Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1475: Eating Meat Is Good for the Climate With Robb Wolf
Episode Date: January 25, 2021In the episode, Sal, Adam and Justin speak to Robb Wolf about sustainable farming and the interesting properties of salt. 1475: Robb Wolf Making an argument that eating meat and dairy is terrible for... the environment. (3:54) The optimist side of regenerative agriculture. (19:10) The point of contention surrounding carbon sequestering of holistic livestock management from grasslands. (24:28) The potential determinants of the veganism model. (29:17) The problems with the food industrial complex. (39:44) How sodium plays a part in hypertension. (46:10) The remarkable performance-enhancing benefits from LMNT. (53:40) The major differences between his electrolyte supplement and the competition. (59:51) Featured Guest/People Mentioned Robb Wolf (@dasrobbwolf) Instagram Robb Wolf Website Savory Institute Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! January Promotion: MAPS Fitness Starter Bundle 50% off! Sacred Cow: The Case for (Better) Meat: Why Well-Raised Meat Is Good for You and Good for the Planet – Book by Robb Wolf Sacred Cow Reducing food’s environmental impacts through producers and consumers Massive release of methane gas from the seafloor discovered for the first time in the Southern Hemisphere Allan Savory: How to fight desertification and reverse climate change German renewables hits 'almost 50%' of consumption The Game Changers Official Film Website | Documentary COWSPIRACY: The Sustainability Secret Nutritional and greenhouse gas impacts of removing animals from US agriculture How Scary Are the Mental Health Risks of Vegetarianism? Coronavirus Is Closing Schools. What Does That Mean for Kids Who Rely on School Meals? Stop Shaming Fallen Vegans The Food Industrial Complex - Priceonomics GlaxoSmithKline Is Teaming Up With Google’s Verily To Develop Bioelectronic Medicines Dietary Sodium Intake and Cardiovascular Mortality: Controversy Resolved? Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You are listening to the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pup.
Now, this episode, I had a great conversation with one of my favorite people
in the health and fitness space, Rob Wolfe.
And we've had him on the show before,
he's a super, super smart guy.
And in today's episode, we talked about
the environmental impact of eating meat,
this whole movement to get people to stop eating meat.
And he really sheds a lot of light on this.
He illuminates the subject quite a bit,
very, again, very, very smart, dude.
So you'll learn a lot about meat.
Is it really bad for the environment?
What are the consequences of eliminating meat
and dairy from our diet?
Then we got into his new company
that he just started called Element.
This is an electrolyte company.
Now, when he sent me a box of this product months ago,
I looked at it and said,
oh, it's just another electrolyte,
you know, powder, big deal.
But then I looked a little deeper and it's very different.
I tried it and I'm 100% honest.
I had performance enhanced,
and I got better pumps in my workout.
So I asked Rob about this in the episode.
Like, why am I getting better pumps?
Why is my performance improving by drinking this
and what makes yours different from other electrolyte drinks?
Now because we talked about this,
he's actually set up a offer for mind pump listeners.
So what you can do is you can actually get
a free element sample pack.
So here's what you do to try this out.
Go to drink L-M-N-T, so the letters,
L-M-N-T dot com forward slash mine pump.
Again, that's drink L-M-N-T dot com forward slash mine pump.
All you do is pay for shipping,
and you get eight packets of element,
which is an electrolyte powder,
very different from any other electrolyte powder
that's out there.
And, you know, if you've been listening to Mind Pump,
you know, I don't lie, try it.
I think you'll be surprised.
Actually, again, I got performance enhancement
from this zero calorie supplement.
Also, before the episode starts,
I want to remind everybody that this month
We've put together a starter bundle of workout programs for people who are getting started in fitness people who've taken along breaks
Or who haven't ever worked out before in this bundle includes maps and a ballack a great program to build muscle and boost your metabolism We also have maps prime. Let's helps you
Fix injuries or prevent injuries
We also have a nutrition guide in there,
the intuitive nutrition guide to help you with your diet.
And then we threw in maps starter,
which is the greatest program for beginners.
This is the one you wanna start with.
Now, if you got all of these programs at retail,
it would cost you over $340.
But right now in this bundle for January only,
it costs you $80.
So $80 get all those programs with this bundle.
Just go to mapsgenuary.com, again, that's the word maps,
M-A-P-S, January.com.
So Rob, it's been a while since we've seen,
you're actually one of our favorite people to follow, though.
We love the stuff that you write and say.
And it's interesting how controversial
some of the stuff you say has become,
although I don't see how it can be controversial.
Since the last time we've talked,
I think it's been a few years,
you've done a couple big things.
One is you put out a book, Sacred Cow.
So I'd like to talk to you about that.
And then I'd also like to talk to you about this product
that you've come out with, element,
which, or element T, which I have a lot of questions about.
It's very, very interesting.
So first off, let's start with your book.
And I'd like to open with this.
And in fact, this, I believe, just came out recently.
It was an Oxford study that was done on the environmental impact of eating meat
and dairy.
And the lead author, I have his name written here, Joseph Pore, this is quote, he said,
a vegan diet is probably the single biggest way to reduce our impact on planet earth.
And I'm assuming he's referring to our negative impact.
According to this study, removing meat and dairy would cut carbon footprint, each of our
individual carbon footprint by 73%.
We would reduce global farmland use by 75%.
And he said in this article or the study said that meat and dairy is responsible for 60% of the greenhouse
gas emissions that are produced by agriculture.
So I'd like to go through some of these because I know you talk about these and you talk about
beef and kind of illuminate some of these statistics or I guess you paint context around
them. So let's start out with the argument that eating meat and dairy is just terrible for the environment.
Yeah, and I guess a little context on this. I had my first public debate on this topic in 2006.
So it's not that this is something Brand new that I've been thinking about. I'm a biochemist by training
but I definitely am a big fan of
economics and physics. I could have probably if I had just gone through the trouble of doing a class or two more
I could have had another degree in physics. So I'm a big fan of looking at things from a very holistic systems-based approach.
I will throw this out there also that taking the stance that I have is a pretty good recipe
for career suicide.
On this whole, I guess, contrarian perspective to the climate chain narrative around food. That doesn't make me right, but it's also,
I guess I would just throw out to people that I definitely haven't arrived at this stuff,
Willie Nilly. I've tried to be as good. I've honestly been tighter with the science on this than
I was in my nutrition books just because I expected so much kind of scrutiny and assailing.
And also, in a way, the interesting thing about tinkering with nutrition, we can have people
try something for 30 days, see how they look, feel and perform, do their blood work before
and afterwards.
And we can see whether or not it works for folks. But it's a much more challenging
proposition to alter global or even regional food systems in various ways and really precisely
predict what does this mean for health? What does this mean for waterways and what not?
The book and the film of the same title cover the environmental, ethical, and health considerations
of meat-inclusive food system.
And so we're covering this thing again holistically, and it's generally because when these discussions
happen, it's what I call vegan whack-a-mo.
Like if we start talking about health, and you address the health topic well,
then the discussion will shift to ethics,
and then if you address the ethics discussion well,
then it will shift to in the environment.
And so that's all a preamble on that.
So as far as the actual claims here,
there's a lot of different things that are going on.
So on the one hand, the claim is that
meet and dairy account for, I believe you quoted
it, in that like 60 to 70% of all greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture.
It really depends in how you look at that.
So there's different ways of kind of parsing out what does and doesn't constitute emissions
in the story.
And part of what gets lost in all of this
is that these biogenic sources,
the sources that come from living systems
are part of a cycle.
So it's very, very different considering
mining oil or coal out of the ground,
which is millions of years old stored carbon
and then releasing that through the process of fossil fuels
versus organic systems that are releasing carbon,
reabsorbing carbon, and it is kind of working in a cycle. And then you also have to consider the total magnitude of that slice
relative to other things like transportation. We we actually had a really interesting natural experiment
on this at the beginning of COVID,
where transportation was effectively shut down,
like the amount of driving,
even trucking to a significant degree
ended up decreasing for a period of time,
airline traffic cratered,
the only time that it's been that low for any
period of time was immediately post 9.11, but this stretched out for weeks and months
and what was noticed during that time, the number of animals didn't change. That was effectively
stable, maybe even increased over that period of time. And what we found was actually that
greenhouse gas emissions dramatically decreased during that period of time. And what we found was actually that greenhouse gas emissions dramatically decreased
during that period of time. So looking at the food sector specifically and laying all blame
there and suggesting that shifting exclusively, what's being suggested here is that we should shift
to exclusively like a row crop centric model, basically, you know, grains, legumes, and what have you, which there are some challenges
there. But it's interesting to me that, and I know I'm kind of bouncing all over the place, the
challenge with this stuff, there's so many moving parts, and like you want to cover everything all at once.
But there was just a piece released yesterday, maybe the day before, suggesting that we should inoculate people
with these mRNA vaccines
that would make people intolerant to eating meat and dairy
so that they would no longer be able to eat them.
So it's fascinating that we have all this type of stuff,
all these really invasive, very problematic interventions that are being
suggested versus addressing the real canary in the coal mine, which is the transportation sector.
And when you get into that, and we talk about this a little bit in the book, but it kind of goes
beyond the scope to really get into it, we should probably be looking at some things like nuclear
energy. We definitely should continue to develop solar energy and whatnot.
Those are the places that if one really wanted to address climate change in the greenhouse
gas emission side of this.
That is where the real rubber hits the road.
Even though they're mentioning that the total amount of greenhouse gas emissions are large
from, say, like animal husbandry, which
isn't entirely true and I will unpack that in a minute. But that's only about 3% of the total
greenhouse gas emissions from the U.S. economy at large. So there's this massive amount of energy
focused on this thing that is a rounding error compared to everything else.
So it's really perplexing that that has become this, you know, this focus.
And if all of this focus is placed in this area that really isn't going to move the
needle, then we're not really putting attention and energy and focus in those areas that we
could actually potentially do something.
Okay.
So let me clarify for a second here, Rob.
So you're saying that the emissions that come from cows and dairy make up about 3% of all
of the emissions that the United States is creating.
And then in this study from Oxford, switching from eating those things to pure vegan would only cut
that by 70%.
So, in other words, really effectively at best we're looking at a 2% reduction, and of course
we're not, and I'd like to get into maybe the consequences of that as well because, you
know, you're somebody who likes economics, oftentimes we look at things isolated, but we don't
consider any of the downstream potential effects.
Do I have that correct with what I said?
Spot on.
Yeah, yeah, spot on.
Okay.
And then it gets a little bit more complex when you start really digging into, so again,
this is where it's kind of interesting.
So when we look at cattle in particular, even KFO cattle, like the cows that end up
in the kind of conventional feedlot system,
they spend 70% of their lives on grass.
Even the ones that, and not all KFO cattle
end up being finished on grain, most of them are,
but not all of them are,
but that grass, most of them are, but not all of them are, but that
grass, herbivore interaction, this is what grasslands are for.
It is without that grass, herbivore interaction, the grasslands die and they become deserts.
And there's this interesting movement of foot to rewild areas to let it go back to its natural state and let like
Dear or elk or what have you kind of repopulate the area and there's no
What's interesting about that is if you all of those animals are also greenhouse gas emitters
None of those animals are as easily managed as cattle are there's no discussion around like well
How will you manage them like hunting is now kind of a taboo topic and gun ownership and all kinds of things around
that.
There have been some modest attempts at reintroduction of things like wolves and whatnot, but then we
end up with situations where you've got a largely uncontrolled population of grazing animals
versus something like cattle that are actually
in this kind of food system.
So if we remove the cows, it's not like that number of animals is gone.
It's going to be replaced with natural grazing animals.
One would hope so because otherwise the grasslands end up getting damaged and destroyed and turned
into deserts.
I see.
And so this is where it's so perplexing.
And again, it's so damn hard to unpack this stuff because there's a million different
little pieces and nuance to it all.
And within that claim around even the cattle generation of greenhouse gases, a lot of the
weight is put towards the methane emissions from cellulosic
fermentation. These cows eat grass, the main constituent is cellulose, that cellulose gets
broken down via bacterial action in the various stomachs within ruminants, and that interestingly
doesn't produce carbohydrate, it produces short-chain saturated fats, and so these animals are
carbohydrate it produces, short chain saturated fats. And so these animals are fat fueled ironically,
which is kind of an interesting side in this whole story.
But the methane that is released as part of that process
gets demonized because methane is a much more potent
greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
Like kilogram per kilogram, it absorbs more heat
from the sun in the atmosphere than
what carbon dioxide does.
But it also has a relatively short lifespan.
The half-life of methane in the atmosphere is about 10 years.
It gets broken down into carbon dioxide and water via the action of ultraviolet radiation
in the atmosphere.
