I will never forget the moment I realized something was wrong with my father.
He was the most intelligent man I had ever known. A man who shaped my values, my ambition, and everything I believe about using resources to make the world better. And slowly — almost imperceptibly at first — he began to disappear. A name forgotten here. A story repeated there. Then one afternoon, he looked at me and did not know who I was.
I had access to the best neurologists on the planet. I could fund any treatment available. And still, there was nothing medicine could do that changed the outcome. We lost him in 2020.
If you are reading this right now, there is a good chance you understand exactly what I am talking about. Maybe it is a parent. A spouse. A close friend. Or perhaps you have started noticing things in yourself — a name that slips away, a word that won't come, a familiar face that takes a second too long to place — and a quiet fear has started to grow.
What I want to share with you today is not a sales pitch. It is not medical advice. It is something more important: the truth about where Alzheimer's research actually stands right now — and why the picture is more hopeful than most people have been told.
The question that kept me awake for years
After my father passed, I stepped away from other projects for a while. I kept turning the same question over in my mind: How is it possible that with all the resources in the world at my disposal, I could not save my own father?
That question sent me — and a team of some of the leading neurologists I had been working with — down a path I did not expect.
We started looking at what the existing science was actually built on. And what we found was deeply troubling. Many of the foundational studies that shaped Alzheimer's drug development over the past two decades had serious problems. Billions of dollars had been spent chasing a theory about plaques in the brain — a theory that, as independent researchers began pointing out, was never as solid as the pharmaceutical industry had presented it to be.
"Doctors want you to believe it is normal to start forgetting things with age. But the data tells a different story — and the most important part of that story has never been on the evening news."
At the same time, a different body of research was quietly accumulating. Scientists in metabolic medicine had begun describing something they called type 3 diabetes — a condition where the brain loses its ability to properly use glucose, its primary fuel. The result: neurons slowly starve. Connections weaken. Memory begins to fail. And critically, this process can begin silently, years or even decades before the first visible symptoms appear.
This was not a fringe idea. It had been published in respected journals. But it wasn't moving forward — and the reason, when we looked closely, was not scientific. It was financial. A natural, accessible solution to a metabolic problem in the brain is not something you can patent for $26,000 a year.
What we found when we looked where no one else was looking
Our research took us in an unexpected direction. Instead of focusing only on patients with Alzheimer's, we began studying populations where the disease was remarkably rare — communities of people living into their 90s and even past 100 with their memories and cognitive function largely intact.
The Mediterranean region, particularly certain island communities, showed patterns that couldn't be explained by genetics alone. When we set up a research base and began documenting the habits, diets, and environment of these populations in detail, our own team noticed something remarkable happening to them personally: sharper recall, returning memories, improved mental clarity — within weeks of being there.
We collected samples. We ran lab analysis. And what came back changed the direction of everything.
The water in that region contained something almost no one had been studying in this context. The food traditions, passed down through generations without any pharmaceutical influence, contained compounds that acted on the brain in ways that the most expensive drugs on the market had failed to replicate.
I want to be honest with you: what we found did not come in time to save my father. That is something I carry with me every day. But it has already reached thousands of families. And I made a decision — one that cost me significant pressure from people with a financial interest in keeping this quiet — to make sure this information reaches the people who need it most.
What this means for you — or someone you love
If you are a caregiver right now, I want you to hear this: the exhaustion you feel, the grief of watching someone you love slowly become unreachable, the guilt of wondering if you missed something or didn't act fast enough — none of that is your fault. The system was not designed to give you the right information. It was designed to sell you the most expensive management of a condition that, it turns out, may have a very different root cause than we were told.
And if you are someone who has noticed early signs in yourself — the fog, the searching for words, the anxiety that something isn't quite right — I want to tell you clearly: catching this early is the most important thing you can do. Everything we learned points in one direction. The earlier you act, the more there is to work with.
- Alzheimer's disease may begin silently 15–30 years before the first visible symptoms appear
- Brain insulin resistance — not just plaque buildup — appears to play a central role in cognitive decline
- Certain natural compounds found in traditional Mediterranean diets act directly on the brain's energy metabolism
- Simple blood-based diagnostic tools are now available that were not accessible just three years ago
- Early intervention with the right protocol shows dramatically better outcomes than treatment at later stages
I have spent over $100 million of my own resources — separate from our foundation's philanthropic work — on this research. I have faced real pressure to stay quiet. There was a point where I received a direct offer from a consortium of pharmaceutical interests to redirect our efforts. I did not take it.
I am sharing this because the families watching a loved one decline deserve better than what the standard system offers. And I believe we now have something better to offer them.
Everything I found — the mechanism, the natural compounds, the protocol we tested in a rigorous double-blind study with over 2,100 volunteers — is laid out in full in a presentation I recorded specifically for people in your situation. No medical jargon. No sales pitch. Just the science, explained clearly, and what you can actually do starting today.
What the data actually showed
In our study, we brought together over 2,100 volunteers — men and women between 35 and 85 — ranging from people experiencing mild brain fog to individuals in advanced stages of cognitive decline. They came from different backgrounds, different genetics, different stages of the disease. But they shared one thing: the desire to get their minds back.
After 12 weeks using the protocol developed from our Mediterranean research, the results went beyond what any of us had predicted going in. Brain fog, anxiety, and difficulty concentrating had dramatically reduced across the group. The progression of cognitive decline had stopped — and in a significant portion of participants, it had begun to reverse. People who had stopped driving were driving again. People who had stopped recognizing close family members were recognizing them again.
These are not statistics to me. These are people. Some of them remind me of my father.
"The worst part wasn't forgetting my keys. It was looking at my daughter's face and not being able to remember her name. After I started this protocol, everything changed. Today I remember every detail of the stories I tell my grandchildren."
— Study participant, age 79
None of the participants needed prescription medications. None of them went through invasive procedures. The solution was entirely natural — built on compounds that have been part of certain traditional diets for generations, now isolated and combined in the precise concentrations our research identified as effective.
I want to be clear about why I am making this available now, and why I am not going through conventional pharmaceutical or media channels to do it. The industry has a financial interest in this not reaching you. I do not have that conflict. Over the next 20 years, my foundation is committed to donating over $100 billion to projects that genuinely save lives — not projects that manage conditions in ways that generate maximum revenue.
This presentation is available right now. It is free to watch. I cannot guarantee how long it will remain up — there has already been significant pressure to remove it. If you or someone you love is dealing with memory loss, confusion, or early signs of cognitive decline, I strongly encourage you to watch it today.
The Protocol Our Foundation Spent Years Researching Is Explained in Full
Watch the complete presentation to understand the root cause of memory loss, what we found in our research, and how to apply the protocol starting today. No medical jargon. No cost to watch.
▶ Watch the Free Presentation NowThe information presented on this page is based on independent research and is provided for educational purposes only. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Please consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making any changes to your health regimen.