Here's a question every patriot should be asking: Why does the federal government continue to force 330 million Americans to participate in the largest sleep deprivation experiment in human history twice a year?
The answer is simple — they don't care about your health. They never have.
Groundbreaking research is finally exposing what many of us have suspected for years: that single hour of sleep you lose during daylight savings time isn't just an inconvenience. It's a direct assault on your body's natural defenses. The data doesn't lie — heart attacks spike by 24% the day after we "spring forward." When we gain that hour back in the fall? They plummet by 21%.
That's not conspiracy theory, folks. That's cold, hard, peer-reviewed science.
Dr. Matthew Walker's research in "Why We Sleep" delivers findings that should send chills down every American's spine. After just ONE night of getting only four hours of sleep, a staggering 70% of your natural killer cells simply vanish. These aren't just any cells — these are the immune warriors that literally hunt down and destroy cancer in your body.
Let that sink in. One bad night of sleep, and your body's cancer defense system is essentially operating at 30% capacity.
Chris Burris and Patty Greer from C60EVO have been sounding the alarm on this crisis, breaking down exactly what happens inside your body during those crucial hours of rest. Sleep isn't some luxury for the weak — it's when your brain performs critical maintenance, clearing out toxins that accumulate throughout the day. Your body releases essential growth hormones. Your immune system kicks into overdrive.
Skip it, and you're essentially signing your own death warrant in slow motion.
Every single year, 1.6 billion people across 70 countries are subjected to this government-mandated sleep disruption experiment. The establishment has known about these dangers for YEARS, yet Congress continues to kick the can down the road on making daylight savings time permanent.
President Trump and the America First movement have been fighting to cut through bureaucratic red tape and put common-sense policies first. But the administrative state moves slowly when it comes to actually helping everyday Americans — and quickly when it comes to expanding its own power.
Source: Next News Network