But one of the dangers that has occurred in this process is this focus
on just limiting greenhouse gas emissions at all costs and getting people very focused
on that, people have reasoned, we've known for quite some time that say termites produce
prodigious amounts of greenhouse gases.
And now there are movements within ecology and conservation sectors to eradicate
termites because they produce greenhouse gases. There was recently a study that was published
in the journal Physics looking at the amount of methane and greenhouse gas emissions from shellfish
on the ocean floor. And it is enormous. And one of the suggestions was to eradicate shellfish.
So, and one additional crazy one that's in this kind of chain
of thought is that the green party in Sweden
suggested that the moose population there should be cold
because these moose eat like in another greenery
and produce greenhouse gases.
So there's vast swaths of people that are suggesting
that we should destroy life on this planet to preserve life on this planet.
And again, what's getting missed in this whole thing is that the biogenic sources of carbon, specifically, whether it's methan or carbon dioxide dioxide are part of a system. And this is just kind of one piece.
So the carbon from those systems goes into the atmosphere and gets, you know,
returned to the, you know, the plants and it's part of a cycle.
What really gets missed in this story is the potential for using grazing animals
to actually expand grassland.
So one of the greatest challenges globally is desertification.
Grasslands and marginal areas converting into desert,
which all kinds of environmental havoc ensues from that.
You have massive amounts of erosion.
You have no water sequestration,
so the water just runs off of these areas and doesn't replenish aquifers.
It dramatically increases the runs off of these areas and doesn't replenish aquifers.
It dramatically increases the heat signature of the areas because you have neither water,
nor greenery, nor life in these areas, which mitigates the amount of solar energy that
gets trapped at the surface level and gets re-radiated back up into the atmosphere.
So a desertified area is incredibly negatively impactful on the environment writ large and properly raised grazing animals
Can reverse desertification in our film we we documented a
Rancher from the Chihuahua Desert area who was reclaimed a million acres of the Chihuahua desert and converted it into grassland
And it's crazy when you drive out there.
You've got to drive for like five or six hours through the Chihuahua Desert, which is just like
scrub brush everywhere. And then on the horizon, you see what almost looks like a wave or something.
And what it is is chest high grass. And people in this area didn't even know that this could be
grassland. But like the great basin that goes from Reno to Salt Lake City down to Las Vegas,
that used to be grassland.
And it got converted into desert because of over grazing of animals.
So you can overgraze an area, you can undergraze an area,
but there's a dynamic balance that is met that can convert a desertified area into vibrant
grasslands.
What is interesting about that is there's a couple of layers to this.
On the optimist side around regenerative agriculture, there are some claims that you can
sequester enormous amounts of carbon in properly managed soil as a baseline, and that that can
kind of go on somewhat indefinitely.
You can then convert desertified areas, which are low in soil carbon content.
And again, sequester carbon into those soils.
And the way that this happens is carbon dioxide is pulled out of the atmosphere, becomes part
of the above ground out of the atmosphere, becomes part of the above-ground portion of
the plant, and also sugars are pumped below ground into the root system, and it feeds bacteria
and fungus that actually mine minerals out of the soil and form the carbon matrix, carbon
mineral matrix that is topsoil.
So this is where you can basically grow top soil. So we have literally no other tool
at our disposal to reverse desertification.
And in the process of reversing desertification,
again, we are retaining water in these areas.
I want to say that a desertified area
versus a grassland, I want to say that it's a factor
of a thousand that is the difference in the amount of water
that like a cubic meter of that soil can retain. So it's just an enormous amount of water to an enormous difference in carbon
capture and Alan's savory. So and then on the flip side, is it some other folks say
the ability to sequester carbon via grasslands ends up plateauing
out after about 20 to 30 years and it kind of hits this steady state. You can't really put more
more carbon in. And so they kind of dismiss the notion wholesale kind of ignores the fact that we
could convert a lot of desertified areas, marginal lands into grasslands and get whatever
run we could get with that.
Some folks claim that there's almost an infinite storage capacity.
Other people claim that there's a limited storage capacity, but they acknowledge that there's
probably a 20 to 30-year run before all of that is maxed out.
Alan Savory has made the case that even if the greenhouse gas emissions of ruminants were four or four five times greater than what they are, what we believe
them to be, that just the ability to reverse desertification
justifies their use and would make the removal of ruminants from the food system,
like an absolutely ridiculous idea. And hopefully it did a half decent job of unpacking that.
That's part of where the book and the film are solid
because they really go through
and sequential order with this stuff.
But one other thought around this is just when we look
at the global food production scene,
there are tens of millions of women globally
that because of the social economic systems
that they live in, they are unable to own land within their legal systems, but they are
allowed to own livestock. And this is their sole means of economic support, of food production,
of social status. And so while we are busy demonizing traditional food systems that are built around
ruminant animals, interestingly, some of the greatest pushback that we're seeing around
this negativity towards ruminant animals is coming from the developing world because
for many of these people, they live in marginal areas that you don't farm these areas, like rotational grazing animals,
is the one consistent means of food production.
And so it's interesting that a largely white vegan
Eurocentric kind of crowd is making dictates
to the rest of the world.
It could be antithetical to these people
just continuing their traditional ways of life.
Right. So hearing what you have to say and knowing what I know about topics that tend to get
politicized, because I've been in the health and fitness space for over two decades and I've never
seen diets have always been an area of contention. You talk to anybody in fitness and they'll say,
don't bring up religion, politics, or diet in conversation because you get arguments.
But I'd never seen diets become politicized. All of a sudden, eating a vegan diet now
was, you could associate with maybe one political party or it was the right thing to do.
We've also assigned a morality to it.
More than just don't kill animals.
So vegans historically didn't eat animals
because they believed it to be immoral to eat animals.
Well, now it's immoral to eat animals
because it's bad for the world.
And I've seen it become politicized.
And the reason why I'm saying this,
Rob is because anytime things tend to get politicized,
they'll get an argument and they'll simplify it
and they'll say this is the reason.
And it's very simple and completely ignores
just how complex the issue is that we're talking about.
And essentially what you're explaining is,
it's way more complex.
There's way more things that are being affected
than just if we get rid
of this than we cut emissions this much.
There's two things that I wanted to address and I'll start with the first one earlier at
the beginning of this conversation.
