Chris Pratt Comments on Political Division in America

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Chris Pratt just did the one thing you’re absolutely not allowed to do in Hollywood.

He said something reasonable about Donald Trump.

On Bill Maher’s “Club Random” podcast, Pratt had the audacity—brace yourself—to admit that hating Trump so much that you refuse to acknowledge when something works might not be the height of intellectual maturity. Imagine that. A guy from Marvel saying, “Hey, maybe spraying your children’s cereal with industrial-grade Clorox just because Trump’s HHS is fixing the food system isn’t exactly smart.” You could practically hear liberal heads exploding across Los Angeles.

And if you think that’s dramatic, wait until you hear what he said next.

He backed part of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s work at the Department of Health and Human Services. Yes, that RFK Jr.—the man the media has spent years portraying as a tinfoil-hat-wearing lunatic. Turns out, Chris Pratt plays cards with the guy. Hangs out. Eats dinner. And maybe most shockingly? He doesn’t froth at the mouth when Kennedy works with the Trump administration to get literal poison out of kids’ food.

Here’s the part that really gets under the skin of the Beltway brain trust: Pratt didn’t backpedal. He didn’t issue a groveling Instagram apology for acknowledging that Trump’s administration might be capable of doing something good. He just shrugged and said what normal Americans have been saying for years: results matter more than political theater.

But oh no, not in 2025.

See, in elite circles, you’re not supposed to think that way. You’re supposed to believe that everything Trump touches is radioactive. That no matter what gets done—safer food, cheaper gas, peace deals, fewer wars—if it came from the orange man, it must be evil. Chris Pratt didn’t play along. And that makes him dangerous… to the narrative.

You want to talk about irony? The guy best known for befriending a raccoon-loving space outlaw and a played a raptor wrangler just became one of the few people in Hollywood actually brave enough to call out the groupthink. Not with some grand political statement. Just a little dose of common sense.

And here’s where it gets wild.

Under Kennedy’s “Make America Healthy Again” initiative (yes, that’s MAHA—and no, that acronym wasn’t an accident), HHS has done more to clean up the American food system in six months than previous administrations did in six years. Forty percent of the food industry is already ditching toxic chemical dyes. You know, the ones banned in Europe but still dumped into American cereals like confetti at a clown parade. Kraft, Hershey, General Mills—all making the change.

The FDA, under Kennedy’s leadership, is finally shutting down the outrageous loophole that let corporations slap “safe” labels on their own ingredients. You read that right: for years, food companies have been allowed to mark their own homework. And the left is mad that someone is fixing it… because Trump is president?

Think about that.

We’re talking about real changes, real policy wins, and actual bipartisan support. Even the Consumer Brands Association—hardly a MAGA fan club—is on board with removing these dyes from public school food by 2026. That’s not culture war fluff. That’s a national health issue. But if Trump’s administration did it? Cue the meltdown.

Which brings us back to Pratt.

He called out the absurdity of it all: the idea that someone would rather poison their own children than admit Trump’s team might be onto something. That blind hatred of a man has become so all-consuming, so reflexive, that even common-sense policies are treated like acts of aggression.

And you know what?

That scares the establishment more than anything else. Because if the American public starts thinking like Chris Pratt—that maybe we judge ideas by their results instead of who signed the executive order—then the whole game changes.

The left needs Trump to be the villain in every story. But when guys like Chris Pratt stop reading from the script, people start asking inconvenient questions.

And those questions? They don’t end with food dye.

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