The logic is shocking. The laughter on the plane went quiet fast. When Dr. Mehmet Oz revealed Donald Trump’s strange belief about diet soda and cancer, even his own son didn’t seem sure whether to joke or worry. A president convinced his favorite drinks might be fighting deadly disease inside his body sounds cra…
Dr. Mehmet Oz’s story from Air Force One paints a strangely intimate portrait: a powerful former president, grinning sheepishly over an orange Fanta, insisting it might “kill cancer cells” because it can kill grass. It’s absurd, almost comical – until you realize it reveals how deeply personal health myths can shape real behavior, even at the highest levels of power. Trump’s long‑documented love of diet soda suddenly looks less like a harmless quirk and more like a window into his private fears and self‑justifications.
Behind the bravado and jokes lies a very human scene: an aging man, praised by his son for his “energy, recall, stamina,” clinging to his own logic about what keeps him going. Science is clear: diet soda doesn’t kill cancer and offers little nutritional value. Yet this moment shows how belief, not evidence, often guides the choices people defend most fiercely.