You had said that when animals eat the grass and then they expel their greenhouse emissions, that they're not unlocking carbon that's been in the earth
for millions of years, referring to fossil fuels. Explain that a little bit more, because
from my understanding, essentially you mean what it sounds to me like is we have fossil
fuels in the earth, that carbon is out of the atmosphere. It's gone. It's buried in the
earth. It's not, we're not adding it to the system until we pull it out
Burn it and now it's new in the system versus
Eating grass burping farting whatever cows do that's the carbon that's already or those are the emissions that have already been there
Am I am I correct with that? That's a really good assessment of it. Yeah, and
This is a point of contention. I
good assessment of it. Yeah, and this is a point of contention. I'm I I and even in the book, we we make the case that we don't really know the true numbers on this, but if the more optimistic
numbers around the ability for a holistically managed livestock to sequester carbon underground,
that is all solar energy fueled. It's run by the sun. And it stabilizes
grasslands. It creates complex, diverse ecosystems, and it provides food for humans. And it
all also, some of that grassland is not really amenable for farming. Some of it can be used
in a rotational fashion for farming. But if even the lower end of the optimism exists
around the carbon sequestration potential of holistic management in these grasslands, this
may actually be a tool to remove carbon that is coming from the transportation sector.
And just to piss people off for sure, like I'm a big fan of nuclear energy as it stands today.
Most of the nuclear energy people are familiar with is like Fukushima and Three Mile Island.
These are Gen 1 reactors. We now have Gen 4, Gen 5 reactors. And people generally who have a strong
opinion about nuclear energy cannot carry on a conversation about what distinguishes a Gen 1 versus a Gen 5 reactor.
They've generally never heard of this stuff called thorium, which is another nuclear energy
potential product that is actually a byproduct of rare earth mining for the products that go
into solar panels.
Currently, this radioactive material thorium is batched up and it's super
fun side buried underground and it's not used.
Chinese over the last couple of years have put over 400 PhDs into the process of trying
to develop thorium based reactors.
These represent amazing opportunities to really get the transportation sector contribution to this carbon
story.
Everybody is very focused on solar.
And I dig solar, it's really, really cool, but there's a lot of issues with it.
Like battery storage, the relative intermittency of solar as an option.
Germany shifted a huge amount of energy infrastructure towards what they call renewables,
which includes solar energy, which Germany is pretty northern latitude.
It doesn't actually get a lot of sun, and they've shifted away from things like coal and
natural gas, but now they are burning wood imported from North America.
So, and I don't want to divert this stuff,
but this is where some kind of goofy,
I don't want to say goofy,
but some poorly educated positions on these topics
have goosed really advanced societies,
like the German Republic,
into making energy decisions,
which are honestly bad for their people
and bad for the planet overall.
Yeah, if you look into the, you brought up nuclear,
if you actually look into the science,
and I encourage anybody watching this
to just dive into the science,
as it stands nuclear power,
especially what you're referring to,
these generation four and five reactors,
those by far have the greatest promise power, especially what you're referring to, these generation four and five reactors.
Those by far have the greatest promise for reducing our greenhouse gas emissions.
There's nothing that even comes close because remember, energy has to be cost effective, has
to be able to be, you know, does it produce a lot of waste, is it safe?
Nuclear energy is extremely clean.
People don't know that about new reactors.
So I'm glad you brought that up,
but that just, again, that points back to this fact
that it's been politicized.
And what makes good politics is always bad science.
Right.
Here's another point to that that I wanna bring up.
So, I don't have your background in some of these things,
but I am a fan of economics,
and I'm also a fitness and health expert.
And here's what I know about nutrition.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this.
In my experience working with everyday people and clients,
when I look at their diets and I'm trying to help them
with the nutrition, one of the biggest problems
that I encounter is that most of their food
consists of these kind of heavily processed foods.
And I think it's safe to say that highly palatable, heavily processed foods
probably are, they probably bear the brunt of the responsibility of the obesity epidemic.
They make us overeat.
It's very hard to control your satiety.
It's just they're engineered to do that.
That's what they're designed to do.
And so when I look at their diets, the very little
unprocessed foods that they tend to consume tend to be dairy and meat.
So it's like eggs, meat, dairy, and then everything else is heavily processed.
And I've trained lots of vegans. I have no issue with someone being a vegan.
But I do know, and this is just the fact, that you have to be much better planned, you have to really
understand nutrition at a higher level when you go on a vegan diet just to make sure
you get the right amount and combinations of nutrients. It's just, it's much more complex.
And if I convince a huge percentage of the population that eating meat is bad and they
already aren't very educated on nutrition to begin with. And they eliminate the very little unprocessed food that they eat, which might be their
eggs and milk in the morning.
It's going to go to heavily processed foods and a vast majority of heavily processed foods
are these plant-based, you know, it's very easy to find vegan processed foods, for example,
I'd say a majority of them are that.
And so here's my, this is where I'm going
with that. In my experience, unhealthy people are less productive, less innovative, they are less
happy, and probably worse for the environment. Are we not considering the potential detriment of
forcing or convincing all these people to not eat meat and cause nutrient deficiencies and then cause
a bunch of sick people and how would that affect the world and innovation and the environment?
You know, it's funny and again, this is where there's still kind of pissing matches on
both sides of this, like the more vegan centric model would say that it's meat and animal
products that are the cause of type 2 diabetes as just looking
at that insulin resistance, which that one is actually pretty easy to unpack and disprove
and that's why we start getting in this game of vegan whack-a-mole, but you know, game
changers, cow-spiracy, like we see films and media onslaught that basically says that
meat is really bad for your health. But it, again, it's reasonably easy to dig into that and unpack it and disprove that claim.
But what's interesting about all that is I'm definitely a fan of low-carb diets.
I don't think they're the right move for everybody.
I completely agree that the real onus here is on hyper, highly processed hyper-palatable
foods.
Once you remove too many animal products out of the diet, that's kind of all that you've
got left.
Like people just aren't sitting down and eating whole lentils and perl barley, and even
if they do, the research has been done on this.
There was a paper and I will get it to you. It looked at if you removed
all animal products out of the American food system, that it would have a small to insignificant
change in the real greenhouse gas emissions. It would absolutely lead to elevated rates
of nutrient deficiencies and obesity and overweight would increase because
people need to eat more calories when people do eat more calories when they eat less
nutrient dense foods.
And we did just some back-to-the-onvallope estimates on the carbon footprint and costs of diabetes-related
care products, like all the syringes and tubing with dialysis and whatnot. It is mind-boggling
how crazy that is. And so it's, again, where folks take a very simplistic view of the problem,
and I wish it was that easy. It'd be great. If it was that easy, then I would promote this stuff,
and I would have my dirty little secret of raising animals on my own property and eat it and I would make more money and my life would be better.
