When you’re trying to outrun the clock, apparently Mexico is the place to go. Marjorie Taylor Greene and fiancé Brian Glenn just wrapped up a stem cell IV treatment in Puerto Vallarta, swapping anti-aging hopes for the kind of experimental wellness protocol you simply can’t get stateside—at least not legally.
Greene, the ex-U.S. Representative, has never shied away from being proactive about her health. Her CrossFit gym ownership days laid the groundwork for what she describes as a lifelong commitment to preventative care, and stem cell therapy fits neatly into that philosophy. She’s convinced the treatment works for her and believes it should be federally legalized in the U.S. The catch? The FDA hasn’t approved most stem cell treatments because they haven’t jumped through the regulatory hoops required to prove they’re safe and effective. That gap between what Greene believes in and what federal agencies have signed off on is exactly why the couple had to book a trip south of the border.
There’s also the matter of health insurance—or rather, the absence of it. Greene told TMZ she doesn’t carry coverage, choosing instead to bankroll her own preventative treatments and wellness therapies. It’s a personal choice that underscores a broader philosophical divide about health management: trust the system, or bet on experimental alternatives?
The Mexico trip wasn’t their only recent getaway. Greene and Glenn had just wrapped up an extended vacation in Costa Rica with Rep. Thomas Massie, which predictably set off speculation about a growing political alliance. Massie even teased a possible GOP takeover, calling Greene an important voice in the Republican Party’s future. So while they were chasing sunshine, stem cells, and quality time with another ousted congressional member, the political rumor mill kept spinning. On Sunday, the pair headed back to Georgia—refreshed, maybe rejuvenated, and certainly ready for whatever comes next.
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Local Lawton
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