I want to address something. A clip of my speech in Lenox MA about female infertility caused by the Pfizer vaccines was just posted. This is an extremely important message. Maybe I wore an unflattering dress; maybe I did not look my best that day. Some (female) commentators in the feed below the clip decided to criticize my appearance. I happen to be in pain from an injury and struggling with walking, and I just can’t take the annoyance of these comments right now so I deleted the clip. You should consider, when you think about the world you want, the impact on female public figures of the constant criticism of their appearance that they endlessly receive. My whole career, since I was 26, I was told I was either too pretty to be taken seriously or, as today, somehow not up to par and I needed to improve something, or both at once, or a dress was too revealing or a neckline was too low or my hair was too big or too unruly or it was falling in my face too much. It is EXTREMELY difficult to stay focused on difficult work and on the challenge of delivering an important painful message in the face of both the stresses of the work itself PLUS this constant sexist judgment of public women’s looks, including of my own. You get the leaders you deserve. And if you constantly wear down women in the public eye and force them to think about things that are not even important rather than about the work at hand, eventually they will throw in the towel, because they are human. Consider that the woman you are bitchily judging may be in pain, or struggling to walk, or simply tired and preoccupied, or even consider that the mass murder of babies which is the focus on my talk is important and your nasty comments about my dress or hair or body ARE NOT IMPORTANT. You are just acting out or bored or trying to make yourself feel better for some reason. So think about the impact you have on public women with these constant bitchy evaluations of them, and if you want any real leaders to show up, RE-PRIORITIZE and manage your destructive impulses. I am done with this nonsense. You know who you are.
🚨BIG MOMENT: The first copy of "A Revolution of Common Sense" is finally in my hands.
President Trump picked that cover — and I gotta say: he was RIGHT again. It looks amazing.
Grab a copy today (links below). You won't regret it 🔥
🔥"An Inconvenient Study" is available to watch here on X.
How can you help? We are asking YOU to act.
⏯️Visit https://t.co/voQVAE9uaZ to download the film for FREE. Upload and repost on your own social media. Share it with your friends.
Make sure everyone you know sees it.
It could change everything.
Share this cover so that the world sees the strength of our great President Trump instead of the one the fake news Time magazine put out.
Time magazine uses the most unflattering photos of President Trump at a moment when they should be honoring him.
@BrandonStraka Thinking of you, and praying God will comfort you as you grieve! 🥺 You have been through so much, yet you stand so strong. My heart hurts for you and your family. 😭
I am in tears. Vice President JD Vance is carrying Charlie Kirk bringing him home on Air Force Two
Charlie Kirk is a true hero to America
I will never forget this 🙏
🚨 BEAUTIFUL: Phoenix Air Traffic Control sent a message to Charlie Kirk when he landed back in Arizona on Air Force Two
“Welcome home, Charlie. You didn’t deserve it… May God bless your family.” 🙏🏻
Americans of all walks of life are mourning the loss of Charlie 🇺🇸
WATCH: Former U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who was at the Kirk event, gets emotional as he reveals that President Trump called him last night to check in on him.
You can hear how broken this man still is, but just how much the phone call from Trump meant to him.
“But I will tell you this, since you and I spoke yesterday, just personally on the phone…I hope I can get through this part…the president called me.”
“I was very touched by that.”
“He talked about his love of Charlie and his family.”
“That man, Donald Trump, is a rock. That guy is amazing.”
“Everything going on in the world, and the president wanted to see how I was doing and wanted to talk about that beautiful lady and his family.”
“It was a really good conversation. I’m very grateful that we have a president who cares the way he does.”
We wept bitterly putting this together...
Charlie Kirk did not fear death. Charlie told us what his legacy would be. Charlie's greatest passion was his faith in Jesus Christ.
Just hours before he was assassinated, Charlie stood on stage, openly proclaiming his love for Jesus Christ. Unafraid, unwavering, and full of conviction. He lived every moment guided by that faith, and in the end, he was taken home by his Savior.
Charlie is a true Christian martyr.
His example is not just inspiring, it is a call to all of us. To stand firm in our beliefs, to shine light into darkness, speak truth and to live boldly in our faith. Charlie showed us what it means to live, and die, with purpose.
This is the legacy he leaves...
I don’t believe that Charlie will be the last.
Why?
Because they’re losing.
They’re losing elections. Trump took care of that.
They’re losing their funding of their shadow orgs. DOGE took care of that.
They lost control of the media. @elonmusk took care of that.
🧵
This is a difficult moment for all of us at HHS. Our hearts go out to those who have lost their jobs. But the reality is clear: what we've been doing isn't working. Despite spending $1.9 trillion in annual costs, Americans are getting sicker every year. In the past four years alone, the agency’s budget has grown by 38% — yet outcomes continue to decline.
We must shift course. HHS needs to be recalibrated to emphasize prevention, not just sick care. These changes will not affect Medicare, Medicaid, or other essential health services.
This overhaul is about realigning HHS with its core mission: to stop the chronic disease epidemic and Make America Healthy Again. It’s a win-win for taxpayers, and for every American we serve.