President-elect Donald Trump to consider banning certain vaccines if they are proven risky
Before winning the presidential election, Donald Trump announced that he would be open to some of the controversial stances of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on
public health, including views on vaccine safety.
Kennedy, the founder, chairman of the board and chief legal counsel for
Children's Health Defense, a non-profit organization that seeks to end childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure, has long advocated against certain vaccines. Kennedy claimed that 60 percent of Americans today have chronic health issues, compared to just six percent when his uncle, John F. Kennedy, was president.
He also noted that nearly 77 percent of American boys are ineligible for military service because chronic health issues and diabetes rates among children have surged, with one in three classified as diabetic or pre-diabetic. Autism rates, too, have spiked from one in 10,000 in Kennedy's generation to one in 34 children today. Kennedy linked all these health issues to vaccines administered to children. (Related:
GOT PLAYED: 124 million Democrats have taken Trump vaccines… what happens if they start dying?)
In line with this,
NBC News asked Trump in a phone interview on Nov. 3 if he would
consider Kennedy and his perspective on vaccines if elected.
"Well, I'm going to talk to [Kennedy] and talk to other people, and I'll make a decision, but he's a very talented guy and has strong views," Trump said. The former president did not specify the exact position Kennedy might hold, but sources close to the Trump campaign have indicated that Kennedy would focus on health-related initiatives, particularly on "chronic childhood disease."
Trump even hinted at a campaign event in Arizona that Kennedy "could do anything he wants" and reiterated his confidence in him.
Trump asked RFK Jr. to clean up corruption, end conflicts of interest in federal health agencies
Before Trump's interview, Kennedy had already revealed in a separate interview with
NewsNation that
Trump asked him to lead a major reorganization of federal health agencies, including the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), and some of the agencies within the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) if Trump wins on Nov. 5.
"He's asked me to clean up the corruption, number one," Kennedy said. "Number two, end the conflicts of interest."
During the interview, Kennedy clarified that the focus of his mandates would be on returning the health agencies to a foundation of "gold-standard, empirically based, evidence-based medicine." Kennedy also explained that the problem is particularly acute at the FDA, which "gets 50 percent of its budget from Big Pharma" and the NIH, which "collects royalties" when pharmaceutical companies sell products developed with NIH assistance.
He then described this excessive influence of corporate interests on U.S. regulatory agencies as "the biggest threat to American democracy."
Follow
Trump.news for more stories about the campaign of Republican Party presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Watch Karen Kingston revealing that
11 toxic rare earth metals found in electronic devices are also present in the COVID-19 vaccines.
This video is from
The Prisoner channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
Major election forecasters predict a decisive victory for Trump.
POLL: Trump takes narrow lead against Harris in Pennsylvania.
MSNBC calls on anti-Trump Americans to murder Trump supporters and "stop Hitler."
Trump COVID official describes mRNA vaccine as a 'biological weapon.'
Trump vows no more foreign wars – Kamala, he says, will "gamble with the lives of millions."
Sources include:
LifeSiteNews.com 1
LifeSiteNews.com 2
NBCNews.com
Brighteon.com