RFK Jr.

I will always tell the American people the truth.

Pesticides and herbicides are toxic by design, engineered to kill living organisms. When we apply them across millions of acres and allow them into our food system, we put Americans at risk. Chemical manufacturers have paid tens of billions of dollars to settle cancer claims linked to their products, and many agricultural communities report elevated cancer rates and chronic disease.

Unfortunately, our agricultural system depends heavily on these chemicals. The U.S. represents 4% of the world’s population, yet we use roughly 25% of its pesticides. If these inputs disappeared overnight, crop yields would fall, food prices would surge, and America would experience a massive loss of farms even beyond what we are witnessing today. The consequences would be disastrous.

I support President Trump’s Executive Order to bring agricultural chemical production back to the United States and end our near-total reliance on adversarial nations. His EO protects two pillars of national strength: our defense readiness and our food supply. When hostile actors control critical inputs, they directly threaten the security of the American people. The Trump administration will secure these supply chains to eliminate that vulnerability.

President Trump did not build our current system — he inherited it. For decades, Washington designed modern agriculture. Policymakers wrote farm policy, directed research dollars, structured subsidies and crop insurance, and shaped commodity markets to reward monocultures and maximum yield. Those deliberate choices locked farmers into chemical dependence and prioritized short-term output over long-term soil vitality and human health.

We are now changing course — without destabilizing the food supply.

Alongside @USDA @SecRollins, we are accelerating the transition to regenerative agriculture by expanding farming systems that rebuild soil, increase biodiversity, improve water retention, and reduce reliance on synthetic chemicals, including pre-harvest desiccation.

We are also driving the rapid adoption of next-generation technologies, including laser-guided weed control, electrothermal and electrical systems, robotics, precision mechanical cultivation, and biological controls that replace blanket spraying with precision intervention.

These solutions are not theoretical. Farmers are already putting them to work. Markets are scaling them. Now the federal government will act with urgency to expand their reach and accelerate adoption nationwide.

I have met with hundreds of farmers and agricultural leaders across the country. They understand the pressures firsthand. Chemical inputs cut into margins. Chemical-resistant pests are spreading. Soil health is declining. Foreign markets are shutting out American produce. Farmers want workable alternatives, and they want policies that support transition without threatening their livelihoods.

At HHS, I am leading a coordinated effort grounded in gold standard science. I am working with Secretary Rollins and @EPALeeZeldin to expedite a better future where a thriving agricultural system is less dependent on harmful chemicals. We are sharing data, coordinating strategy, and supporting farmers through a practical transition.

The Make America Healthy Again agenda forces us to challenge long-standing assumptions about how we grow food, structure markets, and measure success in this country. Reform at this scale will test entrenched interests, and it will not move in a straight line.

President Trump has opened the door to this debate and backed meaningful change — not only in policy, but in the national conversation about health and agriculture.

American farmers stand at the center of this movement. They deserve policies rooted in rigorous science and economic reality. Our children deserve a food system that protects and strengthens their health.

With President Trump’s leadership, we are securing critical supply chains, confronting the health risks embedded in our current system, and deploying every available tool to build a stronger, safer, more resilient American food supply.



Mike
 
Who cares. You now defend glyphosate after campaigning against it as a nefarious poison for years. You claimed to defend children's health but then defended the mass murder, maiming and starvation of multitudes of children in Gaza. You once railed against mass surveillance and the militarization of healthcare but now market surveillance wearables as essential to American "health" and are still letting military/intelligence contractor Palantir run all of HHS' data.

You have absolutely zero credibility and are a salesman for what you once claimed to hate.



Mike
 
BREAKING: Trump just stabbed RFK Jr. in the back.
He nominated a pro-vaccine UnitedHealthcare executive to run the CDC.

THIS ISN'T JUST BAD— this is wore than FAUCI.
👇👇👇
In a stunning move, President Trump has nominated Dr. Erica Schwartz, a retired Coast Guard Rear Admiral, former Deputy Surgeon General, and current UnitedHealthcare executive to be the next Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While RFK Jr. has spent the past year trying to expose vaccine injuries and restore trust in public health, Trump has chosen a doctor whose entire career has been built on promoting mass vaccination programs. Dr. Schwartz helped lead COVID testing efforts during Trump’s first term and previously wrote federal policies on pandemic flu, anthrax, and smallpox vaccinations.

Even more concerning: She currently serves as President of Insurance Solutions at UnitedHealthcare one of the largest health insurance giants in America and sits on the board of other healthcare companies.

This is not just a rejection of RFK Jr.’s agenda. This is a clear signal that Big Pharma and the traditional public health establishment are fighting back and they just got a major win inside the Trump administration.

RFK Jr. is now publicly forced to “look forward to working with her,” but behind the scenes, this nomination looks like a direct demotion of his influence.

The question every America First supporter should be asking is simple:
If Trump was elected to drain the swamp and fix the corruption in public health, why is he putting a career vaccine advocate and UnitedHealthcare executive in charge of the agency that controls vaccine policy for 330 million Americans?

This move raises serious doubts about whether real reform is still possible at the CDC.



Mike
 
Jimmy Dore: “It seems that RFK Jr. is completely shackled by Donald Trump.”

“Trump’s campaign turned out to be the biggest con since Nigerian princes learned how to email.”

“Kennedy would be doing much better if he was outside the government and suing the government and Big Pharma and makers of glyphosate.”

“Instead of being forced to protect those entities inside of government.”

Thomas Massie: “I told Bobby Kennedy before the election, my concern is not that Trump won’t win the election, and you won’t become Secretary of HHS.”

“My concern is that that happens, and you’ve underestimated how hard it is to battle the swamp.”

“He pointed out, rightfully so, that he had battled some big corporations in courtrooms and won, and so he was up for it.”

“But what I tried to point out to him was these are one-sided battles in administration.”

“There’s no judge and jury.”

“It’s dog-eat-dog cutthroat once you get inside of an administration.”

“I still believe in his heart … he’s trying to do the right thing, and he’s operating under all the constraints that would just crush anybody else.”

“For instance, the PREP Act, which gives indemnity not just to vaccines, but to the mask makers, to the swabs that go up in your nose, to remdesivir.”

“Everything that was used, oftentimes used to the detriment of the patients, is indemnified by the PREP Act.”

“It’s actually a declaration of the Secretary of HHS as to whether there is a pandemic emergency.”

“And somebody asked me, could he repeal that by himself?”

“He actually could.”

“He could do that today.”

“The problem is that Susie Wiles would probably repeal him on the same day for doing it.”

“I think he’s between a rock and a hard place.”

Dore: “It’s clear that people like Tulsi and Joe Kent, they’re all in between a rock and a hard place.”
 

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