🚨TOMORROW: A House committee will vote on Section 453—a hidden provision giving pesticide companies immunity from lawsuits.
Even if glyphosate poisons you … you couldn’t sue.
They did it for vaccines in 1986.
Now they want to do it for ALL chemical pesticides.
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Section 453 is buried in the FY26 Interior–Environment Appropriations bill.
If it passes, it would block families from suing pesticide companies—even in cases of cancer, infertility, or neurological damage.
It would also freeze EPA’s ability to update pesticide labels based on new science.
This is about locking in corporate immunity and shutting down accountability for good.
🚨Last month, Jillian Michaels EXPOSED the “chemical onslaught” that is fueling our chronic disease crisis—and pesticides are at the heart of it.
“Infertility.”
“30 year-old men that have the testosterone level a 50 year-old man had 30 years ago.”
“The biggest and scariest one, early onset cancer. Diagnoses in people 18-49, up 79%.”
“Without question, it has something to do with the chemical onslaught we take on from food, water, air.”
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin revealed that he inherited a “massive backlog” with pesticide safety reviews from the Biden Administration.
“We inherited a pesticide review backlog of 14,000.”
But that review process would end if Congress passes Section 453 and gives pesticide companies a liability shield.
🚨Then, Nicole Shanahan sounded the alarm.
“Glyphosate to me is one of these things that’s just as bad as the mRNA vaccine in terms of human health, lack of disclosures, and lack of government accountability.”
“The 1986 vaccine safety act gave immunity to vaccine manufacturers such that if you’re injured by a vaccine you can’t directly sue the manufacturer.”
“They’re trying to do that same thing with glyphosate right now.”
President Trump’s MAHA Report explicitly called out pesticides as a key toxic exposure fueling our childhood chronic disease crisis.
The Report exposed that glyphosate causes “reproductive and developmental disorders as well as cancers, liver inflammation and metabolic disturbances.”
It also directly called out the chemical-manufacturing lobby for spending “roughly $77 million on federal influence activities—placing the industry among Washington’s top spenders.”
It revealed that “in 2023, 60% of chemical-sector lobbyists previously held federal posts.”
The House Appropriations Committee votes tomorrow morning.
Section 453 would freeze EPA reviews and block 67,000 cancer lawsuits.
Here’s who has the power to shape history tomorrow!
Flood their lines and let them know the public is watching.
Republicans:
Mike Simpson (ID‑02) – (202) 225‑5531
Michael Cloud (TX‑27) – (202) 225‑7742
Tom Cole (OK‑04) – (202) 225‑6165
Jake Ellzey (TX‑06) – (202) 225‑2002
Celeste Maloy (UT‑02) – (202) 225‑9730
Guy Reschenthaler (PA‑14) – (202) 225‑2065
Ryan Zinke (MT‑01) – (202) 225‑5628
Over the weekend, RFK Jr. gave two EXPLOSIVE interviews covering all things MAHA.
Food, vaccines, prayer, budget cuts—you name it.
MAHA isn’t just shaking things up in the U.S. anymore.
It’s changing the world.
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RFK Jr. sat down with Brazilian reporter André Marinho for a wide-ranging MAHA interview.
Marinho asked if Trump’s order to tie U.S. drug prices to global lows could raise prices abroad.
RFK Jr. said it’s time the rest of the world stops freeloading off American taxpayers.
Marinho: “Many Brazilians, and I would guess citizens of the whole world, are kind of worried that this could push drug companies to raise prices abroad.”
RFK Jr: “The United States basically pays for global pharmaceutical research.”
“We account for about 70% of the profits for the pharmaceutical industry and we’re only 4.2% of the world's population.”
“The reason for that is that other countries simply won't pay for it.”
“What we've now told the drug companies is whatever the lowest price that you're charging in any other nation, that's what you're gonna charge here.”
“The other countries have kind of gotten a free ride on The United States because they're getting the benefit of all of our research in there.”
“They ought to be paying their fair share.”
“We spend about 8% of our GDP on drugs, and in Europe they spend 3%.”
“We'd like to see them bring that up to maybe like 6%.”
Sen. Ron Johnson held one of the most gut-wrenching Senate hearings ever, titled Voices of the Vaccine Injured.
Families who lost loved ones—or suffered devastating injuries—were finally given a voice.
Their stories were raw, painful, and long overdue.
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Senator Ron Johnson opened the hearing by stating its purpose.
To give a platform to the vaccine injured—and to families whose loved ones paid the ultimate price.
“The purpose of today's hearing is to give a platform to those individuals and families who have been abandoned, their injuries and suffering dismissed and forgotten.”
The hearing was filled with countless heartbreaking testimonies.
One came from Children’s Health Defense’s Polly Tommey, who spoke about the devastating stories she’s heard again and again from families of the vaccine injured.
“We took a bus, and we traveled around America listening to parents and what had happened to them when they vaccinated their children.”
“What we saw was utterly horrific.”
“We saw so much death following baby vaccines.”
“These parents would vaccinate their perfectly healthy child, and then their child would die.”
“I've interviewed so many parents, and one comes to mind.”
“At four months old, Ms. Bundy pleaded with the doctor, ‘Should I vaccinate my child, he's premature?’”
“‘Oh, yes’, said the pediatrician, ‘If you don't vaccinate your baby, he could die of whooping cough.’”
“She vaccinated that baby, and he was dead in his crib.”
“That is the same story we hear over and over again.”
“These childhood vaccinations, the people of America are telling us, they are not safe and effective.”