I think this is really important. Brand name drugs and generics are supposed to have the same active ingredients, but who decides which ingredients are "active". One of the reasons the same drug might taste different is because of different manufacturers. Brand name Tylenol has ingredients that are "inactive", but also curiously proprietary and not found in the generics. For example, Pregelatinized starch and Povidone (polyvinylpyrrolidone) are usually not found in generics. Why would you make filler ingredients proprietary? I've tried both name brand and generics, and you can tell the difference, both in the taste as well as the texture of the tablets. The name brand Tylenol has a more satisfying crunch to it, but also the tastes more like chemicals.
President Trump is very smart. If the problem was Acetaminophen, he would have just said so, but he didn't. He specifically said "Tylenol". And further, aligns with the Q clock post from 2020: "Simple Logic answers the question".
Very good point. Maybe the rest of world do have similar incidence of autism?
Here in UK autism is alleged to be rocketing same as in US. The figures are difficult to understand because autism is recorded in the same bucket as other related conditions such as ADHD and broadly published as "Special Educational Needs" (SEN).
Also the statistics are distorted because all parents on welfare try hard to get their kids diagnosed with some kind of SEN (even if there is nothing wrong with the kid) because they then get significantly increased welfare payments per child, also the local government has a legal responsibility to give them specialised schooling which usually means the kids get free personalised transport (taxis mostly) to school.
Over 50% of our working age adults are on welfare! If you can swing it right then the benefit payments for a family provide a greater income for them than a working family on median wage.
Maybe worth having a check to see if similar scam is twisting the autism numbers in the USA.