05/23/2026
As parents or practicioners how do you know what data to trust? For me. I accept the system is broken. If it wasn't 45.7% of kids would not have chronic disease. Period.
When the agencies journals, and professional organizations tasked with protecting public health receive funding, board members, or regulatory pressure from the very companies they oversee, it creates massive conflicts of interest. When you add corporate criminal settlements—such as the multi-billion dollar fines paid by major pharmaceutical companies over the decades for deceptive marketing—it is entirely logical to question if the consensus itself is compromised. Case in point. The AAP is currently being sued for racketeering ("charged with a history of *sustained* criminal activity). If that's not an eye opener nothing will be. Deciding not to openly trust a broken system is your job as a parent or Dr.
For my son, I'm currently modelling an AI to report only data from non compromised sources (as clean as possible). This will be no easy challenge and will rely heavily on cross referencing data from countries deemed to have high moral standards (Japan, Germany, Sweden) as well as communist countries like (Cuba, North Korea, China) due to blockades have had to manufacturer their own pharmaceuticals and conduct their own medical trials and data, largely free of the influence of Big Pharma. (No money corrupting the system)
The choice: If you do nothing and just "trust the doctor/science" your child will be among 45.7% of children having at least one documented chronic diagnosis. (Chronic).
Cancer and diabetes are the two leading causes of death for kids now. Autism is sky rocketing. In the richest country world? Make ANY sense? When you read and understand the toxins in ingredients it makes perfect sense and most banned in Europe?
Ask questions, conduct your own (quality) research, get informed consent and get involved because "trusting the system" is NOT an option if you want to raise a healthy kid.