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Get Healthy or Get Dead

Vitamin C Was Never Optional, We Were Lied To

Why modern disease exists, why “prevention” keeps failing, and why the cure is not an injection

Kristina Morros's avatar
Kristina Morros
Jan 12, 2026
∙ Paid

We’ve been taught to think about health backward, and while current policymakers are beginning to take small steps toward correcting decades of misdirection, these efforts feel more like symbolic gestures than meaningful reform. Some people celebrate these moments as wins, but the deeper truth is that the fundamental problem remains obscured by widespread misinformation around basic health, nutrition, and so-called interventions—many of which have been distorted by selectively interpreted science designed to keep outdated narratives alive and financial pipelines flowing.

Sure, Kennedy has recently called out the American Heart Association over its revised food guidelines, but that organization is only one of many non-profits that have spent decades collecting donor and lobbying dollars to fund “missions” focused on researching and managing chronic disease rather than questioning why these conditions persist at all. Why is it that heart disease, cancer, neurological decline, autoimmune disorders, and chronic lung disease continue to be framed as mysterious, unsolvable problems, despite generations of research and unprecedented medical spending? Read more about my thoughts on the new food reccommendations here.

A large part of the answer, in my view, is that these so-called unsolved diseases share a common denominator: oxidative stress and lack of vitamin C. One of the most effective antioxidants available—simple, inexpensive, and endlessly misunderstood—is vitamin C.

When I tell people that therapeutic vitamin C dosing can reach levels as high or higher than 20,000 milligrams, their reactions are almost always wide-eyed disbelief followed by concern that such an amount must be toxic. That response alone reveals how badly the world needs a re-education. Most people don’t realize that much of the population walks around in a state of functional scurvy.

My own re-education began last year when I met Dr. Thomas Levy, and since that meeting, vitamin C—specifically sodium ascorbate delivered in a liposomal gel—has become a deliberate part of my lifestyle. I personally take around 5,000 milligrams per day, well above current RDA standards, and I do so intentionally.

After reading Dr. Levy’s book Curing the Uncurable: Vitamin C, Infectious Disease, and Toxins, I interviewed him last year, and that full conversation is available on my YouTube channel. Revisiting his work again a year later has only reinforced why so many recommended injections are unnecessary, and why many of the conditions we are told require invasive prevention or lifelong management are, in reality, both treatable and preventable when foundational nutritional deficiencies—starting with vitamin C—are addressed.

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