Season 2 Episode 6 of The Flipside w/Dr. Michael Nichols features an in-depth conversation about detoxing with Spencer Feldman.
https://t.co/FwtKpiwjd7
BREAKING: Vaccines May Trigger Sudden Infant Death Syndrome via Brainstem Failure
New study finds that immature infant livers may fail to clear toxic vaccine ingredients—triggering inflammation and brainstem dysfunction that can lead to sudden death during sleep. @NicHulscher@McCulloughFund https://t.co/HArLtBb68Q
@drmicheleross@SecKennedy Please tell me how asking questions and demanding transparency shows that he’s not qualified for his job? This is exactly why he was placed into this position.
@jeremyrhammond@SecKennedy This is exactly correct. By their thinking, if a study shows something wrong with vaccines there must be mistakes somewhere. This is the thinking going into the review.
How Big Pharma Silenced the White House
A single poll of 1,000 people convinced the White House to tell Robert Kennedy Jr. to stop talking about vaccines. The full results of that same poll were hidden from Trump and his administration. The Daily Caller just published them.
@JeffereyJaxen walks through the sequence. In December 2025, a Fabrizio poll of 1,000 voters in key House districts was circulated to the White House and picked up wall-to-wall by the New York Times and other outlets, with the message that vaccine skepticism was bad politics and that candidates who questioned childhood vaccine requirements would pay at the ballot box.
Kennedy was told to stand down on vaccines and focus on food. The White House obliged. What the Daily Caller has now obtained is the rest of the Fabrizio data, from a poll conducted in October 2025 by Trump's own longtime pollster, that was never released.
The suppressed results show that 73% of voters expressed concern about childhood vaccine mandates, 90% expressed concern about the pharmaceutical industry's corrupting influence over government, politics, medical research, and news coverage, and approximately 70% across all political affiliations want vaccine manufacturer blanket immunity lifted.
Nearly seven in ten voters want more research into vaccines' cumulative effect on infants. The poll that shaped six months of White House vaccine policy told a fraction of the story. The rest was kept from Trump.
Against that backdrop, Trump just signed an executive order directing the CDC and ACIP to review the scientific assessment and latest clinical data and take appropriate steps to update the childhood and adolescent vaccine schedule, with explicit language requiring that all actions fulfill legal obligations with respect to parental authority, religious freedom, disability accommodations, and equal protection.
Dr. Robert Malone, former ACIP co-chair, describes the order as potentially changing the vaccine debate forever, because the phrase "to the extent permitted by law" restores executive branch authority over vaccination policy and strips ACIP of its de facto rule-making power, confining the committee to an advisory role rather than the policy-setting function it has exercised for decades. The Massachusetts judge's stay on the ACIP restructuring had put Kennedy's reform agenda on ice.
This executive order moves around that roadblock.
We should keep our eyes focused on the next ACIP meeting.
@and_kell@RWMaloneMD The sheer ignorance on his (Hotez) side of the mic is astounding. And we are supposed to listen to anything that comes out of his mouth?
$735,720,598.00 just awarded to Pfizer by the CDC for infant Covid shots. Another $505,272,000.00 awarded for adult vaccines.
https://t.co/HdqhZmBYnm https://t.co/uZNjUYmgJU
Season 2 Episode 6 of The Flipside w/Dr. Michael Nichols features some excellent conversation around detoxing. Check out the full episode on YouTube, Spotify and Rumble.
Sheryl. Your article exemplifies the biased reporting we have come to expect from you and @nytimes. It was unfair, inimical, and inaccurate. All one needs to refute your argument is to glance at my publicly available calendar and to review my unprecedented list of accomplishments on a wide range of issues, all of which I drove. You evidently never undertook these foundational due diligences. Why let facts obscure a good story?
You fault me for missing a couple of monthly counselor meetings. However, I meet one-on-one with my counselors every day to decide policy and strategy. We schedule the monthly meetings to give the divisions a chance to keep each other informed about HHS-wide policies with which I’m already intimately familiar. Had you read my calendar, you would have seen that I have back-to-back meetings all day, every day, with both career and political staff, with my counselors and with outside stakeholders, interspersed with press conferences and other policy announcements.
