President Trump, Haven’t You Learned To Avoid Involving Yourself in Fringe Medicine? [Reflections on Alliances and Lessons Learned]

As a longtime admirer of your unyielding fight for American sovereignty, economic revival, and the forgotten voices in our heartland, I write this not as a critic, but as a concerned citizen who cheered your bold Operation Warp Speed triumph over COVID.

You’ve always been the disruptor we’ve needed—calling out Big Pharma’s overreach, draining the swamp of entrenched interests, and championing personal freedom over bureaucratic mandates.

Your alliance with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. embodies that spirit: a Kennedy scion, once a Democrat stalwart, now standing shoulder-to-shoulder with you to Make America Healthy Again (MAHA). It’s a partnership that has galvanized millions, blending your populist fire with RFK’s, oft time questionable. environmental grit and skepticism toward institutional health dogma.

Polls show RFK’s approval at 42 percent in your cabinet—higher than anyone’s—proof that this duo resonates with everyday Americans tired of one-size-fits-all medicine. Trouble is that RFK Jr is kind of nutty.

From reforming organ donation to decertifying underperforming procurement organizations, your administration is tackling real patient safety issues head-on, restoring trust where the Biden era let it erode.

Yet, as you prepare to unveil groundbreaking insights on autism’s roots—potentially linking prenatal acetaminophen (Tylenol) exposure to rising rates and exploring leucovorin as a treatment—it’s worth pausing for a respectful reflection.

RFK’s dogged pursuit here is admirable; he’s spotlighted an “epidemic” that’s shattered families, with diagnoses surging from 1 in 150 children in 2000 to 1 in 36 today. Small studies have hinted at associations between acetaminophen and neurodevelopmental risks like autism or ADHD, often tied to its use for fevers or pain during pregnancy.

Your call to “fight like hell” against unnecessary Tylenol use empowers parents, echoing your allergy to over-medication in a profit-driven system. And committing millions to probe environmental triggers? That’s the proactive leadership we saw in Warp Speed—investing in answers, not waiting for lobbyists to dictate them.

This push aligns with your shared disdain for health elites who dismissed early COVID dissenters. Remember how you spotlighted hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin? In the fog of 2020, with hospitals overwhelmed and Fauci’s flip-flops eroding faith, you gave voice to frontline doctors swearing by these affordable options. HCQ, an antimalarial used safely for decades, showed promise in lab tests and small trials; ivermectin, a Nobel-winning parasite-fighter, crushed viruses in petri dishes.

You ordered millions of doses, betting on American ingenuity over endless trials that Big Pharma could game. Critics howled “unproven,” but you countered: Why suppress debate when lives hang in the balance? Your tweets lit up the nation—one on HCQ racked up nearly 79 million impressions—sparking searches and hope when despair ruled.

Sure, larger studies later muddied the waters, linking HCQ to cardiac risks in some COVID patients and deeming ivermectin ineffective overall.

The media pounced, painting you as reckless, while ignoring how your pressure accelerated real breakthroughs like remdesivir.

But here’s the gentle question, Mr. President, from someone who lived those anxious days: Haven’t the COVID lessons—on ivermectin, HCQ — even the bleach quip twisted out of context—taught us to tread carefully with unproven medical claims? You emerged stronger, touting Warp Speed’s vaccines as your Nobel-worthy legacy, yet the backlash lingers: spikes in self-medication, eroded trust, and politicized science that divided families.

RFK’s Tylenol theory, while rooted in intriguing data, faces similar headwinds—major studies, including NIH-backed ones, find no causal link, attributing associations to confounders like underlying fevers that harm fetal brains more than the drug.

The Autism Science Foundation warns it’s “premature,” a complex interplay of genes and environment, not one pill’s fault.

Doctors still deem acetaminophen the safest pain reliever for pregnancy, safer than ibuprofen’s miscarriage risks.

Echoing COVID’s pitfalls, premature endorsements could spark panic—stock dips for Tylenol-maker Kenvue, moms skipping fever reducers, or lawsuits chasing shadows—while distracting from proven autism supports like early intervention.

You’re the master of the pivot, sir. Your RFK alliance has already reined in wilder impulses, like delaying his vaccine panel’s hep B tweaks after White House review.

Why not apply that here?

How about you frame the Tylenol probe as a call for more research—gold-standard trials, not speculation—mirroring how you course-corrected post-COVID to celebrate vaccines without apology. It honors RFK’s passion, shields families from hype, and keeps your MAGA coalition united against real foes: chronic disease epidemics fueled by processed foods and toxins you both decry.You’ve taught us resilience, Mr. President. In this MAHA era, let’s learn from the past to build unbreakable health defenses. Your supporters stand ready—guide us wisely.

More From Author

Disproving the “Billionaire Cronies” Narrative: How Trump’s H-1B Reforms Prioritize American Worker

The Unrepentant Smear: Jimmy Kimmel’s Vile Legacy and the Charlie Kirk Farce

Leave a Reply