TSC Talks Guest Roberto Paleco

TSC Talks guest Roberto Paleco joined us in our “virtual land” to discuss his amazing journey and career as a Medical Researcher/Scientist, Entrepreneur, from Australia, Italian born. He started a company to do research and clinical trials “for hire” to bridge the gap in the Australian medical cannabis industry.  Roberto has a passion for nature and chemistry. After years of studying and working in the field as a medical researcher, Roberto decided to work on medical cannabis research entirely, which led him to create ResearchCan. He has a passion for natural medicine, mind-body connection, and chemistry of the body, which made him study different diseases and therapies. He understands that there are people who are suffering and dying that could be helped in different, but simple, ways than the pharma norm.

Roberto mentions the gastrointestinal microbiome. It’s something that I just learned about in probably the last five or six years. As someone who was on a bunch of pharmaceuticals, the impact on the gastrointestinal system was significant. And the mind-body connection, I think that’s something that while it’s taught, it’s becoming more prevalent. People are understanding the microbiome and the gut that connects gut/brain connection.

He developed ResearchCan to make a difference. He mentions it was a hard decision to step out and expose his research, but he also acknowledges that he needs to show the public what he is discovering. Roberto stated that, “We understood the necessity of providing medical cannabis industries with the technology to develop products using pharmaceutical enhancement and medical devices.”

Roberto has an extensive and interesting journey in this field. He explained:

“My passion for natural medicine started during my university studies, where I had obtained the medical and pharmaceutical knowledge to create drugs and the understanding of drug interaction with the human body. As a scientist, I always found the chemistry of the body and the pharmaceutical technologies fascinating. In my career, I studied different diseases and therapies to have a bigger vision of medical treatments. I studied topic formulation to treat skin cancer in Ireland. I moved to Sydney to become an expert on inhalation and nasal administration for respiratory conditions. I have participated in a clinical trial in collaboration with UTS, where I remained fascinated by the connection mind-body studying gastrointestinal conditions. In all of these apparently unrelated conditions and others in my advice, medical cannabis can be used as primary therapy or as a combination to help unavailable and sometimes inefficient conventional treatments.”

“I’ve been aware of the potential of medical cannabis for a long time, and I always tried in my career in Academia to make people understand it. However, nowadays, the barrier is still strong. In the years, I saw people suffering and even die from pathologies that could be treated with this plant. Finally, the world looks like realigning about the use of medical cannabis and I hope one day Australia will lead to this change.”

“My personal experience is that the Academia here is not ready for this change and my advice is that medical cannabis companies should invest money in research and developing medical products privately and directly as pharmaceutical companies always did. Australian universities have incredible laboratories and scientists, but at the moment, there are not sufficient government grants to develop cannabis research within the University, and the old bureaucracy around the intellectual property is discouraging the cannabis industry to invest in research. Besides this limitation, there is here in Australia, a market and a business interest in terms of investment and capability. Government legislation around cannabis prohibition is fast-changing, so I think that with a different approach, we can make the difference.”

Roberto explained the development and creation of ResearchCan:

“I created ResearchCan with a group of friends, all experts on formulation development and almost ten years of experience as medical researchers. We understood the necessity of providing medical cannabis industries with the technology to develop products using pharmaceutical enhancement and medical devices. I decided to create an independent group of scientists to detach our company and research from university bureaucracy and pharmaceutical company control, to be able to deliver cost-worthy research and the access to medical technologies to medical cannabis companies. We hope to become the pharmaceutical research and development partner of a medical cannabis company that has our same vision of this unique opportunity.”

“Our vision is to use medical chosen extracts more efficiently delivered to better target conditions using medical products. Having pharmaceutical formulations to deliver cannabis extracts using different administration pathways can increase the use of medical cannabis. The use of available pharmaceutical technologies will allow the reduction of active ingredients required and a real reduction of the therapy cost, improving the bioavailability and efficacy of the drug. Reducing the cost and creating products with high patient compliance is the key to deliver this medicine and to speed up the change in the legislation that is happening worldwide driven by many patients.”

