RFK Jr. admitted one shocking truth about the COVID vaccine that is making waves

Big Pharma wanted to keep this under wraps. But the truth has been revealed.

Now RFK Jr. admitted one shocking truth about the COVID vaccine that is making waves.

The Independent Medical Alliance (IMA) has launched Smart Moms Ask, a national parental rights campaign urging the federal government to remove the COVID mRNA vaccine from the childhood immunization schedule, tapping into the same grassroots energy that secured Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s confirmation as Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary.

This movement, driven by concerns over vaccine safety, is gaining traction amid shifting federal health policy.

The campaign is explored through three critical perspectives: the grassroots push for policy change, emerging skepticism from health officials, and the cited risks fueling parental concerns.

Grassroots Push for Policy Change

The Smart Moms Ask campaign, spearheaded by IMA, demands that HHS and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) “stop mRNA COVID shots for kids and pregnant women” and remove them from the childhood vaccine schedule.

Dr. Kat Lindley, IMA Fellowship Program Director, declared, “Moms are the fiercest protectors of their children, yet they’ve been bullied into accepting mRNA shots with devastating risks.”

The campaign’s petition invites Americans to join this call, echoing the activism that propelled Kennedy’s HHS confirmation.

In 2022, Kennedy criticized the CDC’s decision to add the mRNA shots to the childhood schedule as a “reckless action,” accusing the agency of prioritizing “pharma overlords” over “child welfare.”

This grassroots effort seeks to reverse that decision, amplifying parental voices in a charged health policy debate.

Emerging Skepticism from Health Officials

Recent statements from FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary bolster the campaign’s case, as he questioned the necessity of mRNA COVID shots for healthy children. During an interview with Charlie Kirk, Makary stated, “Look, I’d love to see the evidence to show that giving young, healthy children another COVID shot – you know, a sixth COVID booster – would help them,” but asserted, “that evidence does not exist.”

He noted that other countries, particularly in Europe, have already recommended against vaccinating young, healthy children, and predicted an upcoming U.S. policy shift, saying, “I think you’re going to see some announcement on that in the coming weeks.”

Makary’s acknowledgment that “there’s no good randomized control data” for the latest vaccine formulation signals a potential reevaluation at the federal level, aligning with the campaign’s demands.

Cited Risks Fueling Parental Concerns

The Smart Moms Ask campaign cites alarming statistics from peer-reviewed studies to justify its push, highlighting risks to children and pregnant women. According to the campaign, 9.5 million U.S. children aged 6 months to 17 years have received the mRNA shot as of April 19, 2025.

It points to a 620% increase in myocarditis among young men post-vaccination, miscarriage rates as high as 81% in a Pfizer Patient Safety study (compared to a 13% average), and a 33% lower successful conception rate for vaccinated women in 2022.

“The risks are real, and parents deserve the truth,” the campaign asserts, drawing on IMA’s expertise as the former Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance. These figures, paired with Kennedy’s prior condemnation of the CDC’s 2022 decision, fuel parental distrust and drive the campaign’s urgency to protect vulnerable populations from what it calls “devastating risks.”

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