Commentary by
MICHAEL SLOVANOS
THERE is no doubt that some see a Trump presidency with cynicism. After all, he’s a New York billionaire who hangs out with the Zionists and has a somewhat questionable background as a casino operator and TV “reality show” star. He also appointed all sorts of wrong people during his four-year term and pushed the mRNA shots.
But Trump’s acceptance of Robert F. Kennedy Jnr on to his presidential campaign and transition team along with another former Democrat Tulsi Gabbard, has confirmed what Trump supporters always knew: Trump is the anti-establishment candidate who was not supposed to win in 2016.
Some of Trump’s actions were radical. He took the US out of the globalist grip of the Paris Accord, opened up the oil pipelines, encouraged coal mining and cut federal regulations. He also gave the middle finger to the WEF, kept the US out of major new conflicts, put tariffs on cheap Chinese imports, told NATO to pay their way and began to mend relations with Russia. He also planned to take the US out of the World Health Organisation in his second term.
But as we mentioned previously, the demon frog goblin George Soros pledged that Trump would not get re-elected, and the Democrats, aided by intelligence agencies, ran a massive criminal vote rigging operation that only now is beginning to be exposed. When Biden slithered in, he immediately reversed every significant Trump change.
Now with Kennedy Jnr on his team, Trump is preparing for some profound change. Kennedy, in a recent interview, said he had been told by Trump that his term was chaotic. He himself wasn’t expecting to beat Hillary Clinton and when he came into the White House he was suddenly faced with hundreds of industry lobbyists pushing their candidates.
Kennedy told Russell Brand he fought against Trump himself, but began to realise that the Democrat Party he once knew had been gutted of its values. What was once the party of Constitutional rights, free speech and anti-war sentiment had become the opposite. He noted that 285 mostly Republican neoconservatives were now endorsing Kamala Harris because they know that things will not change under her administration.
Kennedy’s role in the Trump transition team will be influenced by his agenda is radical change in food and agriculture and pharmaceuticals and health care policy. Kennedy has invented a new acronym MAHA – Make America Healthy Again. The corporate US and global establishment must be terrified of this man.
Kennedy has fought a running battle with Big Pharma for decades through his Children’s Health Defense organisation and in February this year had a rare win in court against government censorship of his statements against vaccines on social media, at least for the time being.
Kennedy maintains that America’s children are the most unhealthy in the world, with some 70% of them suffering from chronic illnesses. These include obesity, low fertility among boys and premature puberty among girls. He puts the blame almost entirely on diet, but also the large number of vaccinations given to them.
Agriculture’s reliance on chemicals and genetically engineered crops are also in Kennedy’s sights, as he made clear in a recent video he made in front of the US Department of Agriculture in Washington DC. He maintains that GE crops are not only nutritionally inferior but contaminated with herbicides and pesticides with produce food allergies such as “gluten intolerance”.
But Kennedy’s anti-corporate idealism is already meeting some resistance from farmers and Trump will be under pressure to reign him in. In one episode of the farmer channel called Barn Talk, the hosts discuss RFK Jnr’s legal action against the meat company Smithfield and its virtual takeover of the pig/hog industry in North Carolina. The farmers dispute Kennedy’s version of events (see from 16min45s).
The reality is that many farmers actually like the convenience and productivity of chemical agriculture, so Kennedy’s idealism for cleaner, more nutritious food is going to face a battle in that sector. There is some larger-scale organic production in the US but its produce tends to be more expensive because of higher labor input, and makes up only 15% of all produce sales. Some organic methods can also endanger soil.
Trump might be better advised to place Kennedy in the big pharma arena, e.g. the FDA, to make them accountable for their Covid crimes, but whether Kennedy alone can turn that ship is another question. Trump will have to take some radical executive actions himself and undertake some major house-cleaning of institutions like the Department of Justice, FDA, CIA, FBI … and so on.