The Raw Dog Food Truth

The Raw Dog Food Rebellion: Challenging the Myths We've Been Fed

The Raw Dog Food Truth

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We dive deep into the controversial truth about pet vaccinations and explore why many health issues in pets may be linked to over-vaccination rather than diet or training.

• Questioning whether the rabies virus has ever been scientifically proven to exist
• Examining how vaccines like rabies may cause neurological damage and behavioral changes in pets
• Drawing parallels between increasing autism rates in children and behavioral issues in pets following vaccination
• Challenging the bacteria fear narrative that prevents many pet owners from trying raw feeding
• Discussing how fear-based beliefs about health can transfer from owners to their pets
• Exploring how seemingly "normal" pet behaviors like thunderstorm phobias may actually indicate neurological disturbances
• Highlighting the difference between healthy, alert raw-fed dogs versus "dumbed down" kibble-fed pets

Take the two-week raw feeding challenge: Switch your pet to a properly formulated raw diet for two weeks and see the difference in their health, energy, and behavior. Visit RawDogFoodAndCompany.com for a free consultation or AHAVet.com to schedule a wellness check with Dr. Judy Jasek.


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Speaker 1:

Oh snap. Hello Raw Feeders. I'm Deedee Mercer-Moffitt, ceo of Raw Dog Food and Company Weird Pets. Health is our business and we're friends, like my dear dear friend Dr Judy Jasek. I just love her because she doesn't let friends feed Kibble. Now do you, dr Jasek? Not at all, not even with a topper on it Toppers.

Speaker 2:

Dr Marty's, I shouldn't have said his name.

Speaker 1:

I shouldn't have said that. I try not to say things. I try not to say words out loud, but it just flew out of my mouth.

Speaker 2:

Sometimes it slips out, can't help it. Um, I don't think I told you this, but I got approached by a company some company making their own foods or whatever and I like asked if I wanted to be involved or consult or something or other. And I went in there in Colorado and I went and looked on their website and they got a kibble topper. I'm like kidding, and the kibble topper is made from, like brown rice and sweet potatoes and I'm like do I write them back and tell them how horrible that is? Or you know, like just ignore them because it's like, uh, you've got to be kidding me. You know you're asking here like so, yeah, not even with. I mean that.

Speaker 2:

I mean that to me that me that's like one of the worst contradictions. To have some foods that are healthy and some of the stuff they were promoting was okay, but then at the same time, you're promoting kibble toppers, like we've talked about. Oh, just meeting people where they're at. So people that still want to feed kibble, they can just put this topper on and keep their pet. Like how can they live that way? It's like that's such a contradiction. I don't know how companies can do that, but I mean aside from the fact that they make more money doing that, but I don't know how they can live with themselves and do that.

Speaker 1:

Well, I guess you could say it like this they can live with themselves and do that. Well, I guess you could say it like this um, did you want me to consult you on, um, which poisons to put in your dog's body? Or, uh, no poisons in your dog's body? Uh, would you like the, the the poison consult? You know how many poisons and which poisons? Or did you want the non-poison console? Wouldn't that be interesting if you could just put it out there in the most truest and blunt terms of what it really is? I mean, because you and I were talking prior to the podcast and you have been invited to be on Children's Health Defense Network. You're going to be on there this Thursday, right Live.

Speaker 2:

Financial Rebellion the Financial Rebellion show.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and they've asked you to come on there to talk about pet health, right, and you know it's so funny. I think that's a great place to be because RFK Jr right now you know that is his, his site, right, and um, they are looking into deeper, not that I don't think that he probably knows the answer to that which he's seeking in regards to, uh, vaccines and autism, but you and I were talking about, um, the whole rabies thing again. Is it poison or is it not? Is it a toxin or is it it not? Is it okay to put a little bit in the body or not? And, furthermore, is there really a freaking need for it?

Speaker 2:

Right, right, that's the big thing yeah, that's the big thing. We were talking about Christine Massey and her FOIA that it's never been proven that the rabies virus even exists. You dig into the history as I've done. It was all just made up, propaganda, and even the contemporaries propaganda by Louis Pasteur, even his contemporaries at the time have written that they didn't believe him. But it was all just made up. So why is that narrative stuck? Just made up? So why is that narrative stuck in something like 150 years of this fear around rabies? And there's laws in every state just about that require these shots. You can't bring dogs into the country, you can't travel internationally unless you get the rabies.

Speaker 1:

It is so ingrained is so ingrained, and that's the only vaccine that's been that it's that ingrained, okay, so here here's what I wonder if you were able to um prove which which I think is provable that rabies is not a thing, and then there wouldn't be this vaccine, do you think that they hold onto that? Because they're like, oh my gosh, if that one, if that one crumbles, then it's going to be a cascade effect on the human side and we're going to have this, you know, rebellion, basically, I'm sure if, if they let, if they let the truth come out or really put it out there outside of just besides us few kooky people that say, okay, it's never been actually proven that viruses exist.

Speaker 2:

If that became more mainstream thinking, the whole vaccine industry would crumble. I mean, how many? Probably trillions of dollars. If you added up animal side and human side, that's a lot of money that would crumble that whole industry because it's all based on. We've got these little, you know, boogeyman viruses that we have to fight and we have to create health by giving injections to children and animals. That's the only way they're going to be healthy, is protecting them against you know, all of these things. So, yeah, if you, you know, proved that concept or that I mean it's actually has been proven, if it was just accepted in one case, sure crumble the whole industry. Yeah, and couldn't have that. Those poor companies that lose all that money, oh man, it just break my heart.

Speaker 1:

I mean yeah, it can't just be okay. I mean, on one hand, yes, it is, there's a lot of money in the rabies vaccines, but it has to be, in my opinion, more than that and, like I said, that it starts a cascade effect, right? So let's just take, for instance, what happens, dr Jacek, if Robert Kennedy Jr does prove that autism is caused by a toxin from said injection, whatever, that is Right. And we've given all these babies and we've given all these kids. You know what? What is going to happen.

Speaker 1:

You already see where these on the media, right, where they're coming out and saying that is so dangerous and look what he's doing and they're villainizing. You know, making him a villain, that he is trying to get to the truth, which is very telling, I think, whenever you want to stop people from investigating as much as they can about something that we definitely see going off the charts, right, you see cancer off the charts, you see autism off the charts, and it can't just be bad genes, it can't just be just food. I mean, I think that we're ingesting a lot of toxins all the time, whether that's water, air, food. Certainly the sugar industry, for Pete's sake, is so addictive and is so damaging. Then let's add alcohol on top of that, right? So all these different things that would be a cascade effect are they? Are they actually gonna let somebody prove that? Is that I, I, you know, or?

Speaker 2:

they'll or they'll, they'll find ways to discount it. I mean, like you know, you know I've seen, you see the graphs. I mean I've seen these are well published, like the autism rates and the number of vaccines that kids get. So in the 80s, you know, they started giving lots more vaccines and the autism rate just shot up. It's like one in 30. That's crazy, that's a lot of kids and the cost to, you know, families and our society, because a lot of these kids probably end up on disability. You know medicaid, um, because the families just can't, it's millions of dollars, you know, over the lifetime of these kids to to take care of them. It can be really tragic, it can bankrupt families, you know to have have to, to have to take care of them. I mean that's a lot of kids. And then she asked, well, what's changed? I mean what's changed? I mean OK, so we talk about, well, correlation isn't causation. But it's like, ok, well then let's do an experiment and let's just change the vaccine schedule. And let's just change the vaccine schedule, let's ask for volunteers to do a research study and say, okay, all you people that don't want to vaccinate your kids anyway, let's just track them. How many of them get autism. They don't want to do that study either because they know what'll come out. I think it's the same thing in animals behavioral problems. Look at the cancer rates. What? It's the same thing in animals behavioral problems. Look at the cancer rates. You know what. What happened after the covid thing and and that covid jab. You heard all about all these turbo cancers and people and the cancer rates going up.

Speaker 2:

What are we seeing in pets? Never used to see. I'm working with a patient now. It's so sad. This dog is three years old and has really severe lymphoma. I mean, like this dog's having trouble breathing. It's a lymph node. It's so big. I mean it's severe. I I don't know if the dog's gonna make it. I mean we're trying. Three years old, I mean, and what's? And what's changed?

Speaker 2:

This dog actually was not very heavily vaccinated either. This dog's a mystery, but is setting it off in this dog? But we know that they're been using they're using more mRNA technology and animal vaccines. I see the ads. You know you get these things, cause every veterinarian gets them. You know you get. You know these advertisements and they're saying using this new mRNA technology and all that same technology, they're using the COVID shot. I think they're using the same stuff and it's causing the the same problems the cancers, the behavioral changes. I think people have just gotten so used to seeing kind of dumbed down dogs that they don't know what a normal, healthy, alert dog that's not been over vaccinated, eating a raw diet, really looks like. Just like I think a lot of people don't know what normal kids like anymore.

Speaker 1:

You know, it's pretty, pretty sad you know, I'm always amazed at the dogs that I see that are just not with it. Right, like they don't understand fully what you're saying. They're easily agitated or easily distracted, right Like I, like I know you guys, probably I, I sound like my mom, who's always bragged about us, and her friends are probably like we don't want to hear you brag about your kids anymore. Okay, I'm going to have to brag about laws. The dog can, can see my hand signals. I can literally do to the right and she will run right. I can do it to the left and she'll run left, because we, the, where we walk, there's a big bike path, so I'm looking across the bike and I'll give her this and she'll run this direction and then I'll say sit, boom, she sits, and then I'll shoot her over to this side, you know. Or she'll leave her toy way behind us and I'm like go get it, and that's all I have to say, and she'll run back and get it, you know.