I am knowledgeable and active on every issue in every division of my department, and I always make the final decisions. I meet with the principals at FDA, NIH, CDC, and my senior counselor every morning, something, I’m told, is unprecedented in HHS history. I try to get out of the office between 4:30 and 6:00 PM, so that I can spend three hours, in quiet, responding to emails. I normally work until 11 PM every night, mostly on phone calls to staff.
In order to prove your preconceived case for my disengagement, you quote anonymous employees, some of whom I fired or who quit to avoid being fired. You also deceptively quote HHS employees without identifying whether they were among those I fired, thereby depriving your readers of the opportunity to make an independent judgment about their credibility.
I came into this job to change the culture of a broken agency that has presided over the worst decline in public health in American history. Of course I fired people—lots of them! It's an easy task for even the laziest journalist, to comb that flotsam and jetsam for malevolence toward the Trump administration. And of course, this species of journalist will always be able to find disgruntled individuals among the 70,000 employees of the Department from whom to cherry pick "facts" to flesh out a preordained hit piece. All that is required for this brand of journalism is the ethical elasticity that you seem to have in spades. You had a preconceived thesis, and you set out to prove it. This is a widely accepted technique in journalism today, but I grew up in an era when it would not have been tolerated by the New York Times.
Ultimately, God puts us all on this earth to search for existential truths. I've tried to instill this mission at HHS by implementing gold standard research to end the regime of politicized science that COVID exposed to the American public. There was a time that journalists were proud to be the fearless and uncompromising champions of truth. Standards have devolved, and journalism is dead. The Times now employs propagandists. Your capitulation to partisanship further compounds your journalistic challenges; since we all are aware of your predictable bias, we at HHS are unwilling to talk to you about the topics that are important. The fact that you have minimal access to decision makers leaves you covering trivia and relying on your own capacity for invention.
Btw. When I took this job, the building was empty. About 90% of the employees were not coming to work. I changed that, but your newspaper never covers my reforms. Nor did you cover the fact that my predecessor almost never showed up for work here during his four years in office. When we came in, there were still artifacts from the first Trump administration in many of our office drawers because no one showed up for work during the Biden years. Just as Rochelle Walensky spent her entire term as CDC Director in Cambridge, Xavier Becerra reportedly spent most of his term as HHS Secretary in California. (I live in California, but I’ve only been there once in fifteen months).
His only notable accomplishments here were losing 300,000 children, referred to HHS for custody and care, to human traffickers and drug runners, encouraging transgender surgeries, and disabling the entire program-integrity apparatus, allowing hundreds of billions of dollars of theft from my agency. I have set out to find the children Becerra lost. He is now the front-runner for the governor of California. These are not invented stories; they are genuine scandals that the Times will never cover, presumably, because the malefactors are Democrats.
Finally, you criticize me for spending time with the Indian tribes in Alaska. I consider that part of my job. I run the Indian Health Services, and I’ve had unprecedented success in transforming IHS from a backwater to a top priority for this department. I’ve made more trips to Indian country and to Indian health clinics and hospitals than any HHS secretary in history, and I’ve brought Indians into high positions on the sixth floor for the first time in agency history. This is another success story that the Times will never cover.
💥BREAKING: Landmark Gardasil trial ends in confidential settlement
The first Gardasil injury lawsuit to reach a U.S. jury has ended in a confidential settlement, leaving key scientific and regulatory questions unresolved.
LINK: https://t.co/UNsoN8NmlN
@WisnerBaum@ChildrensHD@liz_churchill10@newstart_2024@ValerieAnne1970@MaryBowdenMD
Spencer Feldman of https://t.co/pQMulKirNR on Episode 6 discussing the in's and out's of detoxing. Check out the full episode on YouTube, Spotify and Rumble