But it's just not the case that all that plays out, but this is something that gets
really missed in this whole story.
An unhealthy population is incredibly damaging to the environment because of the ecological footprint involved with
dealing with the pharmaceuticals, the medical tubing, the dialysis machines and whatnot.
None of that really gets reasonably well discussed in mainstream media, social media, etc.
Right. Not to mention, again, because here's the thing,
and you see this with economics, oftentimes,
there's an argument being made for something,
and what we don't count is the potential loss of innovation,
which is hard to calculate.
Right.
Do sick people produce less?
Are they less innovative?
And then on the back of that is,
if we're gonna solve a complex problem, we need a lot of
really smart, healthy, innovative people. And so I, it's hard to calculate just how negative an impact it would have to get people even
fatter and sicker and nutrient deficient. I just read a study that showed that
vegans are several times higher
to suffer from
things like mental disorders.
Likely due to nutrient deficiencies, and for people watching who don't understand how
that works, you could essentially get away with only eating meat and really probably never
have a nutrient deficiency because meat contains all of it.
But with plants, you'd have to consume a wide variety of plants to make up.
Nutrients, there's no single plant that will provide you with thoughts.
So it's just the numbers game. variety of plans to make up, Newtions, or no single plant that will provide you with thoughts.
So it's just the numbers game.
And again, we're not counting the potential loss of innovation that might potentially,
it's just complex, it's very, very complicated.
Yeah, and you know, like this last year was a big year of social justice topics and right,
rightfully so, but what an interesting piece to this is most of the things being suggested like to make
meat more expensive, make it less accessible. Wealthy in middle class families are going to be
unaffected by this. They'll cut something somewhere else and they're still going to eat meat.
Who will be affected by this are poor or more marginalized populations.
And there's not a ton of data on this, but there was a randomized controlled trial.
It technically, it's not randomized, but there was a very interesting trial performed
in an African village setting in which these folks eat a very monochromatic diet.
Like it was basically one starchy food crop, and I forget if it was like
cassava or sorghum or what it was, but it made up the bulk of the food that folks ate there.
They ate very, very little animal products.
And this was performed in kids, and the kids were stratified into being given
more of the starchy food product that
they already were getting so that they were getting a minimum chloric level.
Most of these kids were arguably under-reading and it had chronically been for quite some
time.
One group was given a meat supplement and one group was given a dairy supplement.
And what was interesting was that the kids that were given the meat supplement
had better academics, lower infectious disease, were taller in stature, better physical
attributes. Like they were better in every conceivable way. Interestingly, the group that
was just given supplemental food, you know, starchy food, did a little bit better than the dairy group. And that was
posculated to be because dairy can actually inhibit iron absorption. So these folks tend to be in
a very low iron diet environment anyway. And dairy alone as an animal product protein source can
be problematic in that regard. And so, again, it's smaller number.
We don't have a lot of things like this,
but looking at just like the New York City school system,
70% of the kids in that system are considered to be low income.
10% of them are considered to be homeless.
And oftentimes, the singular meal or the singular nutrition
that they get at all is from the public school
food program. And as bad as that food generally is, it still contains some amount of meat and
animal products. And so some of these things like meatless Mondays, people will just kind of
quip and say, well, what's wrong with just having a salad one day a week? And for most people, that may or may not be that big of a deal.
I'm still not really comfortable with that being something that is like governmental policy
being voiced on everybody.
But the irony here is that the people that will be most negatively affected are marginalized,
low income groups.
It is well understood that the difference in achievement and ability on so
many different levels between a lower income, middle, high income children is the food quality that
they experience. And there's lots and lots of other factors as well, but that food quality is a
major factor. And this idea of like meatless Mondays, less meat, better meat, things like that,
I think that they're kind of well-intentioned,
but they're really slick ways of trying to reduce
consumption across the board.
And again, the main people that are gonna be negatively
impacted are the very folks that I think all of us
are trying to put more CPU cycles
into figuring out how to better serve
them and better help them.
And this is going to drive the boat in exactly the wrong direction.
Yeah, I think if you're looking to the government for nutritional advice, you're probably, I mean,
there's the same people that said that the pizza sauce on pizza was counted as a vegetable.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't think that's a good place to look.
You know, some people may be wondering why this is politicized.
You know, one way, I think one, without going too deep into this,
I can't think of any patented animals that we eat.
I don't think you can own a cow and it's patented,
and nobody else can have that same kind of cow.
But we have a lot of patented plant products.
As GMOs are all patented plant products as GMOs are all patented
plant products and
profit-wise
That the amount of money that is produced or or generated from the chemicals that go along with these patented products
I mean dwarfs from a profit their margin standpoint
What you would get from you know raising a, do you think that might play a role?
You are literally the one person I've ever talked to who pointed out this point.
I mean, at Forbes, did a really fascinating piece that said that vegans are no friends
of sustainability, that they're really catering to the global industrial food complex. And the point that was made there and has been made elsewhere is that this
they, different entities, want to run food as a software platform.
Like you own the intellectual property, you process it and get these kind of
up sale options around it. It has a nearly infinite shelf life
or at least a very, very long shelf life relative
to any type of whole unprocessed food.
And this is where things like impossible burger
and beyond burger and whatnot are such the darling
of kind of the Silicon Valley scene
because my sense on all this is it's gonna be exactly
like Theranos, like it's absolute bullshit
It is a bunch of lies and but an enormous amount of money is getting dumped into this and so long as
The players involved can keep the smoke screen going long enough to get an IPO and everybody exits
They don't care if it's really strip mining our food system and providing no real value to the world.
So yeah, I mean, hats off to you.
Like the goal here is to run food
as if it was software that the intellectual property
can be owned.
And this is something that we see.
And it's funny, like on the GMO front,
I'm really, I'm at a spot where I just end up
making everybody angry about GMO because from a productivity standpoint, I'm at a spot where I just end up making everybody angry about GMO because
from a productivity standpoint, I'm kind of like, yeah, I'm super unimpressed with the productivity
increases that we've seen.
You know, that has happened since Morgan Borlaug developing the dwarf wheat varieties
and doing similar things with rice and whatnot. Just standard hybridization techniques ended up really dramatically increasing our productivity
using the Haber Bosch method to make synthetic fertilizer, which is an amazing innovation.
