Now here is another Trump promise that should keep us up at night: He has said that RFK Jr. will have a large role in his administration, overseeing the appointees in the areas that interest him: public health and food.
Melody Schreiber writes in The New Republic:
In June 2019, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. visited Samoa with his anti-vaccine organization, Children’s Health Defense, meeting with local anti-vaxxers and government officials at a time when the country’s measles vaccine was under attack. Prominent anti-vax voices, including CHD, blamed the vaccine for two infant deaths the prior year, even after the true reason was discovered. Amid the swirling misinformation, vaccine rates plummeted from 60–70 percent to 31 percent.
A few months after RFK Jr.’s visit, measles swept through the freshly vulnerable Pacific island nation, killing 83 Samoans—mostly children. Kennedy doubled down, writing to the Samoan prime minister to questionwhether a “defective vaccine” was responsible for the outbreak. Even two years later, in 2021, Kennedy called a Samoan anti-vaxxer who had reportedly discouraged people from getting vaccinated during the 2019 crisis a “medical freedom hero.” Kennedy has also insisted for years, against all available scientific evidence, that vaccines cause autism, blaming them for a “holocaust” in the United States.
This week, Kennedy told supporters that if Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump wins, he has promised Kennedy “control of the public health agencies,” including the Department of Health and Human Services. Trump transition co-chair Howard Lutnik later denied that Kennedy would have a job with HHS—although, at the same time, he said Kennedy had convinced him to pull vaccines from the market. Trump himself, at his Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday, seemed to lend credence to the idea of Kennedy leading on health: “I’m gonna let him go wild on health. I’m gonna let him go wild on the food. I’m gonna let him go wild on medicines,” Trump said. Trump also said on a three-hour podcast episode with Joe Rogan last week that he’s told Kennedy, “Focus on health, focus—you can do whatever you want.” It’s not clear whether such a promise would have been made in exchange for Kennedy’s political endorsement, which would be illegal.
But if Kennedy were to be put in charge of HHS, he would be leading the executive department that oversees the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and the National Institutes of Health, among others. In the meantime, Kennedy is an honorary co-chair on the Trump transition team, and claims to be “deeply involved in helping to choose the people who can run FDA, NIH, and CDC.”
In his own speech at Madison Square Garden, Kennedy took aim at Democrats, saying they were once “the party that wanted to protect public health, and women’s sports”—a bizarre pairing that highlights his recent pivot to attacking trans athletes and gender-affirming care. Kennedy, who ran as a Democratic and then independent presidential candidate before throwing his support behind Trump, is also spreading misinformation on chronic health issues such as obesity, diabetes, drug overdoses, and autism; on Tuesday, for example, he said diabetes could be “cured with good food.” In his Sunday speech, Kennedy characterized Trump as a president who would “protect our children … and women’s sports,” as well as “end the corruption at the federal agencies—at FDA, at NIH, at CDC, and at the CIA”—a constellation of bodies rarely joined together, which he implied are conducting surveillance upon and acting against the interests of the American people.
“This unbridled assault on science and scientists, it’s highly destabilizing for the country,” Baylor College of Medicine dean Peter Hotez, author of The Deadly Rise of Anti-Science, told me earlier this year, a few months after Kennedy announced his run. But it’s not just Kennedy—Trump and other Republicans in Congress are also leading the charge to undermine expertise and further erode public trust in the government, he said. “This is what authoritarianism is all about,” Hotez said, lamenting “the collateral damage that it’s going to do to our democracy” and pointing to the ways Stalin portrayed scientists as public enemies during the Great Purge.
Hotez sees the false claims about vaccines causing autism, which first started gaining momentum in the late 1990s, as phase one of the assault on science. When that was thoroughly debunked, anti-science activists began aligning themselves “around the banner of health freedom, medical freedom,” getting a major boost with the Covid-19 pandemic, Hotez said. “Now we’re seeing the next phase, which is not only targeting the science but targeting the scientists and portraying them as public enemies. That is both scary and worrisome.”
The past five years have seen a “substantial” drop of trust in public health and scientists, especially among Republicans, Robert Blendon, Harvard University professor emeritus of political analysis and health policy, told me. At the same time, the anti-vaccine movement—which previously was not tied to politics—swung wildly to the right. “Republicans have become incredibly distrustful of vaccines,” Blendon said. “The Republican Party after the [start of] Covid has become very anti–public health.” They lashed out against what they perceived to be government overreach, which made them receptive to questions about the safety and effectiveness of the Covid vaccines—and, soon, other vaccines as well, Blendon said. “This led to a tipping point with this enormous resentment among particularly Republican audiences that the government went way too far.”