Speaker 1:

And then I've seen other dogs that are like I don't even get you, like what is this? That's moving your pie hole. Your pie hole is saying something, but I don't get it Right and I'm like that seems very like a neurological problem, right. That seems like there's something that's clouding their mind, their eye, they're not making good contact, they're not able to observe their environment the way that dogs are meant to observe their environment, right? So there seems to be something quite off and I just can't believe that it's just bad training, right? Or bad food.

Speaker 1:

Yes, both of those are a contributing factor if you give mixed signals, right. But here's the thing Most people are pretty consistent, most pet parents are pretty consistent in what they say to their dogs and the way they treat their dogs and the way that they give commands. So eventually that dog, you know, is going to pick those up, right, and that would be consistent. So I have to think that it's something else. And certainly you and I have seen massive groups of dogs, right, we've seen the ones that are coming over from lots of vaccines, lots of bad food Okay, let's take the training out of it. We see what that dog looks like, smells like, acts like, versus the ones where people have already had that and they say, hey, I'm going to raise this dog differently. There's a vast difference between those two dogs and we're not making that up.

Speaker 2:

And I've had people tell me that they've seen their dog change. Same like when people, parents, say they give one of their kids a vaccine and they're just not the same afterwards. That people say that and and and. A lot of it's been after the rabies vaccine. The rabies vaccine definitely has neurologic effects, cause they'll say you know, I just gave that one vaccine and dog was just never the same. Personality changed. They're just sort of blank. It's Like you said. They're just sort of lights are on but nobody's home, you know, and they're not the same.

Speaker 2:

The other thing I see really increase is a phobias, you know, dogs afraid. Why should dogs be afraid of thunderstorms? It's a natural thing. Why should they be afraid of of noises to the point that they're, like you know, of of noises to the point that they're, like you know, destroying the house because they're just so terrified of noises? Like that shouldn't be like those types of phobias. That is.

Speaker 2:

That's a neurologic disturbance and I agree I don't think that comes from the diet. I think the diet helps. They've actually shown that in autistic children, that when autistic children get off the sugars, get off the gluten, get on a healthy diet, especially a ketogenic diet, because it's good for the brain that their autism symptoms get much better and some kids can even, you know, get off the spectrum to where they're developing normally. So the diet can definitely help. That's why it's important to eat the raw diet we preach about every week.

Speaker 2:

But I think the vaccines really play a role and not all dogs, you know, get get past that, especially when you're giving so many at at one time. And the other thing is, you know, for people that have a lifestyle, they're going to travel, they're like I just I gotta travel with my dog, I gotta get the rabies shot. Well, if you're feeding a good diet, I mean, my opinion is, you know, go places that your dog needs a rabies shot. But, um, if you're gonna do it and you're feeding a good diet, your dog needs a rabies shot. But if you're going to do it and you're feeding a good diet, your dog's going to stand a better chance of processing the toxins and not not having the side effects.

Speaker 1:

You know, I'm excited about this interview that you're going to do, because the woman that that is going to interview you is an attorney, correct? Mm-hmm? Okay, the name of the show is what? Financial?

Speaker 2:

Rebellion.

Speaker 1:

Financial Rebellion? Yeah, and it's a part of the Children's Defense Network, mm-hmm. Okay, so hopefully, when you're on there, you able to ask what is her name? Carolyn, the lady that's gonna. Okay, carolyn, who's gonna interview you if, when a foia request is made?

Speaker 1:

Okay, like what christine massey does, right, so she goes to all of these CDC, the World Health Organization, the NIH. She goes to all these different organizations and ask for the information that would show that said virus was the cause of this outbreak or disease or that they've actually been able to identify, right, these viruses To which, to this day and probably now, over 300 of these FOIA requests have come back without any evidence whatsoever. So it would be very interesting if you remember to ask Carolyn and they lie, if somebody requests a FOIA you know the Freedom of Information Act if we could get the information that substantiates the claim. Right? Let's take rabies that rabies exists and that we tested it, that we know it exists, that we know that this said vaccine actually takes away the risk from said virus that we've never found.

Speaker 1:

I mean, can they lie about that? That would be an interesting question, because I can just hear people. Dr Jasek, well, that can't be true. They probably were just lying about it and didn't want to give that information to Christine Massey, and I'm like that doesn't make any sense, because if they actually had something that they had proved, don't you think they'd be smashing that in our sphincter all the time?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you would think so. If they had the actual legitimate proof, it wouldn't come into question. The problem is they just say that it exists. They say here's a picture of the rabies virus, but they have no definitive proof that what is in that picture. They have pictures. They say the rabies is a little bullet shaped virus. It's like little bullets. It's never ever been proven that what that is causes rabies causes disease.

Speaker 1:

And why has nobody?

Speaker 2:

ever asked that. Did you think a medical professional would? I mean I asked that we asked that did you think of a medical professional when I? I mean I asked that we asked that. Why didn't anybody else ask that?

