The Trump administration's fight against Big Food just got a heavyweight champion in its corner. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has enlisted boxing legend Mike Tyson to help expose the deadly grip processed foods have on American families - and the results are already sending shockwaves through the corrupt food industry.
In a powerful interview with Lara Trump alongside health advocate Calley Means, Iron Mike didn't pull any punches about why he's throwing his support behind RFK Jr.'s mission to Make America Healthy Again.
"I had a sister that died from obesity. So when they heard my story, they used me for the commercial, and it was just me telling the truth. People shouldn't be surprised to see because I'm one of the most healthiest people on the planet,"
Tyson's raw honesty about losing his sister to obesity-related complications perfectly captures what RFK Jr. has been fighting against since day one - an food system designed to poison Americans for profit while Big Pharma cashes in on the resulting health disasters.
Of course, the usual suspects in the legacy media are already clutching their pearls about Tyson's past, desperately trying to distract from the message by attacking the messenger. But that's exactly what we'd expect from the same corrupt establishment that spent decades covering for the food companies slowly killing our children with processed garbage.
This partnership represents everything the Trump administration stands for - taking on entrenched corporate interests that have been bleeding Americans dry while making them sick. While the Biden regime spent four years kowtowing to Big Food lobbyists, President Trump and RFK Jr. are actually fighting for the health of everyday Americans.
Tyson's transformation from troubled youth to world champion to health advocate proves that redemption is possible - and his personal tragedy gives him the moral authority to speak truth to power about America's obesity epidemic.
The question isn't whether Mike Tyson is the perfect messenger. The question is: how many more American families have to lose loved ones to preventable diseases before we finally take on the corporations poisoning our food supply?
