Millions of Americans became deeply skeptical of pharmaceutical companies during COVID.

Now many of those same people are injectingpeptidesandGLP-1compounds bought online from anonymous overseas suppliers, often with no real way to verify what’s actually inside them.

Dr. Lynn Fynnwarns that some products may be contaminated, improperly dosed, or manufactured under conditions most consumers never even think to question.

That becomes especially alarming when teenagers are getting pulled into the trend through TikTok health culture and influencer-driven “biohacking—often without their parents even knowing.

Dr. Fynn joins us to expose the darker side of the peptide explosion, why ultra-cheap GLP-1 products should immediately raise suspicion, and whether MAHA has already drifted away from the accountability Americans were promised.

You can feel how badly people want something that actually improves their health. That’s what’s really driving the peptide explosion.

Dr. Lynn Fynn explained thatpeptides themselves aren’t inherently dangerous. The body already uses them naturally as signaling molecules. But people are treating them like shortcuts instead of “tools,” while ignoring basic metabolic health.

Dr. Fynn blamed social media, especially TikTok, forpushing teenagers toward compounds they barely understand. Kids are watching influencers talk confidently about injections, recovery stacks, and weight loss protocols while their bodies are still developing.

And the scariest part?Many parents have no idea it’s even happening.

The biggest issue is quality control.

Source: The Vigilant Fox