He also has a vision for the future! He states the following:

“Nowadays, we have access to the technology to prove cannabis’ medical efficacy and to create the pharmaceutical products that the market need.  The use of in vitro analysis can help to choose appropriate extracts to be used to treat specific diseases and conditions. The in vitro analyses are used to develop a treatment for specific cancer types, to develop a formulation to access the brain efficiently to treat epilepsy seizures and to test cannabis for the treatment of chronic inflammation diseases efficiently. The use of in vitro analysis can help to choose appropriate extracts to be used to treat specific diseases and conditions. The in vitro analyses are used to develop a treatment for specific cancer types, to develop a formulation to access the brain efficiently to treat epilepsy seizures and to test cannabis for the treatment of chronic inflammation diseases efficiently. Furthermore, getting scientific proofs and creating medical formulations is essential to help health professionals to prescribe medical cannabis more safely and efficaciously, opening future access to more diseases. As a group of experts in pharmaceutical formulation delivery, we have been developing prototypes for a nebulizer, a nasal spray formulation and a fast-dissolving sublingual tablet to administer the cannabis extract in different dosages and to better access specific targets. Our plan is to create the knowledge and products needed to give millions of patients an alternative that they need.”

One important aspect mentioned by Roberto is that these prototypes are not standard medical formulations, and that is because it needs to be unique for each individual, their different needs, and the individual’s specific body aspects.

Links to Roberto Paleco:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/roberto-paleco-66139417a/

All of our podcasts can be found at https://tsctalks.com/podcast/

Check out our new cannabinoid topical formulated by Mike Robinson: https://thesourcecannabinoids.com/shop

TSC Talks Guest Dani McQueen

TSC Talks guest Danielle, Dani McQueen, is a true champion in the cannabis world, business owner, who has been nominated with Best Cannabis Company of the Year, ​Maine Cannabis Activist, Business Leader of the Year, Champion in Corrupt Responsibility, Best Innovation: Hot Cocoa, and Young Entrepreneur of the Year. While that, she is also a mother of a special superhero little girl that suffers from the same autoimmune disease as she does. Danielle demonstrates her rough path but also her strength to follow her instincts, and as every human being, with doubts and uncertainty but reaches an amazing lifestyle for her family while also helping other families. She shares a story of overcome but also the real struggle as a person who suffers from Ankylosing Spondylitis. Danielle just really uprooted herself and moved to Maine to help her child and herself. I’m just very impressed with what I’ve learned so far. Danielle shares her story timeline with us on the next few quotes.

“I always knew I wanted to help people. At an early age, I also knew something was wrong with me too. I had gotten into a little bit of trouble at school. I love the gymnastics part in flipping and I thought I could do this. But I also started to realize that I was getting pains, you know, and everyone kind of chalked it up until I was probably around 16, when it really started to affect me. By 17 years old I started, you know, I’ve seen every doctor. I’ve been diagnosed with lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, to everything. So, being diagnosed with so many diagnoses, it’s just because it was kind of unknown. It was a little by 18 when they had known that it was Ankylosing Spondylitis and I was put on oxycodone.”

“This next month, I’ll be going into my third surgery, they’ll be doing a full fusion from the cervix down. Just because I’ve had so many slipped discs and fractures that are kind of just deteriorating. So I’m a little nervous.”

“Every time something like this happens I think of my daughter, what her future might look like. Because like I was saying, when I was a teenager, they put me on oxycodone and it helps, of course. Back then, these drugs were just coming to market. These doctors were taught by the pharmaceuticals that these were lifesavers or they were for some people, I’m not denying that fact. But for me, being so young, I probably shouldn’t have been put on oxycodone. Over time, it stopped helping. And at this point, I was in college and I was going to school to be a nurse and now at this time, after oxycodone, I’m put on the fentanyl patch and this I’m using with  the oxycodone. The fentanyl patch and the oxycodone. So now I’m in school and I’m learning in the medical world. And I start to learn that maybe I shouldn’t be on these doses. Maybe I shouldn’t be on these medications. Maybe it’s okay to question the doctors.”

“I was a manager of a Suboxone clinic a few years ago, and I thought to myself, I was no different than these people, except they went to get their drugs from the street; I just had to go to my doctor. She’d write me a prescription and I’d be on my way. I mean, there was no difference to me.”

