The Most Dangerous Man in Washington DC
Why danger might be what we need right now—from Big Pharma to MAHA to Steve Jobs.
Where RFK Jr. stands, there’s a future he’s fighting for. A war for truth, a battle against noise and misdirection. And in the middle of all of it, more people than ever are calling him ‘dangerous’.
And you know what? They’re right. He is dangerous.
Dangerous to a system that’s gotten too comfortable with itself. Dangerous to government agencies that traded transparency for bureaucratic self-preservation. Dangerous to the pharmaceutical money that swallows negligence for breakfast. Dangerous to the narrative machine that thrives on silencing voices and public thought rather than wrestling with it. Dangerous to the culture of fear that keeps people quiet when they know something’s wrong.
If you ask me, this is the kind of dangerous we desperately need.
Because when someone flips the table instead of politely asking for permission, the ground shakes. And it’s not chaos for the sake of chaos, it’s a recalibration. A redirection. A course correction. Call it what you want, but it’s a necessary reminder that truth isn’t fragile, and it definitely doesn’t come without a cost. But it does need the space to be spoken without fear of censorship.
Real science, real health, real leadership, real public discourse, all of it requires a willingness to break what’s rotten so something authentic can grow. Builders know you can’t build anything new without breaking something old.
This is also a decent reminder, saw this scrolling the other day:
It’s true. ☝🏼
And here’s something else that’s true: maybe it takes someone ‘dangerous’ to fix some of these things.
Another Battleground: Tylenol on Trial
It’s impossible to lay out all the wins. Pharmaceutical ads getting kicked where it hurts, companies like Pfizer bending the knee to the Trump administration, food giants changing their nutrients for the good of the American people, and now Tylenol, what most would have considered a safe choice during pregnancy and for young children, is now being questioned.
Tylenol is obviously more than a medicine cabinet staple—it’s a cultural reflex. That’s why questioning it feels like heresy. But that’s exactly what dangerous leadership does: it forces us to look twice at what we’ve been told is ‘safe.’
This isn’t about never using Tylenol again, it’s about being honest about the risks. About pulling hidden dangers into the light. About refusing to let convenience and marketing outweigh truth and transparency.
Some people think these are ‘small wins’ while others are shouting in gratitude, but the truth is that this system isn’t going to fix itself.
If we want truth back on the table, we have to demand it, defend it at all costs, and amplify those willing to risk being called ‘dangerous’.
The video above is from 1995, when Steve Jobs was called the most dangerous man in Silicon Valley. That was a good thing. Not because he was reckless, but because he was willing to do the impossible. To disrupt entire industries while creating new ones. To stretch the bounds of what was technologically possible while forcing the world to face the truth: progress is always born from the willingness to break what exists.
Maybe ‘dangerous’ is just another word for 'too honest’, or ‘too disruptive’, or ‘too unwilling to play along’.
So when critics call RFK Jr. dangerous, maybe the question we should be asking is, dangerous to what? Dangerous to who? Because if history has taught us anything it’s this: the people who get branded ‘dangerous’ are the ones who open the doors that the rest of us thought were closed shut.
The ground won’t shake unless we shake it.
Thanks for showing up and reading all the way through. It’s easy to feel drowned in noise, but this little corner of conversation is proof that real dialogue still matters. I’m grateful you’re part of keeping it alive.
If you value these ‘dangerous’ conversations, consider becoming a supporter and help us keep shaking the ground together.
So well and aptly said, Adam, thank you!
Brilliant, Adam.
Thank you