Published on May 30, 2026, 6:28:40 PM
Total time: 00:14:59
Peptides are everywhere right now, and the people who tried to keep them out of your hands ran the last FDA.
Dr. Chris Shade, founder of Quicksilver Scientific, sits down to explain what peptides actually are and why so many people are suddenly paying attention. He argues the problem with most supplements is simple: you swallow the capsules and feel nothing because the compounds never reach your blood. His company's fix is a liposome and nanoemulsion delivery system he calls the "biochemical syringe," which he says pushes peptides through the mouth and gut straight into circulation, no needles required.
Then it gets political. Shade points out that the previous administration's FDA, staffed by people who came out of the pharmaceutical industry, pushed peptides onto the do-not-compound list while those same companies sold GLP-1 drugs that are themselves peptides. He credits HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the MAHA movement with reversing that restriction and reopening access.
If you've been curious about oral peptides, bioavailability, copper GHK, BPC-157, NAD precursors, glutathione, or how detox binders and liposomal supplements fit into a daily routine, this is where to start. Shade also lays out how long he thinks someone should commit to a protocol before judging whether it works.
0:00 Quicksilver Scientific and the supplement problem
0:08 Why most supplements never get absorbed
1:14 Oral peptides and the "biochemical syringe"
1:58 GLP-1s are peptides too
2:18 Where to start: copper GHK and BPC-157
4:02 RFK Jr., MAHA, and the FDA peptide ban
6:03 Binders and detoxification
7:48 What Shade actually takes
9:16 How long to commit and how to measure results
Jason Rantz is Seattle’s fresh, contemporary conservative voice. Young and urban, passionate and bold, Rantz is outnumbered by the Progressive chorus, yet refuses to ignore the conservative principles at the core of America’s greatness. Prolific on-air and online, Rantz knows he’s outnumbered in Seattle, but he’s never shy to be outspoken about it.