“I just felt something was wrong. I feel really guilty saying this. One time I’d walked into my doctor’s office to get a prescription. There were a lot of people in police uniforms and there are people carrying boxes and the nurse was really sneaky about getting me into a room. I don’t remember seeing the doctor that day. I just saw my prescription. And I was in a haze. I feel like from 18 to 22 I literally feel like I don’t recall a lot of how I managed to graduate school and do the things I did in that time period, still amazing to me. But that next day I read in the newspaper that my doctor was under investigation for overprescribing narcotics. There were a lot of overdoses in our town at that time. And this doctor was connected to them. Well, next thing I know I’m being called by the board of medicine because my medical records have been found outside of her office being disposed of. So now I’m caught in this, ‘I’m addicted to drugs. who’s going to supply my drugs now. This is so embarrassing. It’s in the newspaper. I’m in the medical field.’ I went through this stage of full-blown depression, I didn’t know what to do on my bed. Thankfully, it was a time of my life- life has given back to me because I had no choice other than to either go to the streets and become a drug addict or detox. And I don’t recommend detoxing at home, but I was too ashamed to go to the same hospital I worked in. And so I detox at home. The worst 14 days of my life. Pain I never felt, sickness and things I’ve never felt before, and I wouldn’t want to ever again. I think that’s why I’ve stayed off of narcotics because that feeling I remember of coming off of them. On day 15 I remember my younger brother offering me a joint and I was mortified. I was like, whoa, how dare you!”

Yeah, the recovery movement. They really were not very pro-cannabis. In fact, I dropped out because they weren’t. I was in an addiction. I was going back to school to become an addiction counselor and they passed around this magazine with marijuana on the front of it like it was the worse thing, and I was sitting there and I had just started using. I felt so guilty and it was helping me and I was getting off meds and I was like, I can’t do this. I can’t get off.

“I get it. I was mortified. And then you know what, I did it because what was the other option? I was so sick, I was so sick, and all of a sudden I feel better, and how do we get more of this stuff? You know? So here I am. I work at the hospital. I’m using my younger brother to go buy me marijuana, you know, like, mortifying, but then I started to realize this is going to help. This is going to be the thing that helps me. And it started to help me and then I started to want to help other people. I got a job at a Suboxone clinic and I wanted to help people. I just thought that I could save the world. Then I started to realize I’m drug testing these patients. They are coming back positive for THC and the doc says, ‘that’s okay, Danny. No big deal. They come back something else that’s a problem.’ And I’m thinking why is this not legal? Why aren’t we just using it? Why can’t we give them weed because here I am… I’m smoking cannabis every day. It’s helping me stay clean, function with my disease, I’m treating these patients, and I’m hiding the fact that I probably smell like it. They thought it was them. It’s me the whole time.”

“Then you know what I got pregnant and there was no more I could hide it. There was no more of ‘I had to be quiet about it’ because Harley Rose, in 2015, early on, started to show symptoms of something and nobody knew what it was. But one day I went into her crib, she was stiff as a board. I picked her up and she was very hard, and her joints were very red and she had a fever of 102 and I knew right at that moment that I had genetically passed down something to her. It was the worst day of my life.  I just thought everything was like flashing. Everything I had gone through and I blamed… I blame myself. Her pediatrician was great. Quickly after the test they found out she had A.S. And right then it was like a whiplash.”

“I was very angry at this point, more at myself. I think Because I just felt like this is all my fault. I gave this to her my child’s gonna have to endure all the same things I have. So I was very scared and then like I said it was like a slide. they just wanted ‘Let’s do this. Let’s do that.’ And I said ‘let’s do none of it! What can I do herbally?”

“The doctors were not supportive of anything alternative. And about a week went by from the diagnosis and I was sitting, probably on a Friday and watching her and her body, she just hurt. You could tell, and I didn’t know what to do. And I had a prescription for pain medication and I was holding it and I just knew, I just knew I couldn’t do it. And within days, you know, we had quit our jobs. We had packed our home up and we had found a place in West Baldwin, Maine. And we didn’t have any jobs here. We didn’t have anything, only the hopes that somebody was going to help my daughter. And we left. We met Dr. Dustin.”

“I probably sounded like a lunatic. You know, I just said ‘please, I know you’re not accepting new patients. I need you to help.’ And within probably 24 hours, 48 hours, there was a callback. We had an appointment within days. We went in and I was terrified because still at this point didn’t want to give her the cannabis. I don’t know. I thought maybe this guy was just going to be able to give her an herbal. I don’t know what I thought. Honestly, I don’t know what I was doing or what I thought. I was so scared. He was so wonderful. He was like this white light come over us and we started her on cannabis and she started to do things you’ve never done before. I’ll never forget the day she took off running, jumped on the arm of the couch and Ninja flips.”

“And I thought, ‘do it again!’ My sisters would look at me and give me that look like ‘you shouldn’t be letting your baby do that.’ But I did I let her do things that maybe you shouldn’t have done.”

“I thought, maybe she’d been trapped, you know. So at that moment, the stigma for myself, you know, here I was, it was helping me but I still was scared to give it to my child. Then I gave it to her. She’s remarkable.”

“That’s when it was like, game on, world! Because if I’m doing everything, teach me how to grow, teach me how to grow cannabis, teach me how to do everything about cannabis.”

“And then I started to help one mom, and then that started to be two moms. And then it just really grew. And I never connected my business name with who I was as a mom helping these women. You know, I never wanted it to be combined. Now I have moms that I helped years ago say to me, ‘did you own this company back then?’ And I’ll laugh because, yeah, I did. But I just wanted them to know I was just like them. I just remember having nobody. I had nobody here. I was so depressed. I had left my mom, my sisters. I was a brand new mom myself. I didn’t know what I was doing. I didn’t have that. We were hours away from everybody we knew.”

We also opened up about the transitions that had to be made because of COVID19. Some of the questions we discussed were, ‘What has been the biggest challenge in the recent Coronavirus? How have you guys gotten through?’ Sounds like they are pretty well versed in their own, boosting their immune system and all the things that we can do.

“To be honest, I was terrified at first. Right at the beginning of it happening she had an EG to go into. We had tests like back to back. And some things that we had to go. So all of a sudden, they were kind of saying ‘you can come if you want to,’ but I’m watching the news, I’m terrified. I kept her inside completely. We couldn’t stop working, sadly. But we would protect herself as much as we could. We change our clothes outside. We would shower right when we came in, but I mean, she still had to go to doctors. So if she was really going to get it anywhere, it would probably be from there.”

Danielle really highlighted something that is important to me and it’s just like the connection that she has with what she’s doing and everything in her life. It seems like she kind of found her purpose and passion. I asked her ‘How do you see the future with your business? Any challenges so far?’

She gladly mentioned how strangers have impacted her life and helped her gather her strength in the hardest times.

“I just honestly want to help people. I just have to. I feel like if anything, my disease, my illness, my daughter’s illness. If it was given to us for any other reason, it’s totally because we can someway change somebody else’s life.”

I think going through something like that where you’re in a situation that really can’t be changed, it presents challenges that are really hard to endure by yourself, it changes you in ways that your whole purpose and meaning kind of shift. I think I’m coming to that kind of conclusion a lot later in life. But you can’t second guess that you go through what you go through to grow through or whatever cliche you want to use, but, I think it puts things in perspective when you look back and I think about the things that didn’t work out and what was down the road that made more sense and kind of brought things together. I can just relate to that. It’s about trying to help my kids and help other people that are just trapped in these disease situations where  they feel there’s no choice but pharma pharma, you know, locked in.

“It’s really sad. I just had a scan done a month ago. They came in I had just had days ago, and they said, like, ‘Danny, there’s 13 new fractures. You have to stop being stubborn and we have to get in there and we got to go operate.’ I’m the worst patient ever on work. But he says to me, ‘I gave you a drug screen. And you really did only test positive for cannabis.’ I start laughing so hard. I go, ‘did you think I was lying?’ And he goes, ‘I don’t know. Yeah, kinda because I thought …How is it that you’re functioning like you are.’ I kind of laughed, but I sent him, ‘I hope this is a learning experience for you that all I have in my system is cannabis. And here you are as a doctor saying, I should not be functioning without narcotics and you thought I was lying.’ And I said, ‘I’ll give you a deal if you want to start smoking cannabis,’ and he started laughing. It’s like that was a learning lesson. How dare you first of all drug test me, I told you I didn’t take drugs. I smoke weed, you know. But you know what? That moment I didn’t get mad about it because I hope the next patient he sees he’s run out of options for that person. He’s putting them morphine, and there’s nothing that’s helping. Maybe something click that says I met this girl one time, that’s way worse than you and all she did was smoke cannabis or eat cannabis and one life can be changed from what he saw.”

Website: https://www.oldmanfarms.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oldman_goodies_llc/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oldmangoodiesllc/

Thank you, Amora Correa, for your awesome job writing this blog!  We are thankful to have her as part of our team.

TSC Talks Guest Tyrone Williams

What’s relatable about this TSC Talks podcast guest, Tyrone Williams is how despite multiple and frequently tragic occurrences throughout his life, he finds a way to take the high road and choose not to stay stuck in unhealthy circumstances and a mindset of a passive victim. Tyrone is a “Proud Father👣 Direct From Source Supplier🌿License THC and Hemp Product Acquisition and Quality Control Specialist🤔Problem Solver”, He speaks out about the inequities in the industry, highlights multiple examples and is determined not to let any of these hurdles keep him from creating a legacy for his son of a life lived with integrity, respect for history and love. Buckle up.

TSC Talks guest Tyrone Williams is a Proud Father👣 Direct From Source Supplier🌿Licensed THC and Hemp Product Acquisition and Quality Control Specialist🤔Problem Solver. This is his story of life in the fast lane in the early days of the cannabis industry in Southern California. Tyrone grew up with a father involved in some of the riskier smuggling operations in the industry, his uncle being killed by the cartel and his mother as a beacon of safety and strength.

In this episode, Tyrone walks us through the timeline of his life, detailing one challenge after tragedy after another. He is passionate about the potential of cannabis to revolutionize the world, has deep knowledge of multiple aspects of the cannabis industry, and speaks with passion and purpose about the lack of equity in the industry, as well as the need to respect the living history of those that have sacrificed, lost and suffered defending their right to use the plant over the years. He makes note repeatedly that it’s not the cannabis business of today, where we take for granted the reduced stigma and ease of access, but the gritty illegal side of the business, that of Netflix docudramas, in which his father and other relatives were immersed when he was born. Despite the high stakes danger and tragic outcomes of these illegal operations, they laid the groundwork for the movement toward marijuana legalization and reform that exists today.

Tyrone’s early years were defined by excitement, tragedy, and turmoil; “One of my first memories is sitting in a pile of money and throwing it up and throwing up in the air like Richie Rich. When I was three years old, we dropped my uncle off at the airport and he was shot down by the Mexican military on his way back. on his way back. He was a very, very good pilot and
It was a C130 plane so there’s no way that it would have just fallen out of the sky”

Despite this tragedy and others, Tyrone mentions his mother and grandmother as positive influences, “Yeah, I didn’t have any guidance. I didn’t have anyone to look to except for my grandmother on my mom’s side. You know she and my mom gave me my work ethic and my ability to love. I will always love them for that because, you know, for my first five years, I had nothing but love and even though there were these events. They weren’t tragic to me, because I was so young. And my mom was still, you know, she was running around with me in a carrier, and she was a thrift store shopper. She didn’t care about money”

He expresses his deep desire to be there for his son, “the second half of my life is going to be where I put my legacy together for my son. He’s getting four As and 2 Bs. He just got his report card. He’s doing so good in school, he’s loving it. He’s got, friends. I mean, he’s happy and he really loves that we have a good relationship. We talk all the time. And you know, we do stuff. It’s something that I didn’t have whatsoever, so I know exactly what to give him. Yesterday I got an argument with my dad. And I actually thanked him for being you tell me exactly what not to do”

In describing how he was able to learn from all the trauma, fighting and things he saw going on, “I don’t believe in arguments because all it does is piss both parties off. But I do believe in communication and discussion. Yeah, we can agree to disagree, but lets at least listen both over each other sides and not try to make either of us feel like we’re inferior to the other. Because there’s that starts to occur, then people close down and nothing’s heard whatsoever. ” Amen Tyrone.

Relating his frustrations with the influx of people into the industry with “certificates and resumes” and bypassing those who have deep lived experience in the industry, real-time. Those who are passed over frequently when in many cases they are far more knowledgeable and educated than those who merely sat in a classroom and were taught about the plant, “I mean, these companies come in and I was brokering trim and there was a couple of companies that came into California and bought all the trim up and now it’s $2 higher than what it was before. And they just priced me out of everything. And then if you want to get any type of position with any of these companies they want you to have some resume that shows that you went to some stupid school to get some freakin ‘certificate that shows that you can do something.”

