Dr Jack Kruse: "Most people don't realize why this story of autism is really important for people to understand because there's another physics part. This will probably be something that will tickle you because it brings you back to the magnetic part of the story.
"The human thalamus is where the alpha wave in the EEG comes from. OK? That wave is 7.83 Hz. That mimics the heartbeat of the earth. So via molecular resonance, the heartbeat of the earth that's created from the cathode ray of the sun hitting the anode with the magnetosphere around it (remember that that sun keeps magma flowing in the planet that creates Faraday's idea of a magnetic field), the magnetic field that's how it's informing your brain how things work through this thalamic relay.
"The caudal end of this retinohypothalamic tract, this story, the answers and parts are all there. This is the reason why defective sleep always comes, if you're on the rostral end it comes with alterations in vitamin A, the distal end it comes with problems related to the alpha wave. What sits in the middle of that pathway? I actually told you that in this podcast already: ATP, ADP, AMP to adenosine. Adenosine is the middle part.
"What stimulates adenosine? Red light. Bright huge intense red light stimulates adenosine. And the reason why, if there's any doctors that listen to this, they'll be stunned at this.
"On our crash carts for ATLS and ACLS (I'm talking about physicians), when somebody gets SVT (which is supraventricular tachycardia, that's a bad rhythm from an alien DC electric current in your heart), guess what the drug is you give? Adenosine. That tells the clinician immediately they have a problem with either vitamin A in the brain or they have a problem with the Schumann resonance in the thalamus. But none of them realize that."
Dr Sara Pugh: "Wow."
Dr Jack Kruse: "Exactly! It's kind of cool stuff."
Dr Jack Kruse with Dr Sara Pugh @ 01:15:26–01:17:25 https://youtu.be/cy8cByk8H00&t=4526