The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is one of the premiere government agencies responsible for research in medicine and public health. NIH is the largest biomedical research institution in the world. Maintaining its scientific integrity is important for the U.S. and the world.
Trump appointed a leading opponent of vaccines to lead the NIH. Others in the medical profession have considered his views to be “fringe,” “extreme,” “out of the mainstream.” Of course, Trump’s choice of Robert Kennedy Jr. to be Secretary of Health and Human Services, which oversees NIH, has garnered many critics, who refer to him as an unqualified and dangerous quack. And then there is Dr. Oz, the hawker of vitamins on TV, as director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. He is said to be a proponent of privatizing Medicare by pushing Medicare Advantage plans owned by private companies.
Why is Trump unleashing his fury on the nation’s public health services? If you know, please share.
Our esteemed reader, who posts under the name, “New York City Public School Parent,” has researched Trump’s nominee to lead the NIH.
She wrote:
Bhattacharya, like Bondi, like William Barr, gets a pass by a liberal media that ignores the worst of their political hackery and their history of dishonesty. Instead of characterizing their actions as corrupt, or demonstrating the utter lack of integrity these folks have, the so-called liberal media instead normalizes their worst actions and mischaracterizes those worst actions as simply “something that rabid partisans on the other side don’t like.”
When the so-called liberal media was helping the right wing media amplify Bhattacharya’s hyped “evidence-based findings” – that covid was no more deadly than the flu, in spring of 2020, a real journalist, Stephanie M. Lee at Buzzfeed, was reporting on this “evidence” – the very problematic Santa Clara antibody study – financially supported by an airline owner who wanted the public flying again – where Bhattacharya’s doctor wife was caught lying to recruit affluent parents at her kids’ school to participate in a “random” study. Unlike the rest of the journalistic establishment, Lee did more than act as a stenographer, and in 2022 won the Victor Cohn Prize for Excellence in Medical Science Reporting. From their press release:
“She investigated a study by John Ioannidis and his colleagues [Bhattacharya and another hack] at Stanford that made a splash early in the coronavirus pandemic when it claimed to show COVID-19 was no more dangerous than the flu. Lee uncovered serious flaws in the study; her stories also showed that Ioannidis had organized an effort to lobby the White House against pandemic lockdowns before collecting any data and that the study had been secretly funded by David Neeleman, the founder of JetBlue and a vocal lockdown opponent.”
Bhattacharya is so lacking in integrity that he made Lee’s life hell for daring to report the truth — he accused her of going after his family (directly causing her to be threatened) because she told the truth – that his doctor wife had improperly solicited parents at her kids’ affluent school to be part of her husband’s “random” antibody study to help prove that covid was no more dangerous than the flu.
He also has a lot in common with Emily Oster – two economists guilty of unprofessionally hyping their very flawed data and getting lots of publicity because they were willing to use that flawed data to make claims that just coincidentally happened to support a dishonest Republican narrative. In both cases, far more credible researchers were correctly pointing out how problematic their “evidence” was – but the media ignored critics and amplified these two folks who were more than happy to hype the lie that indisputable evidence and data supported the Republican narrative about covid being no big danger.
Later, quietly, these political hacks would make revisions to their data, because their critics were correct that they had hyped flawed data that supported right wing narratives.
Despite the fact that no credible researcher would have ever made the claims of certainty (their “data” proves it!), these two never lost an ounce of credibility despite their errors.
Typical double standard – if you are helping the Republican narrative, your improper actions are barely mentioned and always spun as irrelevant, thus your reputation as a widely respected truth-teller remains intact in the liberal media. If you are telling the truth and the truth doesn’t support the right wing narrative, the so-called liberal media (in the interest of “balance”) will scrutinize your actions to find some misstep they amplify into a major scandal that suggests you should never be trusted.
Lee now writes for the Chronicle of Higher Education. Bhattacharya is still disparaging her for not acting like the more prominent reporters in the so-called liberal media who specialize in uncritically rewriting press releases amplifying the undisputed “data” and “evidence” supporting right wing narratives.
The media also hyped the Great Barrington Declaration, which had very few credible researchers in epidemology, medicine or science among their signees, but included fake doctors and doctors who were also dead serial killers.

I agree completely about “so-called liberal media,” in this & most other political issues. Their overcompensation, supposedly in the interest of appearing fair, probably did as much to get T elected as Fox. Don’t get why he calls them “enemy of the people”; they’re one of his greatest supports. There have always been people with outlandish, fringe views. They used to create newsletters printed on paper & distributed by postal mail to maybe 35-200 subscribers who remained on the outskirts of society, where they belonged. The same sort of views now reach millions with less effort than it takes to stuff a dozen envelopes, & are often presented by mainstream press as just another reasonable point of view.
LikeLike
We need a new word or term:
“Crackpot expert”
“Expert Charlatan”
LikeLike
“master cretin”?
“drivel specialist”?
“figment authority”?
LikeLike
Drivel specialist. No degree needed.
