In a conversation on The Joe Rogan Experience, Mel Gibson shared strong personal beliefs about natural remedies and medicine. Gibson said he thinks “anything that afflicts mankind” must have a natural cure, even acknowledging he cannot prove it but feels convinced based on his experiences. He told Rogan about three friends with stage 4 cancer who, according to him, recovered after trying various non-traditional treatments. Gibson listed substances they reportedly used, including ivermectin, fenbendazole, methylene blue, and other supplements, while noting that some of these have been controversial and heavily debated.
Rogan added that certain compounds have gained attention for potential biological effects, though many claims remain unverified or unsupported by medical authorities. Both men discussed how some treatments become “demonized” while others are promoted, raising questions about profit, patents, and incentives within modern healthcare systems. They wondered aloud whether some helpful therapies fail to gain mainstream support because they are inexpensive or unpatentable.
The conversation shifted to diet, supplements, weight loss, and lifestyle changes, with Rogan and Gibson talking about vitamins, magnesium, zinc, sauna use, and discipline in health routines. While their discussion sparked massive interest online, the claims reflect personal opinions and experiences, not medical advice.
Is the medical system really as transparent as we’re told, or is there more we’re not seeing?
Is the medical system hiding treatments the public deserves to know about?
If natural cures don’t work, why does the medical industry react so aggressively whenever someone talks about them?
What do you think?
This information is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Please consult a healthcare professional for diagnosis or treatment.
Here is the video:

