes I mean it was like oh my God And we you know we we thought we had to go back to the mainland and we lived in California at the time so we went back you know after this this long flight back and thinking what could we have done I mean the 1st thing us is works I've done to causes and you know some as a healthy woman vegetarian exercises you know do everything right you know that kind of a thing like Linda McCartney You know was everything right how could you get breast cancer how could you get this disease and when she took her bra off when we got home to take a shower and we were looking at our breasts now for clues what could she have been doing and she we discovered something like that was in front of us like I say you can become oblivious to the obvious when you take your brow when a woman takes her bra off she typically has red marks and in Taishan is where the bra was pushing and squeezing her breasts and all around her chest and we took after granted all these years I mean you know you just take it off in the you know it's a very you know what he thinks about cancer or that way or anything like that right and but I immediately our minds went back to that woman the young girl in Fiji who said isn't it tight and the constriction issue suddenly just popped into our minds like this is constricting the breasts obviously as with those Asus is have something to do with blood flow Well it's actually lymphatic flow and that's something that people know a lot more about. Lymphatics now then they used to because there's so many women of that breast cancer and had a breast removed and the lymph nodes removed and the lymph when when that happens you get swelling and you get lymphedema So we know a lot more people under heard the word lymphatics more than they used to ever hear of it because so many people have been 15 and the lymphatic system is really a hugely important and underappreciated system you can't manipulate it with drugs or surgery it's a tiny it except the lymph nodes which are like filters that detect viruses and cancer cells and bacteria and in the tissues and it drains limper fluid because in actuality I don't know how many people realize this but your cells are sort

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