The HIGHLY CORRUPT American Academy of Pediatrics is gifted millions in Federal funds to design and propagate MEDICAL DISINFORMATION every year
Well, there you have it folks. Follow the money, not the science, and you’ll always find the big pharma and vaccine cult shills. They don’t want anyone, including babies and pregnant women, to escape their ultimate depopulation weapon of mass destruction – toxic jabs.
Public records reveal that the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — a prominent organization representing 67,000 pediatricians — received nearly $35 million in federal grants during the 2023 fiscal year. At the same time, the AAP has been active in both litigation and
lobbying related to vaccines, suing U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over COVID-19 vaccine recommendations and pushing to eliminate religious and philosophical vaccine exemptions for children in schools and daycare.
- The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), representing 67,000 pediatricians, received nearly $35 million in federal grants in 2023, in addition to major funding from pharmaceutical companies like Moderna, Merck, and GSK — raising concerns about conflicts of interest.
- Public records show federal funds supported childhood vaccination programs in the U.S. and abroad, the creation of a Regional Pediatric Pandemic Network, the promotion of telehealth services for children, and the development of an online guide targeting medical “misinformation.”
- The AAP is also a lobbying organization, spending up to $1.18 million annually to influence policy, and it recently sued U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. while simultaneously calling for an end to religious and philosophical vaccine exemptions.
- Critics argue that the AAP’s dual funding streams from taxpayers and Big Pharma have shaped its policy stances, particularly its promotion of universal COVID-19 vaccination for children and pregnant women, while downplaying risks and limiting open debate on exemptions and safety concerns.
The American Academy of Pediatrics Used Taxpayer Funds to Advance Vaccination and Pandemic Preparedness
According to its most recent tax disclosures, the AAP used federal funds for a range of projects: expanding childhood vaccination in the U.S. and abroad, developing the Regional Pediatric Pandemic Network, creating an online hub to combat medical “misinformation,” and supporting telehealth services for children. While documents detail some allocations, not all of the funding could be fully tracked through public records.
Critics argue the funding structure raises conflicts of interest. Alongside taxpayer dollars, AAP also receives financial support from major pharmaceutical companies including Merck, Moderna, Eli Lilly, Sanofi, and GSK. Sayer Ji, founder of GreenMedInfo, said the combination of government and corporate funding “reflects a troubling alignment” that influences AAP’s policy positions, particularly its opposition to vaccine exemptions and its promotion of universal COVID-19 vaccination for children and pregnant women.
The organization is also a powerful lobbying force, spending up to $1.18 million annually over the past six years. Last month, AAP was among six medical groups that filed suit against Kennedy and other officials over changes to vaccine recommendations. In the same period, it formally called for abolishing religious and philosophical exemptions to mandatory childhood vaccination.
Concerns about financial transparency have long surrounded AAP. Dr. Meryl Nass of Door to Freedom said the organization has historically hidden its funding sources and has often taken stances that critics argue run counter to child health interests, especially on vaccine mandates. Journalist Paul D. Thacker, a former Senate investigator, added that groups like AAP are “pervasively tied” to pharmaceutical money despite also receiving taxpayer support.
AAP’s influence extends internationally. Records show it received $257,607 through USAID’s ACCESS Program to promote childhood vaccination in Madagascar. The initiative increased coverage for the pentavalent vaccine, though critics note that this vaccine has been linked to infant deaths.
Domestically, AAP secured $1.9 million to establish the AAP Center of Excellence, an online resource designed to counter misinformation on social media and encourage digital literacy among youth. The guide advises teens and clinicians on how to identify and avoid false health information online.
The organization also received several grants — including more than $700,000 in direct and pass-through funds — to expand pediatric telehealth initiatives. While supporters argue telehealth increases access, some pediatricians, like Dr. Michelle Perro, warn it undermines hands-on examination and risks reducing children’s care to a “profit-driven, AI-dominated model.”
Additionally, a $134,653 grant helped establish the Regional Pediatric Pandemic Network, a federal program designed to strengthen children’s hospitals’ preparedness for disasters and global health threats.
Overall, the AAP’s mix of taxpayer funding, pharmaceutical partnerships, litigation, and lobbying underscores its powerful role in shaping U.S. vaccine and child health policy — while drawing scrutiny over transparency and conflicts of interest. Bookmark
plague.info to your favorite independent websites for updates on the Vaccine Industrial Complex being gifted millions of dollars from the U.S. government to continue injecting humans with experimental, cancer-causing neurotoxic injections called “vaccines.”
Sources for this article include:
Pandemic.news
GatewayPundit.com
NaturalNews.com
ChildrensHealthDefense.org