Friends,
The idea behind MAHA – Making America Healthy Again – is one most Americans agree with. Everyone claims to support better health outcomes, safer food, and medical systems that truly serve the people. Unfortunately, for too many politicians, those promises end when the campaign signs come down.
The real challenge of MAHA is this: too many powerful industries profit from policies that prioritize convenience and corporate margins over long-term health. Highly processed foods, genetically modified crops, and heavy pesticide use may deliver higher yields and larger profits, but they also raise serious questions about safety, nutrition, and chronic disease. Americans deserve honest answers and real choices – not policies written by lobbyists.
The same concern applies to medicine. Vaccines and pharmaceuticals have saved lives and can play an important role in public health. But it is also true that certain products carry risks and that manufacturers have been granted extraordinary legal protections that shield them from liability. When companies profit from both the products that may cause harm and the treatments used afterward, it creates a system with deeply misaligned incentives. This is not an anti-science position – it is a pro-accountability one.
The problem is not innovation. The problem is a policy environment that rewards bad behavior instead of good stewardship. When corporations use their profits to influence research, regulatory agencies, and lawmakers, the voices of everyday Americans – especially parents and patients – are pushed aside. MAHA is, at its core, a policy issue: we must realign incentives so that doing the right thing is also the profitable thing.
MAHA also includes environmental health. Americans deserve transparency about government-funded programs that may impact air, water, soil, and public health. There are legitimate questions surrounding geoengineering research, weather modification technologies, chemical exposure, and the health effects of emerging technologies such as RF radiation. These concerns should not be dismissed or hidden behind bureaucratic language. Independent scientists must be allowed to evaluate risks openly, and the American people deserve clear, honest answers—especially when it comes to the health of our children.
As your next United States Senator, I will not sell out to corporate interests. I will fight to realign policy around real science, transparency, and accountability. I will work to ensure that Americans have access to accurate information, safe products, and medical freedom grounded in evidence – not profit-driven mandates. I support innovation and progress, but never at the expense of public health.
Supporting MAHA means having the courage to ask hard questions, follow the evidence wherever it leads, and put people before profits. If you elect me to represent you in the United States Senate, I pledge to approach every issue with an open mind, a commitment to truth, and an unwavering dedication to Making America Healthy Again.
Please support my campaign at
Support – Bernadette Smith for US Senate
Sincerely,
The Bernadette Smith Campaign for U.S. Senate




