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February 26th, 2026 Mature Content

Why We’re Getting Sicker: Food, Pharma & Modern Healthcare

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  1. Why We’re Getting Sicker: Food, Pharma & Modern Healthcare Furkhan Dandia 49:57

In this episode of EZ Conversations, host Furkhan Dandia sits down with filmmaker Jeff Hays to explore why so many people feel stuck in cycles of chronic illness—and why meaningful Health reform has become so polarized.

Jeff shares his journey documenting controversial topics, what it’s like to be censored, and why he believes the real story isn’t “conspiracy,” but incentives—especially when sickness becomes profitable. Together, they unpack consolidation across food and medicine, the role of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), how insurance influences access to care, and why informed consent matters for medications and treatment pathways.

The conversation also returns to first principles: movement, sunlight, clean food, clean water, and Relationships—simple foundations that often get overlooked in modern life.

In This Episode, We Discuss

  • Why health has become political—and how to de-polarize it

  • What Jeff means by “when sickness became profitable.”

  • Consolidation in food/agriculture and what it does to farmers and ranchers

  • PBMs, insurance, and how pricing incentives shape prescriptions

  • SSRIs, withdrawal, and the importance of informed consent

  • Why “the system may be succeeding” as an industry, even if people are suffering

  • The “boring basics” that often matter most: movement, sunlight, real food, relationships

  • Jeff’s MAHA film release strategy and why he makes it free first

  • Jeff Hays is a veteran filmmaker with more than three decades of experience producing both scripted and documentary films. His work often explores controversial and underrepresented issues in health, public policy, and institutional power. He has produced projects such as The Real Anthony Fauci, COVID Revealed, and the MAHA film series, which examine chronic illness, food systems, and the modern healthcare industry. Jeff’s films aim to amplify perspectives he believes are overlooked in mainstream discourse while encouraging audiences to think critically about incentives, systems, and solutions.

    Watch / Learn More

  • MAHA film site

  • Jeff Hays: jeffhaysfilms.com

  • Follow / Support
    If you found this episode helpful, please follow/subscribe to EZ Conversations, leave a rating, and share it with someone who cares about getting healthier—without the noise.

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    Furkhan Dandia Therapist and Coach

    I am a men's coach, therapist, group facilitator, podcaster and author. My journey began five years ago when I was going through a separation. I found myself alone and in a shame spiral that our culture and society covertly exert on people due to the perceived "failure" of a marriage. Unfortunately, I personalized that message which led me to fall deeper into a hole, causing me to surround myself with people that did not serve me and engage in substance abuse. While seeking therapy, I was not making the wholesale changes I needed.

    As part of my experience with therapy, I realized that I am not alone in the challenges men my age experience (I separated at the age of 34/35). I realized I could be a voice for men like myself and offer support in this space. In the middle of the pandemic, I applied for a Master's degree in Psychology to become a therapist. This change was a significant shift for me as I worked in the corporate world as an engineer. Once I leaned into the space of supporting other men, I also started a podcast to normalize these difficult conversations and started a men's group a year later with the support of a friend.

    I thought I was giving something back when I started the men's group. However, I quickly realized I was getting substantially more from the connections I built than I initially anticipated. It was also something I needed because I was going through another breakup.

    At that point, I also realized that I had not taken the time to heal, and I was outsourcing my healing through romantic relationships, substances, material acquisitions and superficial relationships. I decided to step away from the outgoing lifestyle and started to focus on my healing which was another phase of evolution for me on my journey. Over the last year and a half, I have become mindful of the people I spend my time with. I have cleaned my lifestyle of substances, toxic environments and behaviours. I have focused on my sleep, my health and my knowledge. I have improved my spiritual relationship with myself, which was lacking the most over the past five years. This is the best I have felt.

    As part of my solitude journey and to find myself again, I also released a book encapsulating my journey, which I hope to share with others. My book is titled: The Pursuit of Self-Love.