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Who’s Afraid Of RFK? New Poll Shatters Corporate Media’s ‘Fringe’ Narrative

Corporate media minions spent a good portion of the election cycle attacking Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as a “fringe” conspiracy theorist promoting “dangerous” ideas. In other words, ideas that do not conform to their worldview.

They kept their foot on the pedal and expected President-elect Donald Trump to tap RFK. Junior took a health-related position within the administration. President Trump did just that on Nov. 14, nominating Kennedy to head the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). (Stream the Daily Caller documentary “SICK” about medical institutions here)

In response to this decision, the press stated: atlantic ocean and new yorker He warned against RFK's “bad” ideas, such as banning seed oils and carcinogenic food colorings.

Even the New York Post, a right-leaning news organization, jumped on the bandwagon.

“We are concerned that this bug that he claims ate part of his brain years ago is contagious and is causing an outbreak at Mar-a-Lago,” the post said. said the editorial board. I wrote.

In the opening paragraph of an article about RFK that appears to have been written in part by lobbyists, Politico writes, dropped Dirty word: “fringe.”

“President Donald Trump’s endorsement of the health doctrine of Robert F. “They are in a hurry to stop,” the newspaper reported. reported.

Despite a flood of fear-mongering reports from corporate media, the latest polls show that a majority of Americans support President Trump's cabinet appointments. Many Americans also approve of RFK Jr.'s nomination.

Nearly 60% of Americans support President Trump's candidacy. According to Responded to CBS News/YouGov survey. 47% say RFK is the right person to be HHS secretary. Only 34% of adults surveyed said RFK was a bad choice, and 19% said they hadn't heard enough about RFK.

Almost 50%. That doesn't seem like a fringe to me.

The poll also found that Americans no longer trust the media to determine which ideas are outlandish and outlandish and which are actually smart (such as banning cancer-causing seed oils and artificial dyes). It suggests that it has not. The corporate media's fear-mongering reports once again ring hollow to reasonable people.

Like this post? Check out the full text of John's weekly newsletter, Mr. Right, here. MrRight.DailyCaller.com

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