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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Monday, November 04, 2024

"No Obamacare." Questioning vaccines. No fluoride in drinking water. They're all Republican assertions in the final days of the presidential campaign. The statements add up to a surreal final week of campaigning for Republicans in which several of Trump's top surrogates are introducing unconventional - and generally unpopular - ideas that pit them against the health-policy establishment

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First came GOP House Speaker Mike Johnson's pledge last Monday to overhaul the Affordable Care Act if Donald Trump wins the presidential election. Then Howard Lutnick, the co-chair of Trump's transition team, on Wednesday endorsed Robert F. Kennedy Jr's vaccine skepticism and suggested that a future Trump administration would empower Kennedy to help oversee vaccine data. Three days later, Kennedy announced that Trump would seek to remove fluoride from Americans' drinking water as a Day 1 priority.

The assorted proposals also add up to an agenda that would likely damage public health. Policy experts say that if the Affordable Care Act is overhauled, vaccine confidence declines and fluoride is removed from public water systems, the nation could see a spike in the uninsured rate, a return of vaccine-preventable diseases and more oral health problems, particularly in vulnerable communities.

The stances have also forced prominent Republicans to explain why top Trump surrogates are voluntarily attacking popular, ingrained health programs and public health interventions. The Affordable Care Act, which has become widely popular since Trump attempted to repeal it, has been credited for helping tens of millions of Americans gain health coverage since its 2010 passage. More than 90 percent of children born in the United States have been vaccinated against polio and measles, mumps and rubella, helping protect them from severe infectious diseases. Twelve presidential administrations - including Trump's - have overseen recommendations to add fluoride to water, which has been praised as one of the great public health achievements of the 20th century.

"Independents favor a much more positive health policy message than being presented here by Republicans," Robert Blendon, a longtime pollster and professor at Harvard School for Public Health, has spent more than 50 years analyzing presidential campaigns, wrote in an email.

#Losing - It's simply what Trumpers do best, along with harming Americans simply because they refuse to accept scientific fact as fact.

#1 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-11-04 07:08 AM | Reply

Magidiot Mike on camera "No more obamacare"

Reporter: Will you repeal Obamacare?

Magidiot Mike: Of course not.

#2 | Posted by Nixon at 2024-11-04 08:48 AM | Reply

It seems Repubs are finally achieving their dream of turning the US into a third world -------- like their beloved southern states.

#3 | Posted by jpw at 2024-11-04 09:23 AM | Reply

GOP's Closing Message on Health Baffles, Adds Worries

Throw MAGAt spaghetti at the wall and hope undecideds hear what they want to hear.

#4 | Posted by censored at 2024-11-04 09:33 AM | Reply

Denying science is a big part of the GOP to get people to buy into the fantasy world that the party has fabricated.

#5 | Posted by johnny_hotsauce at 2024-11-04 10:02 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 5

@#1 ... empower Kennedy to help oversee vaccine data ...

Trump doesn't rule out banning vaccines if he becomes president: 'I'll make a decision'
www.nbcnews.com

... Former President Donald Trump said Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would have a "big role in the administration" if he wins Tuesday, telling NBC News in a phone interview that he is open to some of his more controversial ideas.

Kennedy, who ran for president as an independent this year before he dropped his bid and endorsed Trump, has long spread conspiracies and falsehoods about vaccines and other public health matters. He has, for example, frequently claimed that vaccines are linked to autism, even though studies have debunked that theory for decades.

Asked Sunday whether banning certain vaccines would be an option during a second term, Trump didn't rule it out.

"Well, I'm going to talk to [Kennedy] and talk to other people, and I'll make a decision, but he's a very talented guy and has strong views," Trump said. ...


#6 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-11-04 11:42 AM | Reply

One fears that the pattern for the future that Trump is using, involves our distant past, when the poor struggled for everything, certainly healthy care, housing, and education.
And, of course, the rich robber barons ruled like gods.

#7 | Posted by Hughmass at 2024-11-05 07:47 AM | Reply

Beverly is not worried.

But then again he also thought there was no way the GOP would allow Trumpy to reverse roe v wade.

This is just ... Much ado about nothing ... again.

#8 | Posted by donnerboy at 2024-11-05 11:36 AM | Reply

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