It's arguably one of the most important innovations of the 20th century.
And it's kind of got an expiration date on it because that type of synthetic fertilizer
process destroys topsoil. And so that will not go on forever. And so within this whole thing,
getting intellectual property protected seed and fertilizer and insecticides,
that's a great business model for the companies that run that.
And there have been some impressive productivity increase
considerations, but at present,
the world produces 50% more food than what it eats.
50% of the food produce gets thrown away effectively.
So even on the pro, like in theory, we could increase the global population by
50% and if we just had better distribution, then in theory, you could feed everybody.
The problem with that is we don't need calories, we need nutrition, we need nutrient-dense
foods of which some of these products can play a part in it.
You know, corn and rice and wheat and whatnot can play some of a part in this story,
but it's also pretty clear that some amount
of animal products be that from grazing animals
or sea fish or insects,
even have to probably play some role in human nutrition
or it's very, very difficult to tick all the boxes
and make that work.
And again, if the same entities that are producing
prodigious amounts of industrial road crop food
are also tied into our hyper-palatable junk food industry.
And those folks then are tied in with government
and media, social media, and whatnot.
I forget the exact date on this,
but there was a transfer of over $600 million
between Blacksow Smith client and Google,
and I forget which direction it went.
Like Google buying Blacksow Smith client
or Blacksow Smith client and Vessinggo,
I forget which direction it went.
But it basically the transfer then created the situation
where some business analysts made the case
that Google is now effectively like a pharmaceutical company
and a big wing of that pharmaceutical angle
is in this genetically modified or patentable food.
I don't, again, I don't even really care personally
about the genetic modification.
I don't think that people are gonna grow three arms
or anything like that. But I am really concerned that it can become illegal to
hold your own seed. And like if genetically modified seed blows into a farmer's field,
and then somebody comes through and tests it and says, hey, that's patented stuff you have there,
you either owe us a royalty or we're going to sue you, that's super fucked up and it's really, really dangerous.
And that happens.
Yeah.
And again, these companies that patent these GMOs are very powerful and massive lobbies.
You know, it's not, it's, it's, they have incredible influence.
And again, to my knowledge, until now, right, because I don't, I'm, who knows what's
going to happen in the future?
We don't have patented cows or pigs that we're making.
I think there are some, but it's really rare.
Like, there's some really rare circumstances.
It definitely doesn't lend itself the same way that, like,
50 different varieties of, like, rice or something like that.
Can have these really specific patterns applied to them.
Got it.
Yeah, no, great conversation there.
Now I want to move, change directions
to talk about this product.
And I think it was a couple, a few months ago,
we got a package sent here at Mind Pump Studios from you.
And I looked at it and I said, oh, it's okay,
it's electrolytes and it wasn't whatever,
not that not excited. And then I looked a little deeper. I knew it was from you and I said, oh, it's okay, it's electrolytes. And it wasn't whatever, not that excited.
And then I looked a little deeper.
I knew it was from you and I said, well, Rob knows this stuff.
The guy is always impressive.
So let me take a closer look.
And it's interesting.
So very different from any other electrolyte drink that I've ever had.
And I'll go over some of the statistics or some of the my notes here for the audience.
So a serving of your product has
200 milligrams of potassium, so a decent amount,
60 milligrams of magnesium, that's about 15% of the RDA.
Here's where it's a different,
a thousand milligrams of sodium.
Now, according to the RDA, that's 45% of the sodium
that they recommend, which we can get into here in a second.
I've never had an electrolyte supplement with that much sodium.
Now here's the interesting thing I used it, and I've never also noticed a performance enhancement
from electrolytes, and I did a little digging, and it's from the sodium.
So let's get a little deeper into this. Number one,
let's talk about the RDA for sodium because when you look at it, 45% of my sodium, holy cow, if I
have two of these, I can't have any more salt for the day. Like, what's that all about?
It's interesting. So we know that sodium plays a factor in hypertension. So, in hypertension is a major factor in cardiovascular disease.
The bugger about this is it's kind of a guilt by association.
In general, highly processed foods tend to carry sodium with it.
And highly processed foods tend to be hyperpalatable.
You overeat, you get insulin resistant.
And then when you're insulin resistant, we tend to retain
sodium. And this is where, you know, there've been so many low sodium studies looking at their
effect on hypertension, and they just don't change things. It'll bring, like the really, really
aggressive, like zero sodium diets will bring blood pressure down two to five points.
Like it's just not that impressive.
And it's because when an individual is hyperinsulinemic, their insulin is by definition elevated, but
then a hormone called aldosterone is elevated and you tend to retain whatever sodium is there.
And so, you know, I think that it was kind of some good intentions thinking about like,
well, hypertension is this major vector in cardiovascular disease, both stroke and heart attack. So,
we need to do something about that. And you do, but the irony is that what you need to do is
figure out a way of eating so that you don't overeat, so that you're not hypertensive and insulin resistant.
Low-carb diet is a great way to do that.
They're not the only way to achieve that end goal.
But what we find is that when people eat in a way where they're not insulin resistant,
their blood pressure tends to drop and normalize and can drop to the point where people can go
from seated to standing
and get kind of lightheaded, and this is where folks then need to introduce more sodium
into their diet.
And there was a fascinating study that looked at the sodium consumption and morbidity and
mortality within type 2 diabetic heart patients.
And so they were looking at the renal excretion of sodium,
which basically tells you how much these folks are consuming.
And it tracked these folks over time
and looked at the morbidity and mortality.
Do they get sicker, do they die?
And there was a u-shaped curve
where at very low intake of sodium, two grams or below,
morbidity and mortality was very, very high.
Total morbidity and mortality got the low ebb in this sick population at about 5 grams
of sodium per day.
Then you had to get out to nearly 8 to 10 grams of sodium per day to be at risk for complications
including death and illness as at two grams per day. So the low-web was five grams.
Two grams was more dangerous than eight grams in general for people.
And so we were kind of noodling on that, and because we do tend to work with a lot of
folks in kind of the keto, low carb, paleo space, we started doing some research around
that. And if somebody is prescribed a medically supervised ketogenic diet, what the dietician
will do is make sure that they get an array of electrolytes, but specifically, they get
at least five grams of sodium per day.
So this was kind of another benchmark there.
