A DRUG BORN FOR PROFIT, MARKETED AS A MIRACLE
In a nation where 74% of the population is classified as overweight or obese, a medical crisis exists — but it is not obesity. The true crisis is political capture, corporate exploitation, and the weaponization of medicine as profit strategy, not healing.
Ozempic, a drug developed by Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk. Once marketed as a treatment for Type 2 diabetes, it was quickly repurposed, rebranded, and resurrected as a silver bullet for obesity — a condition that, as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. correctly points out, “barely even existed 100 years ago and is entirely preventable.”
But today, obesity is no longer viewed as a lifestyle-related issue. It has been medicalized, institutionalized, and monetized — not by doctors or by data, but by lobbyists, corporate media, and bought politicians.
“Today, over 100 members of Congress support a bill to fund Ozempic with Medicare at $1,500 a month. Most of these members have taken money from the manufacturer of that product, a European company called Novo Nordisk.” — Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
What follows is not public health policy. It is a full-scale economic assault.
THE $3 TRILLION BLACK HOLE — FUNDED BY YOU
Let’s break the math open. If Medicare approves Ozempic for widespread obesity treatment — which it is poised to do — the drug will automatically become available to Medicaid recipients as well, triggering a chain reaction of federal reimbursement.
The price? $1,500 per patient, per month.
In a country where 74% of citizens fall within the obesity classification, the cost of this mass pharmaceutical dependency quickly balloons to $3 trillion annually — nearly the size of the entire U.S. federal budget.
And what exactly are Americans paying for?
“For half the price of Ozempic, we could purchase regeneratively raised organic agriculture, organic food for every American three meals a day, and gym membership for every obese American.” — RFK Jr.
Instead of funding American farmers, local gyms, and nutritional education, Congress is poised to send hundreds of billions of dollars overseas to a Danish corporation whose own government doesn’t even recommend the drug. Denmark recommends dietary and lifestyle changes. Only the United States — and its compromised political class — sees lifelong medication as the first option.
FOLLOW THE MONEY — LOBBYISTS, MEDIA, AND THE BOUGHT SILENCE
The story becomes darker once you trace the pipeline behind the legislation.