President Trump's FDA is finally doing what the Biden regime refused to do for four years - protecting American families from dangerous chemicals hiding in our food supply. The agency announced Tuesday it will review BHA, a preservative commonly found in processed foods that's also used to make rubber and plastics.
While European countries have strict standards protecting their citizens from questionable food additives, Americans have been forced to consume industrial chemicals masquerading as "safe" preservatives. The previous administration was too busy pushing woke policies and appeasing corporate donors to care about what families were putting on their dinner tables.
BHA (butylated hydroxyanisole) is found in everything from cereals to snack foods, yet this same chemical is used in petroleum products and synthetic rubber. Does that sound like something you want your kids eating for breakfast?
Trump Delivers on Food Safety Promise
This investigation represents exactly the kind of America First approach Patriots voted for in 2024. Instead of bowing to Big Food lobbyists, the Trump administration is putting American health before corporate profits.
"We're bringing American food standards in line with what other countries demand for their citizens," the FDA announced, signaling a major shift from the previous regime's corporate-friendly approach.
The agency also plans to make food labels clearer and more transparent - another win for everyday Americans who deserve to know what's actually in their food. For too long, families have been kept in the dark while food companies pumped products full of questionable chemicals.
This is what happens when you have an administration that actually works for the American people instead of corporate boardrooms. While Democrats were busy with their Green New Deal fantasies, they ignored the basic right of families to safe, clean food.
The question is: how many other industrial chemicals are still lurking in our food supply, and why did it take a change in administration to finally address this crisis?
