The following is part of a frightening post by Lev Parnas:
When it comes to leaks around Donald Trump, almost nothing is truly locked down anymore—except one thing.
His health.
On policy, on personnel, on internal power struggles, the dam has broken. But every time I pushed on Trump’s medical condition, I hit a wall. People went quiet. Conversations changed. The tone shifted. That alone told me more than any single sentence ever could.
What I was consistently told—by more than one source—is that while details are being tightly guarded, Trump has been receiving ongoing IV treatments. That part, I can say with confidence, is not conjecture. It also helps explain the repeated and increasingly visible bruising on his hands—something the media keeps dismissing, even as it appears again and again.
And now look at how they’re trying to explain it away. Trump himself has been floating the idea that the bruising is “just aspirin” — not even a low-dose, doctor-prescribed baby aspirin, but a higher daily dose because he wants his blood “thin.” Could that be true? Sure — aspirin can make people bruise more easily. But that explanation also raises even more questions than it answers, because it’s not the typical regimen most doctors recommend for prevention, especially at his age, and it conveniently gives the press a one-line excuse to stop asking follow-up questions. The problem is: bruising is only the surface of what we’re seeing. When the public is watching increasing confusion, slurred or disorganized moments, mood swings, and erratic judgment in real time, “it’s just aspirin” starts to sound less like transparency and more like a shield — a way to wave everyone off while something bigger stays hidden.
Now here’s where it gets serious.
Sources would not name a specific diagnosis. They would not confirm a single drug. But multiple people independently said the same thing to me in different ways:
what he is receiving is consistent with treatments used for early cognitive decline.
That matters.
Because in recent years, there has been a new class of IV-infusion drugs approved for early Alzheimer’s and dementia-related conditions—drugs like lecanemab or donanemab (Kisunla). These medications are not casual treatments. They require regular infusions, careful monitoring, and MRI oversight because of known neurological side effects.
And those side effects are not abstract.
They include:
Confusion
Worsening cognition, sometimes temporarily
Personality and behavioral changes
Poor judgment and impulse control
Memory lapses
Slurred or disorganized speech
Mood swings and agitation
I want to be crystal clear: I am not diagnosing Donald Trump.
I am saying that the behaviors we are all witnessing—on camera, in real time—are consistent with the side-effect profiles of these treatments, and with untreated or progressing cognitive impairment.
When you step back and actually look at the full picture, it’s impossible to ignore how all of this adds up. The repeated bruising on his hands and arms. The sudden reports of frequent MRIs. Watching him on stage drifting off thought, losing his place, slurring words, struggling to complete sentences, snapping emotionally, lashing out, showing poor judgment, confusion, agitation, and visible mood swings. These aren’t isolated moments anymore — they’re a pattern. No, we don’t have the single smoking-gun document yet, and anyone telling you otherwise is lying to you. But real investigations don’t wait for permission, and they don’t ignore obvious warning signs. My job has always been to connect the dots others are afraid to even acknowledge. And when you connect these dots honestly, it raises serious, unavoidable questions about what’s really going on behind the curtain — questions the public deserves answers to, whether the political establishment likes it or not.

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