Time to place Trump in a padded cell.
The Trump Show's latest episode:
Trump claims US has experimental drug 'to bring people back to life'
Trump claimed at an Oval Office press conference but provided no clinical data or name for the drug, prompting swift skepticism from medical professionals.
By Olivia Beeson/The Daily Express
PUBLISHED: 10:00 ET, Sat, May 30, 2026
Donald Trump has asserted that the US is developing a medication capable of reviving people from death.
The president made the startling claim during an Oval Office press conference.
Trump indicated that the drug has undergone testing and is demonstrating promising outcomes. He said, "Without waiting many, many years, we know the drug works because we've taken people who were dead. We had a person given the last rights, gone. "The kids are crying, and everything, and given them this drug, and the person became better."
"It works. You know, and some don't work, but you learn really fast. It's called the ultimate test."
Nevertheless, the US president withheld specifics, providing no clinical evidence or the exact name of the compound.
He attributed the reported successes to the Right to Try Act, a measure that permits terminally ill patients to obtain experimental therapies.
The law was enacted during his initial term in office.
Medical experts and commentators have predictably greeted the assertions with considerable doubt.
It has been suggested that this account has been inflated from cases involving critically ill patients, rather than clinically deceased individuals, with specialists maintaining the drug simply does not exist.
There was also criticism from the medical community following the conference regarding the endorsement of 'fake drugs'.
Trump claims US has experimental drug 'to bring people back to life'
Trump claimed at an Oval Office press conference but provided no clinical data or name for the drug, prompting swift skepticism from medical professionals.
By Olivia Beeson/The Daily Express
PUBLISHED: 10:00 ET, Sat, May 30, 2026
Donald Trump has asserted that the US is developing a medication capable of reviving people from death.
The president made the startling claim during an Oval Office press conference.
Trump indicated that the drug has undergone testing and is demonstrating promising outcomes. He said, "Without waiting many, many years, we know the drug works because we've taken people who were dead. We had a person given the last rights, gone. "The kids are crying, and everything, and given them this drug, and the person became better."
"It works. You know, and some don't work, but you learn really fast. It's called the ultimate test."
Nevertheless, the US president withheld specifics, providing no clinical evidence or the exact name of the compound.
He attributed the reported successes to the Right to Try Act, a measure that permits terminally ill patients to obtain experimental therapies.
The law was enacted during his initial term in office.
Medical experts and commentators have predictably greeted the assertions with considerable doubt.
It has been suggested that this account has been inflated from cases involving critically ill patients, rather than clinically deceased individuals, with specialists maintaining the drug simply does not exist.
There was also criticism from the medical community following the conference regarding the endorsement of 'fake drugs'.






