Speaker 1:

well, what, what, what. What answer do you get when you ask that question?

Speaker 2:

people just believe the narrative. The narrative, they just believe you know, well, you know, I I that that that it's been that the animals they say the animals have been tested for it and been shown to have it. But what tests? How has it been? Again, these tests are just looking for these things. And the thing about all these tests, these little, pretty microscopic pictures, once you take something. If I've learned anything or I got anything really valuable, I feel, from Dr Tom Collin is this when you take anything out of the body and look at it, it's not in its normal state ever. And when you take something out of the body, you look into the microscope, you're drying it, you're staining it. That's not what it looks like in the body. How do you know that these little things you're seeing aren't artifacts? But people believe the test. They say well, the dog tested positive for rabies. Well, how do you know that test is valid? Well, because the CDC says so. You know, it's like, and it's just so ingrained in people's minds. Even people that are more holistically oriented will still believe the rabies narrative, even though it's it's never been proven.

Speaker 2:

Louis Pasteur, who supposedly started the whole thing, he identified, you know, quote unquote mad dogs. These were dogs that were salivating, were aggressive, were in ill health, they might bite people, aggressive, were in ill health, they might bite people. And then he, he took the. What he did was he took the saliva from these dogs and he injected it into rabbits brains and the rabbits got neurologic symptoms. So he said, okay, the dogs must have this virus. And he called it rabies. I don't even know where that name came from, actually, but he called it rabies and said that's what rabies is. Well, you inject anything into an animal's brain, it's going to have neurologic symptoms because it's not supposed to be sticking needles into it. Come on.

Speaker 2:

It's like you can stick saline into a rabbit's brain and you're not supposed to be sticking needles in there and they're going to have symptoms. So then he said, okay, well, the dogs are acting this way because of the virus, but they never investigated what else could be. A lot of the dogs were starved. They were abused, they were. They were starving, so they were malnourished. They're eating all kinds of anything they could pick up so they could get toxins, any sores, any kind of a sore in the mouth that's going to cause them to salivate. So they never looked at, they never took any of these dogs and said, okay, what if we feed them a better diet, put them in better health conditions, you know, take care of them, give them a loving home? Do these symptoms go away? No, they just destroyed them. So it was all really made up without any proof and it's persisted for years. And I think the reason it's persisted is because of the fear. There's a lot of fear generated in the media.

Speaker 2:

You know, you've seen movies with these rabid dog old yeller got rabies, you know, and all this stuff is they really played up this narrative because people can supposedly get rabies is supposedly the one virus that all mammals can get. So people can get it from the bite of a dog and that's what the veterinarians are playing. I'm all like you come in here with your dog, it's not vaccinated while I'm putting my whole staff at risk when I say let them go get the damn shot, leave the dogs alone.

Speaker 1:

Right. Well, I'm telling you, I've said this to you guys before my father, when he was a kid, there was a rabid supposedly okay, he didn't even get bitten, but supposedly in his neighborhood there was some sort of rabid dog. They were all going crazy. So what did he get Shots in the stomach, and you know what he got from that Encephalitis. His brain swelled. And you know what he got from that, what they called, you know, polio. You know there was, and that was also the time of DDT. So I mean so many things. I'm like he never even got bit Right and yet they did this crazy stuff. To the point, his brain swelled so bad that he had to learn how to speak over again. I mean, it was a bad deal. It was a bad deal.

Speaker 1:

What? What happened to him with these, with these shots and um, so again, the, these unsubstantiated fears are so easy to project onto the world. Right, you and I have seen this so many times oh, there's an outbreak over here. Well, really, let's see the test right. And if anybody could have figured this out, well, it had to be Fauci could have figured this out, dr Jasey, because he was doing all types of horrible, terrible tests on animals, this little Oompa Loompa, which I heard him called the other day, which I think is fantastical. Oompa Loompa, um, you know this, this guy's really evil. Has no problem seeing people or pets uh, suffer um I think he must enjoy it.

Speaker 2:

How can you cause so much suffering and you don't have this evil at your core that enjoys watching it? Because it's not natural. Nobody could harm so many people. He orchestrated the whole supposed AIDS outbreak, where the truth of the matter was that the people were actually being poisoned by the drug. I'm blanking on it. What's?

Speaker 1:

that AZ-T.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the AZ-T drug that they used for to supposedly treat AIDS, which was what was ultimately killing the patients, and the initial symptoms were what people say. That don't believe. The whole AIDS narrative was because of the lifestyle, because it was primarily in gay men and they didn't have a particularly healthy lifestyle I'm partying a lot and a lot of drugs and alcohol and all this stuff so they would be not the healthiest people to begin with. So they kind of picked on that population and started they named this thing called AIDS and then they started injecting the drugs. And it was the drugs that really made them sick, the AZT not. That created the AIDS, because there's the virus, the supposed, you know, human immunodeficiency virus. Hiv AIDS was the autoimmune deficiency syndrome. That was the whole syndrome where they just got all these chronic diseases and just went to hell. That was caused by the treatment, not by some virus.

Speaker 2:

It's just so easy to blame anything, not about polio. Polio, like you were saying, because your dad it's linked to DDT came about during the time of DDT. And then they come out with the vaccine, quit using DDT. Oh, the vaccine has saved the world where really it was the toxicity from the, you know, from the pesticide all along. We've really been really been lied to. You really got to just sit back and say can I believe anything? I've been told.

Speaker 1:

Well, I don't know what I'm supposed to do, Dr Jasek, if I don't believe anything.

Speaker 2:

How do I go on? Trust your gut, do what's natural.

Speaker 1:

But my gut, but here, this is the only problem I have with trusting the gut. Okay, here's one of my issues with that. Okay, here's one of my issues with that. Your gut, okay, typically picks up on what you believe, right? So let's say this that if you are a huge proponent of vaccines which is good, you know, you think that they are the best things that slice bread.

Speaker 1:

I find it hard to believe there are folks that think like that, but I do know that there are, because we saw a bunch of them during the covet. Um, love them, I want every vaccine. Because I think I don't, I don't in, I don't believe and I don't see that these people signed up for fetal bovine kidney cell, formaldehyde, mercury, thermosyl, you know, bromine. They don't really realize all those things that are going into their body, right? They don't say, hey, inject me with all of that stuff that looks like you know the stuff under the kitchen sink. They don't really get that. What they think is I'm getting some sort of great um protection against the boogeyman that's floating, you know, up my nostrils. Okay, this is, this is what they're thinking um. And now I've lost my train of thought. Uh, that I was going trusting your gut, okay thank you very much.

Speaker 2:

Your problem with trusting your gut, because I'm anxious to hear this Grab it back, come back.

Speaker 1:

So if you really believe that, right or wrong, true or false, the trusting your gut, to me seems that it could lead you down the wrong path because it's bouncing off what you truly believe. So if you really truly believe that something is going to protect you and you've heard shows like this one say, I don't know now, bunch of toxins in there, I don't know now, bunch of toxins in there. And they're sitting in front of their pharmacist and the pharmacist says would you like the shingles and the COVID and the?

Speaker 2:

RSV. Would you like all those? Just like pneumonia yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'll just give them to y'all in one arm and they're like I'm going with my gut. My gut says, yeah, I need to be protected. Why? Because I have a belief in that. So I don't know, if you have a rebuttal, tell me. But sometimes I'm like can I really trust my gut? Because could it be that my beliefs that I've picked up and I've just decided it's true, haven't really investigated if that belief is based on anything? I just decided to believe it? Could it really influence my gut? And then my gut takes me down the wrong damn road.

Speaker 2:

I, I suppose it's true. I I think, if I've heard a lot of people tell me about their pets, though, that you know like, yeah, I just knew I shouldn't have done that shot, like they knew. But they were told by the, the vet, that they needed that to be protected. So in their head that sounded good, but their gut was telling them, yeah, maybe that's not, maybe that's not, maybe that's not the best thing. So maybe, if you're, maybe you could be more in your head and really listening to what your gut's telling you.

Speaker 1:

Well, yeah, I like it. I like it what you're saying there. And then you have to take another step backwards and say why is it that we trust other people more than ourselves? Is it because we've made mistakes and we're like, ah, that feels like, that feels like hell, it feels like torture when I make a mistake and I have a regret that I made this mistake? Therefore, I don't really trust myself. I don't know if I can really make an educated decision. Maybe you can make an educated decision better than me.

Speaker 2:

I think part of it too is where do you see? Think part of it too is where do you see health coming from? Like is to me believing that you need vaccines to stay healthy. You're giving your power away. If you believe, like I do, that your power to heal is within you, then you you shouldn't need like those external things. You need to activate that, that power within. So I guess I would be asking where did that belief come from? Where were you fed that information? From your doctor, from the media, like, where did that, where did that information come from? And then, is that belief really true for you or what you know was it? Was it propaganda? Because I I think people do believe things they they hear in in the media of course that's why we have it.

Speaker 1:

But where?

Speaker 2:

but I think you have to ask that question where is that coming? I mean, why do you believe what you believe? Because you know, because you're, I mean, I start to ask you know clients that sometimes like well, why, why do you believe that? Why do you think you know? Why do you think your dog has Lyme disease? Well, because it tested positive. How do we know we can believe the test? The test is an antibody test. It could just mean exposure. Well, it's because it's got these symptoms. Well, could those symptoms be from anything else? Because what happens is you know, there, once you have a believe, believe your dog has Lyme disease and all the symptoms are, like, attributed to it. So maybe it's not like I got the answers here, but maybe we need to examine where our beliefs come from. Why do we believe what we believe? And maybe that would be part of that answer answer?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, I told you that. You know in the hospital what they say to cancer patients can't eat raw veggies, can't eat raw food, got to be cooked to death. Cook all the goodness out of it, cook it, because that's healthier for you. And my question was what are we afraid of? What are we afraid of? Oh, salmonella, e coli and listeria. Okay, and we have proof that this has caused irreparable damage to patients.