And then we did some poking around the more mainstream literature around
athletic performance and the American Council for Sports Medicine. So this depends on the
size of the athlete, in a particular circumstance that they're in, but high motor athletes, warm
environments, humidity, sodium demands can be as high as 7 to 10 grams per day. So we had this kind of 5 to 10
grams being this kind of bracketed area that we use to make a case that this is both safe and
potentially where we see an ergogenic effect. We then looked at the diet records of about 300
people using chronometer and we looked at the calcium, magnesium,
potassium, and sodium that these folks were getting from a generally whole food-based diet
and eating a little bit on the lower carb side of things. And what we found is that people were
totally ticking the boxes on calcium. They were a little bit deficient magnesium, similar on potassium,
like they could use a little bit of help there, but where they were really woefully deficient was the sodium. And what's interesting about that is that the kidneys,
if given adequate sodium, do a pretty darn good job of sorting things out from there.
But if you don't have enough sodium, it becomes really difficult for the kidneys to function
properly and by extension, really for your physiology to work well.
Folks don't really realize that we have more sodium in our extracellular fluids and more
potassium intracellularly, and it's that sodium potassium gradient that drives ATP production
and nerve impulses and muscle contractions and what have you. And again, the more dangerous state is too low of sodium.
But again, it's problematic because so many people eat these highly processed, high sodium
diets in conjunction with a kind of a high insulin environment.
So what we're finding, or you know, our recommendation is if somebody's eating a pretty highly
processed diet and they're getting a lot of sodium if somebody's eating a pretty highly processed
diet and they're getting a lot of sodium and it's kind of a high insulin load as a consequence of that,
they probably don't need an element. It probably isn't a good fit unless, again, they're super high
motor and they're doing a lot of physical activity. But if you've cleaned up your diet at all and
you have a more modest insulin load and you're active
at all.
There's a pretty good case to be made that you know this supplement, which really that
is what the goal is.
It should just be filling the gaps of what we should otherwise be getting from a largely
whole unprocessed diet.
Yeah, what I noticed from it, I eat a it a pretty good diet. I very, very low in processed foods.
And I always salt my food because I know that the benefits of having sodium, I noticed
if I don't do that, I just don't feel as good.
I don't have the same.
But when I used element, I just got better pumps.
Yeah.
While I was lifting, it was pretty remarkable.
I also noticed that when I fast, every few months or so,
I'll practice a 48 hour fast.
And really it's not any health reasons.
I know there's health benefits to it,
but the reason why I do it is more of a spiritual act
to kind of disconnect from,
or disconnect I should say from food for a couple days,
just to kind of, you know,
center myself or whatever.
But I noticed when I do that,
I have to add salt to my water or I get dizzy
and I don't feel good.
And so when I fast, it helps quite a bit.
The other benefit, of course, is it taste good.
Your element tastes good and there's no calories.
You get to put these electolites in your drink
and, you know, and it tastes really good.
So what's happening for the pumps?
Like why am I getting better pumps
when I use element before and during my workouts?
So you're definitely getting more fluid volume
because of the sodium.
And that's a transient deal.
The kidneys, again, will kind of sort that out
and will reestablish homeostasis.
But sodium is really critical for a pump. And this is why oftentimes when folks go to a lower
carb diet, they will notice feeling kind of flat and it's kind of hard to get a pump.
But even in that circumstance, if folks properly supplement with sodium, they'll get pumps pretty
much on par with when they were more, you know, higher-carb fed,
but interesting aside, but we saw a ton of buy-in and interest from different elements of the
breastfeeding moms community online. We just started getting tagged in these forums and the moms were
like, this is what I pumped today,
and then I took this element,
and then it was one bottle with barely anything,
and the next day was like four bottles full.
There's interesting pieces to that.
The adequate sodium suppresses cortisol,
so it tends to drive down that adrenal response.
So epinephrine tends to drop, cortisol tends to drop.
It increases fluid volume.
And so for these breastfeeding moms, just drinking water doesn't hydrate them because hydration
means the water and the electrolyte.
You have to have the electrolyte in there because it's this electrochemical gradient that
is really the purpose behind the whole thing.
And so just drinking more water doesn't really help with breast milk production.
It can actually hurt it because they get hyper hydrated and end up with hyponatremia,
low sodium.
And so the body then puts the brakes on the whole process of producing breast milk, elevates
cortisol and epinephrine to try to create a situation where you retain sodium
via other mechanisms besides just the aldosterone.
So there's a couple of different angles on that where you could see a performance improvement
and then anything that is like a vascular delivery problem, whether that's breast milk production
or training ends up getting improved because of the proper sodium intake.
Yeah, you're blowing my mind right now
because I have a newborn at home
and my wife, breast feeds,
she eats a very unprocessed diet as well.
Her blood pressure is low anyway.
And since she started breast feeding,
it's really low where she gets dizzy when she stands up
and she's trying to drink water.
And I'm like, right now as we're talking, like lights are popping off for me.
I'm like, oh, I need to put some of this in her water.
Yep.
That'll probably make a huge difference.
I also want to refer back to what you were talking about with the Guilty By Association.
You know what that reminds me of?
It reminds me of those early studies on coffee.
You know, back in the day, there were studies that showed
that drinking coffee caused cancer.
And we all know now that coffee's anti-cancerous.
It's a fact.
It's actually high in antioxidants, reduces cancer risk
in particular in the liver.
Very healthy for you.
But back then, the studies showed that it caused cancer.
And the reason why is because they never separated
coffee drinking from cigarette smoking.
And back in those days, if you drink coffee,
you smoke cigarettes.
And so they didn't separate the two.
So are you going to have high blood pressure
and heart disease if you eat a lot of heavily processed foods?
Yeah.
Are they also high in sodium?
Yeah.
So we got to separate the two.
Right. And so that makes a lot of sense.
I'm glad you brought that up.
Yeah.
And just just as an aside, like in some of these things are very anecdotal
observational, but the traditional Japanese diet, um,
folks consume in the range of 10 to 12 grams of sodium a day,
as well, like they're me, so in soy sauce and all this stuff.
And until their diet has become more Westernized and more processed, into 12 grams of sodium a day is like they're me, so in soy sauce and all this stuff.
And until their diet has become more westernized and more processed, there had no issues with
increased rates of, they had lower rates of cardiovascular disease, less heart attack,
less stroke.
Blood pressures were generally lower, although they were still poo-pooed for consuming that,
that amount of sodium. But even in this very starch and carbohydrate-based diet,
it was a diet and lifestyle practice that did not lend itself to insulin resistance.
So that sodium intake was kind of a non-issue.
