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“Don’t take Tylenol if you’re pregnant, and don’t give Tylenol to your child,” Trump said plainly. “When he’s born or she’s born, don’t give it — just don’t give it.”
This wasn’t a suggestion. It was a clear directive from the Commander-in-Chief, and it left parents stunned.
Trump also repeated his long-standing call for doctors to space out childhood vaccines instead of giving multiple shots at once.
“And we’re going to have — I think really, if you do all the things that I say: break it up. Just break it up. Break up the shots with the doctor — MMRs, as I told you, separate, separate, separate,” Trump told the crowd.
The President cited disturbing statistics showing autism rates climbing at an unprecedented pace.
Today, estimates range from 1 in 32 children to as high as 1 in 10 — with California seeing some of the worst numbers in the country.
“When I leave office, I don’t want to have — it’s going to be the kind of number that we’re hearing where it’s 1 in 32 or 1 in 10, because I’ve heard 1 in 10 also. And in California it’s really bad,” Trump said.
Compare that to decades ago, when autism rates were as low as 1 in 10,000 or even 1 in 20,000 children.
“You don’t go from 1 in 20,000 to 1 in 10,000 then to 1 in 10 unless you’re taking something and something’s wrong,” Trump added.
Trump said he believes this epidemic isn’t natural or genetic — but “artificially induced” and completely preventable.
“I want it to be — let’s get it back to maybe 1 in 10,000 or 1 in 20,000, or maybe none in 20,000. The only way you’re going to do that is because this is artificially induced,” the President declared.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had already promised Americans the truth about the autism explosion.
“By September, we will know what has caused the autism epidemic, and we will be able to eliminate those exposures,” Kennedy vowed. “This is a preventable disease. We know it’s an environmental exposure. It has to be. Genes do not cause epidemics.”
Now September is here.
And Trump’s Tylenol warning may be the first look at what Kennedy’s team uncovered in their comprehensive meta-study on autism causes.
For decades, the medical establishment told pregnant mothers Tylenol was safe — while autism rates soared.
Now the President of the United States is saying the opposite.
For parents who have been desperate for answers, Trump’s words signal real hope: the possibility of reversing the autism epidemic.
“I feel very certain — and I know I’ll be criticized someday — they’ll look back and they’ll say, ‘Well it wasn’t,’ but I think it will,” Trump said. “I think we’re going to have a tremendous — I want this. This is one of the most — this is the most important. There’s nothing more important.”
Trump knows the backlash will be fierce. But he’s prioritizing children’s health over Big Pharma’s profits and the medical bureaucracy’s pride.
Monday’s announcement from Trump and Kennedy could mark the beginning of a seismic shift in how America protects its children.
And it all started with three simple words: ditch the Tylenol.