Speaker 1:

Not the chemo, not the radiation, not the antibiotic. It's the bacteria on the food. Seriously, I mean there is no answer for that and that, but I will say that I see this in the raw diet all the time. Right, dog eats a raw diet. Dog has loose stools, you know, maybe throws up, and it's automatically some type of bacteria. Okay, that's one.

Speaker 1:

And you can never change pet parents' minds. They got that. I mean that fear is so ingrained that it's like I would rather feed my dog boiled chicken and rice that has no nutritional value in it whatsoever when it's not unwell or when it's not feeling good. Or I would rather stuff that down their throat than just letting them fast for a couple of days. It is just, it's got to be bacteria, or I have tracked this, dr Jacek, not like you know to the T, but I see it over and over and over again, and this one is really funny when the plants run out of labels or they run out of the sleeves that the food goes in and it just comes out in a pure white casing with the label on it, we invariably get calls my dog won't eat this.

Speaker 1:

You've changed the recipe. You've changed something. You change. My dog won't eat it. Because I'm like it's not different, it is the exact same food. Now, I can't tell you whether that's the pet parent having that fear and that thought and that transfers over to the dog or not, but I can tell you that there is nothing different about the recipe. Now, when I say that you're not going to get the same cow you had the last time, because there's only so much cow to go around, because once the cow's gone, the cow's gone. We got a new cow coming in.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it's sort of like if, if, if you and I, dr jasic, were the you know being ground up and, um, like soylent green, right the show, we're being ground up. You eat a, a, really, you know you eat like a very different than I do. And, uh, you, you don't do any gluten. I eat gluten because I never checked to see if there is gluten. So I'm sure there is gluten. Maybe you don't eat dairy. You know there's different things. Now can I say that typically the animals are fed the same thing it could be, but seasons change, you guys, and if they can't eat grass because there's snow covered, we can't let them starve to death. They're going to eat something different. Okay Now, if that cow is in the Texas region versus a cow that's in the Pennsylvania region, maybe there's going to be a little difference there.

Speaker 2:

They're eating different grasses, whatever you know, and then different things grow in the pasture depending on the year and on the waterfall and the region, so they're going to taste different depending on what they're eating right, but I will tell you that it's.

Speaker 1:

It's a weird phenomena that I see people will call me saying my dog won't eat this. So we're like, give them one with the label on it. Give them one, try to find, you know, and don't show them the package, because maybe they think that it's different.

Speaker 2:

And if you show the dog the package, maybe they're like, hey, that's different. I'm just wondering Is mom trying to pull something over? I'm thinking it's time for my beef rotation and maybe she's trying to feed me chicken or something, because the packaging's changed, so maybe they just shouldn't be showing it to their dogs.

Speaker 1:

People say that I'm really facetious, but I'm serious, I totally believe you, I can just totally see that people and you know, what you know what I think back to beliefs.

Speaker 2:

I think the way to know a false belief is if the belief is based in fear. If you're afraid, because I think, if you're afraid of something, if you're doing something because you, because you're afraid of something, you're afraid of getting a disease, or you're afraid, then I think that's that could be a sign of a false belief. You're afraid, you know the food's bad or whatever. They put that fear energy into the dog's bowl and the dog feels it. Or they put it down for 10 seconds the dog can think see, dog didn't eat it.

Speaker 1:

You know that I eat raw meat, right, you know I eat raw hamburger meat. Yeah, okay, I love it. But I will say this Sometimes, you know, it's like this tastes a little off, tastes a little off to me. So I give it to Lazi and she's like this is damn good. Yeah, she's like this is damn good. Yeah, she's like give me all your stuff. And there was some. What was pork? You know it was cooked. Obviously I don't eat raw pork, but it was a pre-cooked some pork. And you know, a lot of times I'll do like a three-day fast. I forget to put my stuff in, like the freezer so it goes. You know, know, doesn't smell so good and I I give all the stuff that doesn't smell good to me.

Speaker 1:

My food, uh, in Lassie's food, right, I mean, she eats, as you guys might suspect, every single type of food that we have. She eats, right, it's a big rotation. Um, and it's so funny because most pet parents are like, ooh, that probably would make my dog sick. It's a little off to me. I'm like it won't, it won't. I just don't get. I don't get how this bacteria fear is. You got to test it out, jacek? I mean you really? I mean, I guess maybe that's why you and I and neely and all of us that do the, the raw feeding, um just don't worry about it and therefore that vibration of fear or worry doesn't get transferred onto the dogs because we have no fear of it I think that's a big part of it.

Speaker 2:

I really do, because what I mean? What other explanation could there be? It's not bad, and even that food that smells a little bad to you might not even hurt you. If you didn't believe, you weren't afraid that it was gonna be bad for you. It might taste a little funky, but that's just what happens. It's like fruit, you know, like. How do you know that fruit is ripe? But you kind of smell it, you know. I mean, ripening is really just a part of the rotting process. You just eat it before it rots, right, but it changes texture, changes the smell and all those sugars that are created. It's because it's breaking down the fruit, the fruit's breaking down. You let it go too long and it gets a little mushy and a little funky and doesn't. It's not as appealing, but it doesn't mean it's bad, it's just part of it's just going away. Just like us, we're going to go away someday too. We'll probably smell pretty bad too someday when we're going away.

Speaker 1:

That's called old people smell. You know, I was asking my mom about Easter. She went over to my brother's and I asked if my nephew showed up and she said no, he didn't come because his little boy had some sort of a virus, you know, vomiting and throwing up, and so we didn't want him to come and infect everybody else. Okay, and I was like, okay, you know, I mean, I guess it's it, it goes back to that, right, so every everybody looks at that as something that gets passed around. But I'm like, if, if, I, I guess I'd want to test that out. Right, just have somebody come.

Speaker 1:

Right, everybody is in this environment, okay, and you bring somebody that was in another environment, that was supposedly, you know, sick with something, and put them in this environment. Does everybody get sick, right? Or is it that everybody gets sick because they're eating the same thing, they're drinking the same thing? You see what I'm saying? I just it's so hard to make that kind of make that distinction and yet we cannot get the FOIA request back to that. That shows that these viruses are actually existing, right, that these viruses are actually existing, right.

Speaker 1:

So, supposedly, supposedly, something was going around in Oklahoma, right, it's one of my parents. We got this thing going around. You know, all my kids are getting sick, they're getting diarrhea, they're getting this and that Kids at the daycare are getting hand-to-mouth disease, and so you're just like nobody will stop and really look at that and say what is happening. So, like these, these kids are in this daycare. Okay, like these little kids in the daycare, they're together, eating on the same toys, licking on the same floors, you know, doing what kids do, but none of the parents, none of the parents. I'm like, well, if it's a virus, how is it that none of the parents are experiencing the same thing? It couldn't be a contact thing. Could it be a cleaning solution? Could it be? What could it be? Could it be something different?

Speaker 2:

Something toxic. And then I mean, like you know, they feed them snacks there or something. You know, maybe there's a common snack, something that they ate. You know, red dye, number 40 or something you know made them all sick. I mean, who knows? I think it could be, I think it could be a lot of different things. How about, you know, do they go outside and play? Are there pesticides? Are they spraying weeds out there? Are they spraying the weeds out there? You know they do that in playgrounds. You know, did they all get a good dose of glyphosate out there, maybe Playing? They're running, playing, get it on their hands, and then they don't wash their hands and they come in and eat. And you know, I mean there can be all sorts of reasons for it.

Speaker 1:

But if it's a virus, wouldn't you think that the parents would get it? And here's how we justify that, or we reason it away. We say, well, the immune system, the immune system is different.

Speaker 2:

The adults have a stronger immune system.

Speaker 1:

You're just like, do they? How are we testing that? How are we um knowing that beyond just the belief?

Speaker 2:

it's and that it's. It's a popular popular narrative, and then once enough people believe something and it's said enough times, it becomes true, whether it is or not yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So anyway, it's just it's. It's so interesting because I'd like to know the truth. I I would like to see the testing done. I would like to know the truth. The problem is dr jaycee, who's gonna do it? Who is going to?

Speaker 2:

really. That's why this is the raw dog food truth podcast. That is right.

Speaker 2:

That's why we do this right and we yak and we toss this stuff around because we want the truth, because I don't know. I think I'm learning more and more what's not true, but finding out what is really true is harder. I think it's safe to say that most of what we've been taught in medicine and about health and in the conventional side has not been true. There's been ulterior motives and we know that what's been taught in nutrition for pets and people is not true. Well, I think we know what's true in the diet for dogs and cats. I, you know, feel like I know what's the best diet to feed a dog or a cat for, pretty, pretty dang sure.

Speaker 1:

And back to Belize. You can talk to your blue in the face I can talk to. I'm green in the face, right. And if somebody believes that they must have buttloads of synthetics in their dog's food, they're going to do it, because I see that all the time too. If they believe that kibble has massive amounts of nutrients in it and that it cleans their dog's teeth because the breeder or a vet gave him a prescription diet, there is nothing that you and I are going to be able to do, but the one thing that a pet parent can do to see it for themselves is to try it. Do the raw diet for two weeks, and I don't mean throw them a steak. Let someone like us help you pick it out, feed it to your dogs. It's got the right amount of bone, organs and fat and meat in it. Okay, give it a good solid two weeks and let's just see what you think.

