Trump posts video reviving thimerosal controversy, but what about the toxic burden of aluminum on developing brains?


The vaccine safety debate has flared up once again after President Donald Trump shared a video featuring scientists Mark and David Geier. These scientists have focused their research on thimerosal — a mercury-based preservative once common in vaccines. Thimerosal is now being studied for its link to autism.

In fact, the timing is striking: Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been quietly assembling a team to investigate vaccine safety, with thimerosal squarely in the crosshairs. But critics argue that focusing solely on this one ingredient misses the broader picture — aluminum adjuvants, aggressive vaccine schedules, and unnatural immune stimulation at developmental milestones in babies may also play a role in neurological harm.

If upcoming NIH studies on vaccines and autism advertise thimerosal as the sole toxin in vaccines; and if the government moves quickly to make vaccines look safe again by focusing only on the removal of thimerosal, then this whole effort to improve chronic disease and childhood health will become a laughable, regurgitated fraud of false reassurances.

For one, thimerosal has already been removed from most vaccines for over twenty years, and wouldn’t be the most pressing issue regarding vaccines and brain damage. Second, upcoming studies must address more pressing concerns, like the compounding burden of aluminum adjuvant (in vaccines) and the hyper-inflammatory nature of aluminum-based vaccines.

Not to mention, the studies should focus on the compounding neurological damage from an outrageous childhood vaccine schedule (that has never been properly studied as a whole), and the of course, let’s investigate how these toxic elements are rendered more toxic at the critical time at which developing brains exposed to these chemicals and metals. An adult may be able to handle a specific dose, but it’s babies that are unknowingly poisoned by multiple jabs of these toxic elements. Their blood volume and body weight are much smaller, and these babies are at critical moments in development. When the child grows older, they learn that they never had a say; their parents were never given proper informed consent; and their neurological injury is something that have to deal with for the rest of their life.

Key points:

  • President Trump shared a video featuring anti-vaccine researchers Mark and David Geier, reigniting debate over thimerosal’s safety.
  • Thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, was largely phased out of childhood vaccines in 2001 but remains in some flu shots.
  • The focus on thimerosal is too little, too late, for a President who has unfettered access to information regarding vaccine risks and failures.
  • Trump has recently bragged about the success of COVID shots, despite widely available research debunking his egotistical claims.
  • HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has prioritized investigating thimerosal’s link to autism, though aluminum adjuvants — still present in most vaccines — may also pose the greatest to childhood brain development.
  • The CDC maintains thimerosal is safe, but internal documents, including the 2000 Simpsonwood conference transcripts, suggest officials knew of potential neurological risks.
  • Critics warn that singling out thimerosal while ignoring aluminum and other questionable vaccine ingredients (including aborted fetal cells) could undermine genuine safety reform.

A decades-old controversy resurfaces

Thimerosal has been a lightning rod in vaccine debates since the late 1990s, when concerns first emerged about its potential neurotoxicity. By 2001, under pressure from pediatricians and public health agencies, it was removed from most childhood vaccines — except for some flu shots. Yet the controversy never fully died.

The video Trump shared features David Geier, whom Kennedy recently appointed to an HHS vaccine safety panel, alongside his father, Mark Geier — a doctor whose medical license was suspended over questionable autism treatments. The pair have long argued that thimerosal causes autism, citing studies linking mercury exposure to neurological damage.

But the so-called scientific consensus (backed by Pharma-controlled media), and echoed by the CDC, is that thimerosal does not cause autism. Multiple large-scale studies, including those published in The New England Journal of Medicine and Pediatrics, found no association. Yet skeptics point to troubling revelations from the 2000 Simpsonwood conference, where CDC officials privately acknowledged a “statistically significant” link between thimerosal and neurodevelopmental disorders.

Aluminum: The overlooked culprit?

While thimerosal has dominated headlines, aluminum — a common vaccine adjuvant used to provoke stronger immune responses — has flown under the radar. Unlike mercury, aluminum remains in nearly every childhood vaccine.

The FDA sets limits on aluminum exposure in medications — 25 micrograms per kilogram per day — yet vaccines routinely exceed this threshold for infants. A newborn receiving multiple shots in a single visit may be injected with hundreds of micrograms, far beyond what regulatory agencies deem safe for intravenous exposure.

Animal studies suggest aluminum can accumulate in the brain, triggering inflammation and neurological damage. French researcher Dr. Christopher Exley, a leading expert on aluminum toxicity, has found alarming levels of the metal in autistic brain tissue. Yet mainstream medicine dismisses such findings, insisting aluminum adjuvants are harmless.

Government positioning for more mRNA vaccine experiments?

Trump’s video post comes as Kennedy faces mounting scrutiny over his vaccine skepticism. Senators from both parties have grilled him on whether he supports routine immunizations, while public health advocates fear his focus on thimerosal could erode trust in vaccines altogether. The White House insists the administration is not anti-vaccine — just pro-safety. “It’s not a binary,” an official told reporters. “You can support vaccines and still ask tough questions.”

As HHS prepares its autism report, the question remains: Will officials confront the full spectrum of vaccine risks — or settle for a politically convenient scapegoat and claim “safe vaccines” in the years ahead as they move toward more profitable mRNA experiments? The signs are there for another government coverup- with Trump meeting with Bill Gates and praising mRNA COVID jabs, while pointing out thimerosal as the scapegoat for the vaccine autism link.

Sources include:

YourNews.com

TruthSocial.com

Politico.com


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