LikeLike
Quackpot
LikeLike
I like that!
LikeLike
Ain’t new but works:
Numbnuts!
LikeLike
I remember the “Declaration”. I remember when it came out, if only at first because I grew up in Massachusetts and am familiar with Great Barrington.
What I DON’T remember is “the liberal media” fawning over it. I remember the virtually instantaneous reaction that it was dangerous nonsense.
I call bullshit.
I DO remember many conservatives at the time loving it, because it meant business would go on as usual if adopted. In fact, I recall the resistance to treating COVID seriously originated in CONSERVATIVE circles. Like Fox News.
LikeLike
If there had been “virtually instantaneous reaction that it was dangerous nonsense”, do you think that perhaps the person who wrote and promoted it might have lost credibility instead of still been treated as a respectable voice in the liberal media?
Read the “critical” NYT op ed below, which still gives this guy credibility despite his promoting that dangerous nonsense!
LikeLike
If you think the NYT is “liberal” you need to broaden your horizons, as well as your reading habits.
LikeLike
The NYT is not liberal.
You are doing the Right’s work for them.
LikeLike
I agree with you that the NYT is not liberal. The NYT’s normalizing coverage of Trump and the far right Republicans legitimized Trump in a way that 100 fawning Fox News anchors could never do.
I agree with you that anyone who calls the NYT “anti-Trump” or “liberal” is doing the Right’s work for them.
LikeLike
People love to call the press “liberal”. The press is obsessed with treating Republicans “fairly”. By “fairly” they mean “fawning”.
That ain’t “liberal”. It’s cowardice.
LikeLike
Good to know there are others who view NYT this way. I thought I was the only one!
LikeLike
No, we are legion.
LikeLike
Thanks for re-posting my comment. Just to clarify, I would not call Bhattacharya an “anti-vaxxer”. But he is definitely the opposite of what a scientist or researcher should be. He had an agenda before he even begins his “research” — which is why he was hyping that Covid wasn’t more dangerous than the flu long before he had credible evidence to support it. (in that way, my main issue with him is that he has the same integrity as Trump, who similarly claimed he had very strong evidence that Obama’s birth certificate was fake and thus he went around saying that Trump was not born in the US).
It’s bad enough that our society now allows politicians to lie with impunity, but if science is to go the same way, we are in big trouble.
But to see what I mean about the double standard untrustworthy folks like Bhattacharya gets, read this column. It does a great job of reporting just how wrong he was and STILL deems him a very qualified pick who made very good points when he criticized scientists.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/27/opinion/nih-director-trump-jay-bhattacharya.html
I could not believe that this opinion writer was actually promoting the Orwellian argument that the news media did not give a lot more credibility and attention to the people saying it was a near certainty that Covid came from a lab leak even though there was never any credible evidence that it did except the wishful thinking of right wing Republicans who cared only about politics, not truth and good public policy!
LikeLike
n”ycpsp– “he had an agenda before he even began his research”: another example of this, as testified by two of the original authors of “A Nation at Risk.” https://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2018/04/29/604986823/what-a-nation-at-risk-got-wrong-and-right-about-u-s-schools Whose authors not only started with an agenda, but misinterpreted the test data “supporting” it, falling into a statistical trap called “Simpson’s Paradox.”
LikeLike
To your question: “Why is Trump unleashing his fury on the nation’s public health services?”
1)He blew the covid effort from day 1. 2) His ego and adoring base. 3) His answer to everything is anti-established and disrupt.
And behind closed doors maybe he was embarrassed it was real and he missed his opportunity to be a hero. Now he’s stuck with the anti-medicine mantra.
He’s such a wannabe expert and anti anyone who is an actual expert on anything, he blew it off, used the no-masks protests to further rile up the ugly base, and of course wouldn’t listen to anyone.
He easily could have Mobilized the nations’ experts, mass produced protective gear and masks, mobilized getting equipment to hospitals, convened some Governors with common sense, turned scientists loose for vaccines, worked with tv and other networks to overnight produce good old educational tv episodes (PBS only one who did) – and be a hero!
Instead, he criticized anyone with a medical degree, ignored data, (facts too, but just the data), spouted off about potions, and never acknowledged thousands of deaths.
In a sick way, pun intended, he did all that and got adoration and votes – so of course latching on to the Kennedy mystique and another off-the-wall wannabe and appointing a critic the likes of this guy suits him
LikeLike
Yet he lost his bid for reelection…
LikeLike
The saddest part of this will be the idiot Republican representatives, senate and congress who know better, will confirm these unqualified bizarre picks because they lack backbone, nerve, guts, whatever you’d like to call courage due to the fact that they FEAR the, unfortunately, next resident of the White House. I can’t think of a more noble act than rebuking the soon to be president about the people he chooses to assist running the country (into the ground, I’m sure.)
LikeLike
This comes from Robert Reich’s Substack.