Speaker 1:

Don't take our word for it let's just see what you think, because I just bet you, I would just bet the old sphincter okay, that your dog is going to love. It is going to feel better, look better, better, smell better, better poops, better gut digestive issues, better skin issues, if you will give it a try. You don't have to believe me, you don't have to believe Dr Jacek, but just see what your eyes say. But you can't do it half-assed. Okay, you go. Okay, well, I'm on my, I'm gonna cheat just a little, just gonna cheat a little bit. Okay, I can't, I just can't, can't go all the way because they're afraid.

Speaker 2:

Well, the deal is all the fear, the deal, the fear, yeah, and the deal is off.

Speaker 1:

right, the deal is off if, if you gotta cheat, there ain't cheating, there'll be a cheater.

Speaker 2:

Because even a little bit of poison is still poison.

Speaker 1:

Come on, dr Jason, that's no fun. Hey, do you think that Robert Kennedy is going to be successful in making some headway? What do you think? Do you think they're going to actually let him? I don't know, I mean that's the question.

Speaker 2:

Are they going to let him? Do you think they're going to actually let him? I don't know. I mean, that's the question Are they going to let him? I mean, I think he's very well intentioned in getting you know. He says he wants to get the evidence, but are they going to let him have the information? Is the evidence going to be presented truthfully, and all of the evidence, or are we going to get part of the story and they're going to say, well, okay, we can see these correlations, but it doesn't prove anything?

Speaker 2:

I was listening to a podcast, a story this was actually on chd where a woman was being interviewed who whose children had one of her sons had started to act, show some signs of autism after a vaccine, and the doctor told her that some children are just predisposed and sooner or later they're predisposed to autism. Sooner or later something's going to cause it to come out, and if it wasn't the vaccine, it would have been some other illness or something else that happened, but sooner or later it would have come out because he's just going to get it. That's, you know, that's what they're told. So I know, are they going to present truthful information? Are they going to allow all the information to come out? I don't know. That's the question. I think the information is unquestionably there, that the link between autism and vaccines. It's just if they let it out and how they let it out. And what other counter narrative do they present? Or we go to war with China and then everybody gets distracted, or something else. They do that too right, so that interview.

Speaker 1:

And everybody gets distracted with something else. I don't, they do that too, right, right, all right, so that interview. You guys. Do you have to be a member of Children's Health Defense website in order to hear that interview that you'll be doing? Will it be live on Thursday? And then it will go into an archive where people can also hear it? Yep, I'll send you the link and you can post it. Okay, great, now listen you guys. April is almost over and Dr Jacek is still. You can still get her April wellness checkups, okay, and this is the time that you want to get a checkup. This is not your standard. Hey, we're doing a checkup and here's your flea and take your heartworm and your rabies, okay, so what you will get with dr jacek is a healthier alternative to all of these actual wellness, not creating sickness exam.

Speaker 2:

Actual, keep getting, you should well you should have.

Speaker 1:

Maybe you should have been really sarcastic. I think you should have named this a really sarcastic like program. Like you said, no BS checkup or I don't know. We we, you and I should have thought about this, dr Jason. We should have said you know, this is, this is not up, your sphincter wellness checkup. This is like you know we should have. We should have come up with a really snarky name for it, okay, well, we'll work on that for next time.

Speaker 2:

Okay, your next promotion you call me because you know I'm all for the snarkiness If anybody could come up with a snarky title.

Speaker 1:

it would be you. Well, listen, you've got to get these appointments scheduled by the end of April in order to qualify for the discount. Okay, so through the month of April on these.

Speaker 2:

And you can schedule them like into May, but you got to make the appointment by the end of April, yeah, yeah, so you're going to get $25 off of a regular price of 95.

Speaker 1:

So for $70, they're going to help you formulate a plan to keep your pet in optimal health in the upcoming year without poisoning them. How about that? Who is out there offering that kind of program? I don't know anyone. We are yes, you are, and you can go over to AHAVetcom. Ahavetcom, and it's Dr Judy Jasik, j-a-s-e-k.

Speaker 1:

Listen. Get your dogs on a species appropriate diet. Take my two week challenge. Okay, please prove me wrong If you can. I don't think you can Get over to RawDogFoodAndCompanycom. Brian is sitting right there just waiting for your phone call. He's just waiting for you. He's awesome. He's waiting for you to sign up for that free consultation and he's going to help you get your dog in the best possible shape. Okay, get over to rawdogfoodandcompanycom, where your pet's health is our business. And what, dr Jacek, friends feed kibbleble y'all. That's right. If you have any questions, email us right here at raw dog food and companycom. We'll answer them right here on the podcast. We'll see you next week, everybody Bye-bye. Oh, snap. Find out how you can start your dog on the road to health and longevity and longevity. Go to rawdogfoodandcompanycom, where friends don't let friends feed kibble, and where your pet's health is our business.

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