Steve Bannon and Rasmussen’s Mark Mitchell spotlighted explosive polling on COVID vaccines, framing them as a lethal scandal eroding public trust in a $1.5 trillion industry. With 56% suspecting unexplained deaths from shots, Bannon urged aggressive reforms under Health Secretary RFK Jr., warning that ignoring this fuels radicalization and civilizational decline.
Grasping this is critical: It highlights how vaccine distrust could spark health crises and political upheaval if Trump’s administration doesn’t dismantle ideological barriers, per Bannon’s call for evidence-based accountability.
In an exclusive War Room segment, Bannon grilled polling expert Mark Mitchell on America’s simmering vaccine backlash, tying it to broader regime resistance under President Donald Trump.
“This is not going away,” Bannon asserted, as Mitchell unveiled data showing widespread suspicion of COVID-19 vaccines’ side effects.
The episode, broadcast amid escalating political tensions, positioned vaccines as a flashpoint in Trump’s health overhaul. Mitchell’s Rasmussen findings were stark: 32% believe it’s “very likely” and 24% “somewhat likely” that vaccines caused unexplained deaths, totaling 56%—up from prior surveys. Alarmingly, 46% of Democrats share this view, crossing partisan divides.
“Americans think hundreds of thousands died,” Mitchell said, citing videos of young people collapsing on fields or during broadcasts. Bannon amplified: “Bill Gates slobbered over this experimental therapeutic, forced on pregnant women and kids.”
He lambasted the rollback as too slow, demanding proof for the “massive childhood schedule.”The discussion pivoted to the firing of former CDC Director Susan Monaris, which Bannon framed as a necessary purge. Polls showed that 50% agreed that government officials deserve criticism for their handling of the pandemic, with 42% supporting the firing of officials.
Mitchell noted Monaris wasn’t directly involved but symbolized resistance: “Sometimes you need a scapegoat.” Bannon mocked her congressional testimony—crying over two measles deaths while ignoring vax harms—as “crocodile tears” from a $1.5 trillion empire defender.
“She called RFK a stone-cold liar,” he said, praising Kennedy’s priorities: evidence over ideology. Why the urgency? Bannon linked vaccine distrust to Western civilization’s stakes, arguing that over-vaccination contributes to population collapse and family erosion.
“One in 28 think a family member died from side effects,” Mitchell reported, implying massive underreported tolls. Without reforms—like questioning newborn hepatitis B shots sans hep-positive moms—preventable diseases could surge, as seen in the largest measles outbreak in 30 years.
Mitchell tied this to radicalization: Distrust breeds extremism, amplified on platforms like Reddit. Bannon warned of youth indoctrination into anarchist cells, where “direct action” celebrates violence like Kirk’s assassination. “If Republicans ignore, the republic dies,” Mitchell cautioned, noting 67% GOP support for CDC firings.
In a news context, this echoes ongoing debates. RFK Jr.’s tenure has sparked scrutiny, with Monaris’s op-ed in the Wall Street Journal defending science amid ACIP changes.
Bannon’s framing underscores Trump’s mandate: 35% say side effects are unlikely, but the majority demands transparency. Failing this, per Bannon, betrays families trusting vaccines for polio and measles.
Broader implications? Economic hedges like gold amid turbulence, as Bannon promoted, tie personal security to national revival. Understanding via his lens reveals vaccines as ideological war: Challenge the status quo or face torches and pitchforks. In Trump’s America, this polling firestorm could redefine public health—or ignite deeper division.
For more, watch this full interview:




