Senators Bernie Sanders and Angus King—two independents who rarely see daylight outside D.C. committee rooms—are introducing legislation to ban direct-to-consumer prescription drug ads across all platforms: TV, radio, digital, print, you name it.
Let that sink in. We’re talking about $2.18 billion in ad spending gone in just the first half of 2025. In 2024, it was $3.4 billion. Poof. That’s not just a dent—that’s a kill shot to the media machine that’s been shielding Big Pharma for decades.
And guess what? These ads aren’t just about medicine. They’re about control. Psychological warfare. Convince Americans they’re sick, sell them a cure, repeat.
Let’s be clear—I don’t worship at the altar of Kennedy. But the man was right on this one.
While campaigning, RFK Jr. vowed to ban pharma ads with an executive order, calling out the system for turning Americans into overmedicated lab rats. He wasn’t wrong then, and he isn’t wrong now.
“We’re one of only two countries in the world that allow this,” Kennedy said. That’s the U.S. and New Zealand. You know who’s not on that list? Every other country that doesn’t have their evening news bought out by Pfizer.
He pointed to overmedication, media bias, and regulatory capture—all valid. Still, let’s not pretend the man’s spotless. But on this? He was early. The others are just catching up.
You know why this bill is pure dynamite? Because pharma ads fund the propaganda networks you’re told to trust. CBS, MSNBC, CNN, even Fox—they all suckle at the same syringe.
Through May 2025, drug ads made up nearly 25% of ad minutes on evening news. That’s not journalism—that’s a glorified sales pitch. At CBS, over 70% of commercial breaks featured pharma ads. And they wonder why no one trusts them?
This bill would blow a crater in legacy media's budget. Expect meltdowns. Expect lawsuits. But also, expect honesty to have a fighting chance again.
Cue the violins. Big Pharma and their mouthpieces at the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America are already whining about “raising disease awareness” and “helping patients.”
Translation: “We make billions convincing you you’re dying.”
They’ll cry First Amendment, but this isn’t speech. It’s corporate coercion, bought influence, and the shaping of public opinion to fit a profit margin. And ever since the FDA gutted ad disclosure rules in 1997, it’s been open season on the American psyche.
You can’t advertise cigarettes on TV, but somehow it’s fine to push SSRIs that list “suicidal thoughts” as a side effect?
Make it make sense.
This bill doesn’t fix everything. But it hits the system where it hurts—the wallet. Take away the ad money, and the media can’t keep playing both sides. Take away the media protection, and Big Pharma doesn’t look so untouchable.
RFK Jr. wasn’t wrong. He saw the rot. And now the Senate, shockingly, might actually take a bite out of it.
Don’t expect the media to cheer this on. They’re about to lose their biggest customer. Expect spin. Expect fearmongering. But more than anything—expect the truth to finally start breaking through.
It’s about damn time.
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The media’s lifeline is Big Pharma. Cut the cord. Let the truth breathe.
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