Honest people standing up is precisely what resisting authoritarianism and protecting democracy require — monitoring those in power, acting as watchdogs against abuses of power, challenging those abuses, and sounding the alarm about wrongdoing and wrongful policies.
But how to “stand up” without reliable sources of the truth?
So, as we enter the darkness of the Trump regime, please make sure you and others you know have access to accurate information about what’s occurring.
Here are the sources I currently rely on for the truth: The Guardian,Democracy Now, Business Insider,The New Yorker,The American Prospect,Americans for Tax Fairness, The Economic Policy Institute, The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, ProPublica, Labor Notes, The Lever, Popular Information, Heather Cox Richardson, and, of course, this Substack.
LikeLike
NIH isn’t the pure institution that many believe exists.
I was a patient at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland in a Neurofibromatosis Type 2 Natural History Study [NINDS section] for four and a half years, starting in October 2008. I was flown in at NIH’s expense twice a year and was given money to purchase food. Usually I was there for around 4 days and was given eye tests, movement tests, hearing tests and MRI’s.
After having been a patient at NIH for two years, one of the medical students told me that out of 160 patients, I was the ONLY NF2 patient who was functioning normally. [I STILL am functioning normally.]
An MRI at NIH proved that I shrank a 3cm meningioma brain tumor by 2 mm. NF2 tumors are tough and NEVER shrink. I used alternative medicine methods that came in a book written by Dr. Adam McCloud entitled, “Intention Heals”.
The head researcher, Dr. Ashok Asthagiri, helped a psychiatrist at NIH write up a phony psychiatric report. The end result was that I was declared to be severely mentally ill and was told that I had to see a psychiatrist when I got back home. I didn’t see a psychiatrist and received a written letter informing me that because I didn’t see a psychiatrist, I was permanently out of the NF2 study.
I wrote letters to the Director of NIH, Dr. Francis Collins, the head psychiatrist, a lady in public relations in the NINDS [neurological section] and to Dr. Asthagiri. These letters were sent by certified mail and I received a signed paper saying they had all received my letter. Nobody ever apologized and I was out of the NF2 Study.
I went to see a licensed clinical psychologist, Dr. Larry Stoler, to whom I gave the NIH report. He wrote a rebuttal saying, “…She made it clear that it is hard for her to accept the fact that a medical professional diagnosed her as psychotic, when her healing experiences are legitimate …Hers is an uncommon healing journey but not an unknown one. Her experiences are examples of what is possible, though they remain outside of mainstream Western medical thought. … It is my professional opinion that Ms. Ring does not meet the criteria for a Psychotic Disorder, NOS or a Mood Disorder, NOS….”
I sent Dr. Stoler’s rebuttal to the Director of NIH, Dr. Asthagiri, the psychiatrist and a women in the NINDS public relations department.
I also have 3 letters in my file at NIH, written by three women. I had put my hands on their shoulders and had taken pain out of their bodies. One lady wrote that she had a problem with a disk and had been in constant pain for 20 years. When I put my hands on her shoulders, she became pain free for two weeks. That was the ONLY time she hadn’t been in pain for 20 years.
Dr. Asthagiri did mention that I took pain out of women’s bodies on one of his reports that I received.
So, it takes a severely mentally ill patient to take pain out of bodies and to shrink a brain tumor.
My opinion of NIH isn’t very high.
LikeLike
Carol, are you saying that you are a healer and modern Western medicine cannot explain why? That what happened to you has not been replicated in any study, yet it should be considered a legitimate source?
LikeLike
There are a number of authentic healers in the world. The Western medical establishment doesn’t want any of this to be recognized because no money is made if a disease is cured.
Western medicine isn’t interested in finding out why healing happens. They work to keep this information suppressed. $$$$$$$$
Dr. Larry Stoler, the licensed clinical psychologist, recognized that I was healing because he is also a healer. He uses Qigong and studies with a Qigong Master.
American inventor Royal Raymond Rife cured cancer in the 1930’s. He died penniless. I just looked up his name online and the overwhelming number of articles states that he was either a fraud or that he never claimed to cure cancer. The AMA carries a lot of weight.
I shrank a brain tumor and got the information from a Canadian healer, Dr. Adam McLeod who wrote a book entitled, “Intention Heals”. Dr. McLeod now only treats cancer patients who are citizens in Canada. He can visualize the insides of patient’s bodies.
Anita Moorjani wrote a book entitled, “Dying to Be ME”. It was a New York Times best seller. She had a near death experience after having had her body ravaged by cancer for 4 years. She was near dying and completely healed. She was released from the hospital within a couple of weeks. Anita now lives in California but was born in Hong Kong.
Dr. Eben Alexander has written several books, the first was entitled, “Proof of Heaven”. He was a neurosurgeon who had part of his brain shut down completely. He laid in a coma for seven days. He was in such bad shape that his doctors considered stopping treatment. He has completely recovered and goes around the country lecturing.
Donna Eden is also a healer.
LikeLike
Dear god.
LikeLike