Bell Brother Reports 7-OH Kratom Ban Caused Florida Overdose Spike
"The FDA claims it's a victory that banned 7-OH in Florida, but in the past 2 years Suboxone prescriptions have not risen at all. A lot of people have died. Suboxone is way more addictive and hard to get off of than 7-OH."
About this episode
On this episode of the Danny Jones Podcast, host Danny Jones sits down with Mark Bell, powerlifter, inventor of the Slingshot, and host of the Power Project podcast, for a wide-ranging conversation on performance-enhancing drugs, nutrition, training philosophy, and unconventional health practices. Bell made headlines by confessing to a 25-year testosterone addiction he expects will last his lifetime, citing fears that stopping would cost him mental clarity and training performance despite knowing the health risks. The discussion dove deep into steroid culture, with Bell addressing bodybuilding myths like trenbolone causing homosexual urges due to extreme libido spikes, and explaining how performance drugs alter brain chemistry in unpredictable ways. Bell challenged mainstream diet narratives by claiming dietary fat, not carbohydrates, is the primary obesity driver because of calorie density and restaurant cooking practices that make fat overconsumption unavoidable. He introduced research on WVE-007, the so-called James Bond peptide, which early trials show adds 8 pounds of muscle while cutting visceral fat with only yearly injections. The episode also covered kratom regulation, with Bell's brother reporting Florida's 7-OH ban caused opioid overdose spikes as pain patients turned to fentanyl instead of prescribed alternatives. Bell and Jones discussed GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, assisted suicide commercials, the importance of outdoor movement and sunlight exposure, homeschooling alternatives like Acton Academy, and Bell's philosophy of equanimity in the face of social media chaos. The conversation blended personal vulnerability with controversial health claims, offering insight into the mind of a fitness influencer who lives at the extreme edge of biohacking.
Key takeaways
- Mark Bell admitted to a 25-year testosterone addiction and expects to remain on steroids for life despite health concerns.
- Bell argued dietary fat, not carbs, is the main obesity driver due to calorie density and restaurant cooking practices.
- Bell's brother reported Florida's 7-OH kratom ban led to increased opioid overdoses as patients switched to fentanyl.
- New WVE-007 James Bond peptide shown in trials to add 8 pounds muscle and cut visceral fat with yearly injections.
- Bell discussed bodybuilding myth that trenbolone steroid causes homosexual urges due to extreme uncontrollable libido spikes.
- GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic reduce dopamine and overall desire, potentially dampening sex drive and causing relationship issues.
- Bell emphasized outdoor movement, sunlight exposure, and defatting diet as foundational health practices over biohacking trends.