Gulf Is Polluted, Aajonus Property, Stem Cell Company, Spas

Tags

fish

food sourcing

pollution

aajonus

health centre

los angeles

hot springs

aajonus plans

[2006]

[Aajonus]

And I said, well, you know, nobody's offering to buy me a- he said, "How about Costa Rica"? I said, "I checked Costa Rica, too expensive". You know the only real estate agency down there is century 21 from America, and they jack the prices up so bad, it's terrible.

I won't live on the Atlantic.

[Attendee]

Why not?

[Aajonus]

Because that's the Gulf and two US nuclear bases dump their nuclear waste there in the Gulf. Plus you have the Panama Canal, which is very close, and it's all that oil from the tankers. And some of those tankers are backed up for three weeks to a month, and they're sitting out there spilling all kinds of garbage.

I don't eat anything from the Gulf. I won't liver there. So, it's very expensive. He said, "Well, how about I build it for you"? I said, "Be my guest". So, he made a call right there to a friend of his in Costa Rica. Said, "I need 100 acres. Get it as soon as you can".

[Attendee]

Would you have both?

[Aajonus]

Yeah. I'd love to have both. Thailand and Costa Rica. That'd be perfect cause then all people that are close to Asia and Australia and Europeans would go to Thailand and then all the Americans and South Americans, north or south, could go to Costa Rica.

Thailand is central between China and Australia and I've got a lot of Australians. In fact, they want me to come in July to Australia is long in Asia. I'm gonna go to Australia and do a workshop.

[Attendee]

Which part?

[Aajonus]

Brisbane. It's a Gold Coast trail.

[Attendee]

...And that's where I got the butter and the culture cream butter. And that's the milk that you only buy, it's Cleopatra's Bath Milk.

[Aajonus]

*Laughs* that's okay. Doesn't matter what for.

Help build a health center in both Thailand and Costa Rica.

[Attendee]

How's the progress on that?

[Aajonus]

Well, the partners are doing very well with their other company. They have the stem cell company where they take the stem cells from a person of blood, they have a laboratory in Israel, they take the blood and send it to Israel, to the laboratory, they separate the stem cells from the blood. They breed it in your own blood serum when they separate it, so it's all natural and they put it with a courier to take it to Bangkok, it goes to the hospital, and then they inject it in the heart.

They got a three year license from the country of Thailand to do experiments on humans because they've been done only on animals and in all animals there was not one case of, of rejection, there was not one case of any side effects. After two years of doing the tests, the same was for the humans, not one reject cause it's your own stem cells bred in your own blood serum.

It completely reversed 80% of the heart disease. Where it was mitral valve prolapse or bypass, the body actually builds new arteries to bypass its own arteries in three to six months. So, it was so extraordinary and the test went so well that eight Nobel Prize winners joined the board of that company, plus the King's own cardiologist.

So, they gave him a license to go ahead and become commercial as of January, so it was a year early. But because of that, that put me on hold, my health center on hold, the money for the health center cuz now that they have the license already and they know they're gonna do it, they need 13 million to build the laboratory in Bangkok cause they can't keep trucking it back and forth from Israel to Bangkok by messenger. Too many things could happen cause you have 24 hours to get it into the person once it leaves the land. So, it's risking it too much and it's only $36,000 right now. And open heart surgery is anywhere from, you know, $125,000 - $300,000.

And people are going from othe wheelchair to the tennis court three to six months, so it's pretty amazing.

And Don Ho, anybody know who Don Ho is? . He was famous in the sixties for that song and he's 72 years old who lives in Hawaii, had open heart surgery last year, and it didn't work. Plus he got a pacemaker, wasn't working. So, he went to Bangkok and had this done and seven weeks later he was doing full sets back to work.

So, that put them on the map. So, they're making money with it. And everybody told them, no you're gonna need $32 million - $50 million for this kind of a starter company, and it would take you five years before you would get any money. And they did it with $3 million for two years.

Smart people, and they're on the diet.

[Attendee #2]

I was listening to public radio and it looks like SA Institute and a bunch of others that could have a consortium, other company, and they're gonna start this big stem cell research thing in San Diego. They're all excited about it.

[Attendee]

They're doing different stems cells aren't they? They're not doing blood stem cells are they?

[Attendee #2]

I'm not sure.

[Aajonus]

Well, the problem with the fetus stem cells is they were rejected something like 60% of the case just like having a transplant problem there. But when you have your own stem cells from your own blood and you're breeding your own blood stem cells, there's no rejections, no side effects.

They're very happy with that.

What the health centers are going to do is they're gonna provide the Primal Diet food completely. We're gonna have 100 acres on each one. One in Thailand, one in Costa Rica. So, we'll be growing all our own food, herbs, everything year round because the areas I'm picking are tropical enough to grow all year round, all the food.

[Attendee]

Including the meat?

