Medical Freedom is Popular

To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson, a government that decides the medicines we take will leave our bodies in as sorry a state as our souls under tyranny. Today, Americans cannot seek remedy if the vaccine of a drug company causes them harm whenever that drug is issued under the PREP Act or per Childhood Vaccine laws.

We asked Americans what they thought about holding drug companies liable and responsible whenever their vaccines cause injury. We asked this question in multiple ways, including whether Americans supported making drug companies responsible if vaccines cause injury and how much such an issue would impact their vote for a candidate.

Here were American answers 

Please tell us whether you agree or disagree: “Drug companies should not be immune from suit if their vaccines cause injuries.”

 

Agree: 75%

Disagree: 17%

Unsure: 8%

 

Strongly Agree: 50%

 

Every demographic group supported ending drug company immunity for vaccine injuries. Every ideological group supported ending drug company immunity for vaccine injuries. Every age group supported ending drug company immunity for vaccine injuries. Every group across religion, race and region supported ending drug company immunity for vaccine injuries.

When asked whether this was a voting issue for them, Americans answered as follows: impact of a candidate supporting making drug companies responsible if vaccines cause injury.

 

More Likely: 68%

Less Likely: 13%

No Impact: 19%

 

Once again, every demographic group, every ideological group, every age group, every group across party, race, region and religion reported they were more likely to support a medical freedom candidate – no immunity for drug companies -- than less likely by some of the largest margins on any issue the company ever surveyed.

 

The specific concerns animating this demand for ending Big Pharma immunity for their vaccines derives from doubts about the Covid19 vaccine especially. Only 1-in-3 Americans expressed a “great deal of trust in the safety of Covid19 vaccines” while nearly 2-in-5 reported serious doubts about the safety of the vaccines. The lowest level of confidence arose from voters under 50 years of age, Black and Hispanic voters, Independent voters, military voters, unemployed voters, disabled voters, non-college voters, voters with young children, uncommitted voters, undecided voters, swing voters, and voters unsure about voting in 2024.

 

When asked whether they personally thought the Covid19 vaccines are safe and effective, less than half the country (48%) believed they were safe and effective, the lowest rate of public confidence in any vaccine in American polling history. The lowest levels of public confidence came from Zoomers and Millennials, Black and Hispanic voters, Independents, Non-College voters, Income under $100K, Unemployed, Disabled, Separated, young parents, and undecided, uncommitted and swing voter groups.

 

When asked about experiencing discrimination from the vaccine, another 30% of the country expressed personally experiencing it or a close family member experiencing it. Once again, the numbers experiencing discrimination spiked amongst younger voters (49%), young parents, black and Hispanic voters, non-college voters, unemployed, disabled, separated, undecided, uncommitted, and swing voters.

 

An extraordinary 30% of Americans reported they or someone very close to them “suffered serious adverse reactions from Covid19 vaccine including injury or death.” Once again, the number reporting injuries trended young, parents with young children, working class, minority, unemployed, disabled, 3rd party and independent voters, swing voters, and undecided voters.

 

The further sourcing for these beliefs derived from a skepticism toward corporatized, industrialized, monopolized pharmaceutical supply under the control of conflicted government bureaucrats and big corporations. Americans expressed strong skepticism toward government bureaucrats (73% report having “too much power”) and big corporations (73% report having “too much power”),and strong sympathy toward empowering ordinary people (79% report having “not enough power”).

 

Most notably, the swing voter survey revealed just how hot the issue of medical freedom is for the very voter groups that will decide Election 2024.

 

1776 Law Center commissioned a survey to uncover who these voters are. One-in-5 voters are uncommitted to any Presidential candidate and admitted they are considering multiple options, including whether to vote for Trump or Biden or Kennedy. Of note, half the country excluded voting for each of the candidates; about 40% committed to voting for Trump; about 40% committed to voting for Biden; 5% committed to voting for Kennedy. Half the country said they are considering voting for Trump, Biden or Kennedy. Who are the 20% uncommitted?

 

Notably, the 2024 swing voter experienced above average rates of social and physical harm from the Covid19 vaccine, with half reporting someone very close to them suffering a serious or severe harm from the vaccine or discrimination from vaccine mandates.

 

What motivates these voters? These voters listed the issues “more likely” to impact their vote as: the power to hold drug companies responsible for the vaccines (76% of swing voters versus 63% of other voters).

 

Medical freedom is a big winning issue, decisive with the very voting groups that will decide Election2024.

 

1776 Law Center commissioned BIG DATA POLL, a survey company with an established record of successful surveys for the past decade. Using statistically validated methodologies, propreitary access to voter files, and diversified sourcing, BDP interviewed 2000 registered voters nationwide from May 17 to May 24, 2024 via mixed-mode to include likely voters screened by self-reported likelihood to vote and independently confirmed vote history. Interviews conducted online are sourced through Lucid (CINT) and phone interviews including P2P SMS and text-to-online are sourced from the Aristotle National Voter File Database. Results were weighted for gender, age, race and ethnicity, education, geography and region to approximate the American public. The overall sampling error is +/- 1.8% at a 95% confidence interval.