One of his ongoing concerns with the industry, “So that’s another problem with this influx of new money into the industry is that people are so greedy that they’ll do anything, they don’t care about trying to follow the rules, there’s no etiquette whatsoever anymore.”

Tyrone goes on to mention, how he cannot believe what he’s lived through stating, “Yeah, this is all true, real firsthand experience, not just something that I heard about from somebody else, the third person, this and that. So, yeah, and that’s why when I read back thru it, I’m like, I don’t even believe it.”

And in conclusion, I’ll leave you with this quote that gives evidence to the reason Tyrone has survived lived experiences beyond belief and has been able to rise above overwhelming circumstances to come on this podcast and talk to us today. Thanks, Tyrone for your honest, painful, inspiring glimpse of another side of the industry that many don’t understand.

“I don’t believe in arguments because all it does is both parties off. But I do believe in communication and discussion. Yeah, we can agree to disagree, but lets at least listen over each other sides and not try to make either of us feel like we’re inferior to the other. Because when that starts to occur, then people close down and nothing’s heard whatsoever. They’re just thinking about what they’re gonna say”. Truth.

From LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tyrone-sky-williams-5b4b45195/
“I’m a second-generation grower with 20 years in indoor hydroponic space design and quality control. Specializing in licensed farm direct THC products of the highest quality. The products personally rigorously tested and vetted from only the best quality. I have designed products that have proven positive results that I will be introducing to the market if anyone is interested in an investment opportunity.”

TSC Talks Guest Tyrone Williams

https://tsctalks.com

 

TSC Talks Canna Combo Mini Pod

TSC Talks Canna Combo Mini Pod

A mini compilation of a few Canna conversations; Blaze Therapeutics, Michael Pedersen, Tyrone Williams & past guest Mike Robinson.

1-“Blaze Therapeutics exists to offer plant-based solutions to the rare disease, the US Veteran, and professional medical communities that target the improvement of overall health, wellness, and quality of life. We believe in amplifying the beauty of life through the pursuit of wellness.

Blaze Therapeutics, Nadia Bodkin-Rare Disease Advocacy Professional, Executive Officer, Philanthropist and Vincent Crowley-Senior Vice President-Blaze is comprised of a team of experts concentrated from the healthcare, patient advocacy, nutraceutical and cannabis industries. Blaze Therapeutics is engaged in supporting the open market through Responsible Distribution of plant-based dietary supplements and the Rx market through the pursuit of FDA approved cannabis-based nutraceuticals.”
Website: http://www.blazetherapeutics.com

2-Michael Pederson, Host, Producer of Cannabis Update Podcast. “This podcast features stories about the leaders and organizations involved in cannabis legalization in Canada. This is not a “Pro Pot”​ podcast, but a balanced representation of news and information pertaining to legalization”
Website: https://www.distinctmedia.ca/cannabis-update-podcast

3- Tyrone Williams-Proud Father👣 Direct From Source Supplier🌿License THC and Hemp Product Acquisition and Quality Control Specialist. I’m a second generation grower with 20 years in indoor hydroponic space design and quality control. Specializing in licensed farm direct THC products of the highest quality. The products personally rigorously tested and vetted from only the best quality. I have designed products that have proven positive results that I will be introducing to the market, if anyone is interested in an investment opportunity. https://www.linkedin.com/in/tyrone-william-5b4b45195

4- Mike Robinson -Cancer Survivor/Cannabis Activist, Founder, Global Cannabinoid Research Ctr., Chief Operating Officer at Nanobles, Inc. “Cannabis is Medicine and it’s important it’s recognized globally as such by all nations. Setting the pace now to educate those providing healthcare is imperative for both patients and providers. As a cancer survivor with severe epilepsy that quit a 24 yr. pharma opioid addiction with the use of Cannabis oils to overcome, choosing a healthy alternative medicine was the key to my own success – and for many is the key to exit the Pandora’s Box of addiction, illness, and so much more.”

https://www.mikesmedicines.com/mikes-other-publications/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-robinson-~-cannabis-heals-256b3192

Thanks for tuning in! Stay tuned for Blaze Therapeutics up this week and keep on keepin’ on.
https://tsctalks.com