[Aajonus]

Oh yeah. We'll have cattle, we'll have dairy, we'll have everything. The farm that my grandparents had was only 50 acres of growing and barns and we about 40 Jersey cow, which supplied all the milk from just about 10 miles west of Chicago all the way to Peoria. It supplied all the milk for all the towns round all through the early 1900s, late 1800s. And plus that was 40 acres of corn that we grew to feed the horses cause they Clydesdale horses to pull the wagons to deliver the milk.

Of course in the 20s they had the delivery trucks, classical things to start delivering it. But my grandfather, he liked to stick with the horses and the buggy. He did it all the way up to the 30s with the horse buggy or he didn't get out there himself, helped do it, but it was all milked by hand. He never went to machine all the way up. It was about 49 when he stopped producing dairy.

[Attendee]

Did you grow up on raw milk?

[Aajonus]

I was born in 47, they started boiling it. My grandparents bought the bull. It was all boiled. She would boil it right there on the stove. I don't think she did it with all the cream, she cuts on the cream off, so we're getting cream with our cereals, berries. She had a great raspberry garden.

So, at these primal centers, the diet will be 100% available every day, day and night. There will be lots of hydrotherapy, outdoor hot baths. The land that I've chosen, 60% of the land is bordered by Elk River, so we'll be able to use hydro and solar power, should be completely self-sustainable.

The river has a great deal of red clay, so we do like they do in Vietnam at one of the spas there, siphon the clay mud into these tubs where people can sit in a warm clay and stay in there for- in Vietnam at that particular spa, they only lets you stay in for 20 minutes. I would like people to stay in it for an hour - hour and a half, especially if they have lymphatic damage.

And then there'll be swimming pools and there'll be kitchens where people get to learn how to make primal food, how prepare dishes, and lots of therapists, massage therapists. Anything that I know that has worked.

[Attendee]

With Chlorine?

[Aajonus]

No, no, no. It will be an electrical chlorinator. So, you just put real sun dried sea salt in the water and the electric coordinator turns it into a non-toxic chlorine with no chloroform vapors. It's called an electrical coordinator, made for pools.

And they're relatively inexpensive.

[Attendee]

Yeah, they do them in New Zealand everywhere.

[Aajonus]

Yeah. So, I've got friends in Nevada City who have it for their very natural looking swimming pool, I swim there every time. One time they put too much salt in, it was like swimming in the ocean. I didn't like that, but that was only once they did that. I think they went to pour it in and sack broke or something, got too much salt in there.

[Attendee]

Is there any place that you would go here locally to just swim? Any type of any kind of spa?

[Aajonus]

Nothing, there really isn't. Well, the closest thing, it's not that far from here is Deep Creek. That's in Hesperia, just on the other side of the San Bernardino Mountains. You go 15 through San Bernardino and you get off at Hesperia and then you ask for- well, you might be able to find directions on the internet to the Bolin Ranch field, and it's about 25 miles east from Hesperia.

And you go to the Bolin Ranch and you pay like $4 for your car, and then you drive in about half a mile and you park your car and you walk two miles into the canyons mountains and follow the trail down and the river from all the melting rain and you snow from the mountains flows down and you get a river.

So, you gotta cross the river and the river's probably from here to the sidewalk over there wide and it never gets any higher than this. Well, it does when the rains first melt, you can get this high and it's pretty cold.

You cross the river cold as hell and you get to the other side and there are all these natural hot springs that are coming out of the mountains and all these natural pools, and there are about five of them. It's all hot springs, so you get to go and they're all places to dive off of these rocks into the cold. So, you go from the hot to the coal and you get to swim around.

Men, wear some drawers or something, or keep your penis protected because there are catfish in there and they bite. I got a bad bite once, immediately bled because catfish have teeth.

[Attendee]

Should ate him.

[Aajonus]

Laurie did.

This is wild. If you want to spend the night there, it's illegal. Don't do it on a weekend because the Rangers come in on horseback and they'll ticket you at $80 and they tell you you have to leave, but $80 is like a good hotel.

I've never gotten bused for renting night there during the week, but a lot of people get run off on the weekend. Too crowded on the weekend.

It's San Bernardino State Park.

[Attendee]

We have lots of hot springs down there.

[Aajonus]

And then this place has one, it's called, [unclear 18:45 if u wanna try and hear it], and it's right there. I mean, if you broke the rocks off, the cold water and the hot water would be running together, same level. And they've got a very deep one where you have to climb a little bit and it's probably about 8 feet deep. .

And then one's up on top, really hot, very hot.

[Attendee]

Did you drink the formula before you go into the bath?

[Aajonus]

Yeah, absolutely.

[Attendee]

And then afterwards you need exercises?

[Attendee]

Well, on that side you've got a trail that leads all the way down to the dam, which is about 12 miles. So you've got plenty of trail, they're fire roads. That's a fire road.

It's a very easy walk and that's pretty flat. Not like when you come in from Bolin Ranch, you don't wanna walk 12 miles, you just wanna walk two miles. That is mostly downhill, on the way back it's uphill.

Better make sure you have enough food for as many days as you're gonna get back there cause you're gonna need your fuel to get back.

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