Trump’s own short-lived support for vaccines during the measles outbreak in 2019 and Covid in 2020 seems to have been a blip; he has spouted anti-vax views since at least 2007. Although Operation Warp Speed produced highly effective Covid vaccines in record time, one of the Trump administration’s only accomplishments of the pandemic, “the Republicans don’t want to claim it,” Trump said in September. At least 17 times, Trump has pledged to defund schools mandating vaccines. While his campaign says this vow applies to Covid vaccines only, Trump doesn’t make any distinctions in his speeches, opening up the possibility of all childhood vaccines being banned—though it’s not clear how he would carry out this plan. (No states requireCovid vaccines for school attendance.)

That would mean death to public health and millions of children and elderly!!!
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RFK Jr. in charge of health for the nation?!!!!!! Oh no, might as well have Bozo The Clown in charge of health, at least Bozo would supply some laughs on our path to health armageddon.
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No surprise there considering RJK JR’s ties to the same group (QAnoners, Christan Nationalists and Far right Extremists are mostly one and the same) that made an alliance with the convicted rapist, fraud and felon Donald Trump who became a traitor on January 6, 2021.
RFK Jr. Fundraisers Tied to J6ers, QAnoners, Christian Nationalists, and Far-Right Extremists – Mother Jones
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it’s starting to feel like we’re living in a bad mind Monty Python movie. Stay well everybody.
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When I was a prosecutor, someone came up with a “Petition to Destroy a Worthless Person”.
It was a joke, of course.
But if we did have such a thing, RFKJR would be a perfect object of the petition. If his name wasn’t “Kennedy” no one would pay attention to him.
And they shouldn’t.
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Great! An antivaxxer in charge of the nation’s health. As a result of right wing propaganda, measles is on the rise in this country. What ‘s next, a return of polio?
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RFK said today that day 1 of a Trump presidency, Trump will advise all water systems to remove fluoride from the water. Dr. Strangelove.
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Just an FYI…..A long while ago, Robert Reich led a huge lawsuit to have fluoride removed from the water supply. He lost! Most other countries don’t fluoridate their water supply and they don’t have an abundance of dental caries. I would like it removed! I would also like to see HFC’s (high fructose corn syrup)and other preservatives removed from our food supply.
I’m not saying that RFK Jr is the right person to do this, but other countries don’t allow all these chemicals, dyes and preservatives into their food/water supply chains. Nor do they have the high rates of diabetes that this country seems to be OK with (because we have such great and expensive drugs….like Ozempic).
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I confess I don’t know much about this but I know the CDC disagrees and also that Robert Reich is kind of an idiot.
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I don’t mean to be rude. Im sure there are reasonable concerns about what levels of fluoridation are safe and unsafe. But I’m skeptical of anything RFK says and I do think Reich is a bit of an idiot.
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In a speech, Trump said he would give RFK whatever he wanted: “women’s health, men’s health,” child health.” Scary.
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I don’t think you sounded rude and I think Reich is kind of a dope (a far left wacko….but correct in certain aspects).
I’m a pretty “crunchy” kind of person and I always have been. I make my own cleaning/laundry supplies, I don’t buy soda (except for company) or juices with HFCs, my snacks are pretty basic etc and I live a very clutter free life. Some of what RFK JR says really has some merit in regards to what is allowed in our food/water supply chain and about some vaccine issues. I’m not an anti-vaxxer and my children are fully vaccinated, but there is literature out there about the damage that some vaccines have caused. And studies are coming out now about other chemicals and their effects on our hormones/endocrine systems. At one time lobotomies and Thalidamide were considered medical break throughs. I think there is enough scientific literature out there to warrant ridding the water supply of fluoride.
This doesn’t mean that I like RFK Jr….he’s a true wack job! I’m just saying that he has some valid points on some health issues.
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I grew up with fluoridated water. Everyone in my state did.
I have never heard of anyone being diagnosed with flouride-caused illness. And I’m 72.
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Lisa said: Robert Reich led a huge lawsuit to have fluoride removed from the water supply. end quote
I searched high and low for this but could not find any confirmation.
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I made a mistake….if my comment in moderation ever gets posted. RR won his lawsuit. An EPA scientist was fired for warning about the dangers of fluoride in the water supply and he was fired….RR got his job re-instated, but the warning about the fluoride still got buried.
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Reich did reinstate the scientist who was fired.
I can find nothing, in an admittedly brief search, that says Reich agreed with the scientist’s beliefs about fluoride.
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A most FRIGHTENING thought.
Trump NEVER picks the most qualified person. Trump picks people he can control.
Trump is a Hitler.
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Don’t forget RFK,Jr. has a celeb wife who helps to normalize her husband’s views.
Does Cheryl Hines get vaxxed? Does she share her husband ‘s views? She’s fair game, in my book.
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Every time I see RFK Jr. I hear the “Curb Your Enthusiasm “ theme in my head.
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Nothing like guilt by association.
Fortunately, the justice system disagrees at least.
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Just how much of RFK Jr’s brain did that brain worm eat, anyway?
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I doubt that brain worm died. It’s still chomping away.
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Must be. He gets more bizarre by the day. Cheryl should have him admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
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