The 3 Secrets To Health: How You Should Approach Medicine
The Tai Lopez Show
Tai Lopez
4.8 • 6.9K Ratings
🗓️ 10 September 2019
⏱️ 60 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Visit netsuite.com/tai to download your FREE guide, “Seven Key Strategies to Grow your Profits”
Go to stamps.com, and click on the microphone at the top of the homepage and type in TAI—to get a 4-week trial plus free postage and a digital scale without any long-term commitment.
(click to tweet)
Health is more than a diet and exercise regimen.
When we take a minute to examine our health from a more global perspective, the other factors of well-being surface. Our lifestyle, our habits, our mindset—these are the things that shape a person’s vitality.
And on today’s episode of The Tai Lopez Show, we are joined by Dr. Martin Blaser, the Director of The Human Microbiome Project at NYU’s School of Medicine, to discuss the dangers of antibiotic use. Dr. Blaser has 28 patents, and is the author of Missing Microbes, a book that examines how our species is devolving with the declining supply of microbes in our system.
Tune in to this conversation to capture an educated perspective of the whole health ecosystem!
Don’t forget! You can also listen to The Tai Lopez Show on Spotify! Click “Follow” and let me know what you think!
(click to tweet)
Points to Keep In Mind
- Humans are actually a partnership between microbes and us (equal numbers of cells)
- Without microbes we would not be alive
- There is evidence that our supply of microbes is disappearing
- Evidence that this is at the root of the rising rates of autism, celiac disease, Alzheimer’s, etc.
- Most probiotics have not been tested in scientific studies over the long term
- Kids who take on average more antibiotics than others turn out fatter
- We only look at the benefits of antibiotics because doctors are too concerned about liability
- Babies pick up their mother’s microbes in the birth canal
- Rising rates of cesarean sections are preventing this from happening
- 70 years ago, agriculture experts figured out that if you feed antibiotics to animals, they gain weight faster
- Some cities have an antibiotics in their drinking water
- Sweden uses 40% of the antibiotics we use
- Epidemics come from the lack of diversity in our current living situations
- Kids born by C-section are more prone to disease (celiac disease, juvenile diabetes, etc.)
- The rate of juvenile diabetes is doubling every 25 years
- A Denmark study showed that antibiotics increase risk of inflammatory bowel disease by 14% in kids
- We’ve engineered a system where the doctor-patient relationship is sterile
- Antibiotics change the metabolism in adults
- We need better diagnostics to determine viral vs. bacterial infections
- Food preservatives are antibacterials destroying our microbiome
- Our good bacteria fights the bad bacteria; this is the problem with anti-bacterial products
- Hospitals and doctors like C-sections because they’re scheduled
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | I think that the dirt bacteria aren't that important. |
| 0:03.2 | I think what's important are the bacteria you get from your mom, |
| 0:06.4 | the bacteria that are on your skin, the ones that humans have had for a million years |
| 0:11.2 | that are disappearing. I think those are the important ones. |
| 0:18.4 | Okay, welcome to today's show. I've got a special correspondent doing the interview. |
| 0:24.6 | One of my close friends, Dr. Hermann Garcia Fresco, who is a molecular neurobiologist, |
| 0:31.4 | and he's going to be interviewing today's guest, Dr. Blazer. |
| 0:38.5 | It's pretty fascinating. I listen to it afterwards, and I think that I always say in life, |
| 0:46.3 | there's three outcomes of everything you do. The first one is because, as expected, |
| 0:53.2 | the second is things go worse than expected. The idea, the third is things go way better than |
| 0:59.8 | expected. You'll find that in anything, in a job interview. In a date, you have with somebody |
| 1:07.2 | in a business partnership. In this interview, we're expecting to be good, and everybody was like, |
| 1:15.1 | wow, it was amazing. Have fun listening. We're really a partnership between microbes and us. |
| 1:24.8 | The human microbiome project is to try to understand that. Let's figure out what's going on. |
| 1:29.1 | Is it an accurate statement to say without microbes, we wouldn't be able to be alive? |
| 1:33.9 | Yes, it is an accurate statement. There are some exceptions where you can raise animals without |
| 1:39.0 | microbes, but it's very artificial. Basically, it's a partnership. Without microbes, |
| 1:44.4 | we would not exist. Cool. So, what got you to write this book? |
| 1:51.5 | I've been thinking about the ideas in this book for at least 10 years, but I was always too busy, |
| 1:57.2 | and finally, some editors contacted me and said, you know, we've read about your work, |
| 2:02.1 | we think you have a book there. And finally, I just thought, yeah, I was going to do it. |
| 2:06.2 | I did it. Oh, good. So, I know you're a bestseller, and it's been featured ever. You've been |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Tai Lopez, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Tai Lopez and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.