And it's only become a bit more of an issue as the Japanese diet starts taking on
more and more elements of the
more Western diet, which is honestly a lot more like kind of liquid sugar type options,
like sugary beverages and whatnot.
Right.
And we start seeing more problems.
Right.
Now when you're talking about, just for the audience, when you're talking about grams and
you're saying things like five grams, six grams, whatever, that's 5,000 milligrams.
And I, I, I, yes, referred to your packet is having a thousand milligrams,
which would be one gram.
One gram.
One gram, one gram.
In comparison, when you look at the other electrolyte drinks
and stuff that are out there,
how different is that between yours and theirs?
It varies.
There are some that I think get this story a little bit better
there are some that in my opinion go exactly the wrong direction like they have
more potassium than sodium and I think that that actually is very very problematic
and it's it's funny because we've had people say hey you guys got this all
backwards now granted we could we could be, you know, it's a lot of work, founding a company and spinning up a formulation and getting
distribution and doing all this stuff. And I'm like, Hey, man, I really appreciate the
insight here, but we're good. We did this for a purpose. It wasn't a mistake. We're not
idiots, you know, so it's, it variesies there are some products out there that are pretty pretty good like they really understand the importance of
Sodium in this story and then there's other ones where they've got like vitamin C and zinc and like it's like this kitchen sink approach and
Clearly some in my opinion the folks formulating things, they didn't sit down and just
start at first principles of, hey, let's read a book on renal physiology as it relates
to electrolytes and really get steeped in that because observationally, we were seeing
some very cool things clinically.
It's like, wow, people were dragging ass and then, you know, it's funny, like in the low
carb scene, there's associations with like kind of thyroid dysregulation and adrenal
cortical dysregulation, like HPTA access dysregulation.
When you really dig into that and you look at the role that sodium could play in that,
like we started noticing that if people were having those problems inevitably, they were
not getting adequate sodium.
And again, I love low carb diets.
I don't think they're the right thing for everybody, but to the degree that people were
having problems and then they properly addressed sodium, they didn't have problems anymore.
And I'm a great example of that.
Like I was having a hell of a time fueling Brazilian jujitsu on a low carb diet.
I would have to sneak in some carbs and then I would get kind of on a carb roller coaster.
And when I finally did diligence on getting adequate sodium, I have a great low end gear.
I can go hard and I can go long and so it ended up solving a lot of that stuff. So it is interesting that I think it's funny.
The science is actually well established there
when you pair it all away and just get down to
what really does, like the guidance,
textbook, and physiology type stuff have to say on this.
But then you get to what society and media
and social media all say about this.
And it's so contrary to what the science is,
there's almost been this like force field around us
where people have products already.
They have spun up new products.
And it's like they can't quite get the formula, right?
Because they just can't wrap their head around
what we're doing with that,
which is kind of cool on the one hand,
but also kind of crazy on the other.
But it definitely was gone into with intent
and a lot of research and we continue to tweak and iterate.
But we had a really cool opportunity with this where the genesis of the company
was really initially we were just serving people online and we created this make it at
home option. We called it ketoade and it was basically used this much salt, this much
no salt, which is potassium chloride and then a little bit of magnesium citrate, do some lemon juice and some stevia,
and you've got a no-carb thing.
And we had half a million downloads from this thing.
It was very, very popular,
and people reported feeling way better
in their workouts and general performance.
But then people started tagging us on social media,
and they're like, hey guys, love the ketoade,
but when I was going through TSA, they didn like, hey guys, love the ketoade, but when I was
going through TSA, they didn't like my three bags of white powder LOL, you know, and then
we were like, okay, maybe there's an opportunity for kind of a stick pack convenient option
here because that, that, I mean, we were just getting tagged on these social media things
of people getting danged while traveling. And so that was really the genesis for the whole idea,
but we identified a need, did a freemium option to meet the need. It's like, hey guys,
by hooker by crook, just get enough electrolyte, specifically sodium. That a half million people did
that and said that they really enjoyed it. And so then we were able to basically vet that there
was a legit, you know legit market need in this.
First is just like, man, I wonder if this thing would be cool.
So we ended up backing into this thing in kind of an interesting way.
And honestly, the first flavor that we had is kind of a classic citrus salt thing.
And we formulated it so if it sucked or died as an electrolyte it could be spun
off as a margarita drink base because it tasted amazing with that. So that was, we figured
it would either do pretty well or it would like be like a plane into a mountain side and
so far knock on wood. It's gone well and people really, we've had a lot of loyalty around
it because people get a lot of benefit from it.
That's hilarious. Yeah, anybody who, anybody by the way, when you were bringing up the potassium versus sodium thing,
anybody who, you know, questions that, just look at the issues that bodybuilders have had in the past and the deaths,
that are the results of low sodium, potassium sparing,
doretic use, the classic I remember, I think what I remember what year it was, 1996,
I think Paul Dillett seizing up on stage
and having to be carried off because of too much potassium,
not enough sodium.
But I do wanna say this Rob, you sold me on electrolytes.
I honestly literally, we got the box,
I'm like, oh, electrolytes are whatever, big deal.
But because it was you, I gave it a shot,
and I note legit notice performance enhancement from.
In fact, we here at the studio,
we've been working out in the morning together,
and they see me every morning grab a packet,
put it in my water, and I notice enhanced performance.
So you sold me, and it wasn't an easy sell. Like I said, I had preconceived
motions and I was definitely sold on it. Thanks so much for coming on. Let me talk to you.
You're one of my favorite people in this space. I love the way you present things. I love the way
you look at things from every angle. You aren't evidence-based person. And again, I know this
is going to sound, you know, whatever, but I got sold on
electrolytes. It's been electrolyte powder has been around forever. You're actually improved my
performance, so I wanted to get you on to kind of talk about why it was so much more effective. So
I appreciate you coming on. Huge honor and just a huge fan of everything, mind pump. And I'm stoked to see you guys expanding
and doing more. There's just so much talent with you guys and curiosity. And it's really
cool to see you guys continuing to expand beyond what you've already done great work.
So I'm stoked to see where you guys are taking all this.
Well, thank you very much. We're thinking about selling our programs to Bitcoin now
because we're trying to move away from,
just protect ourselves a little bit,
but that's a joke, by the way.
That's a joke, Google, I'm just kidding.
Anyway, thanks for coming on, Rob.
I appreciate it.
Take care.
Bye.
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this is MindPump.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mindbomb.