NORTON META TAG

04 February 2025

RFK Jr.’s confirmation hearings were even worse than expected ‘I hope he goes wild’: RFK Jr.’s nomination is headed to the Senate floor 31JAN & 4FEB25


 WHEN I hear robert f kennedy jr. say his decisions at HHS will be based on his own research (it seems he rejects almost all accepted, verified, completed medical research) I get chills because all I can think of is dr mengele's human experimentation "research" at Auschwitz and Auschwitz II (Birkenau) even though the results of his "research" were already known. I am not suggesting robert f kennedy jr. wants to do mengele style research, but his willingness to expose people to diseases and death because he disagrees with the medication or treatment for personal feelings not scientific facts is frightening. robert f kennedy jr must be rejected for leading the HHS. ( Josef Mengele - Wikipedia https://search.app/vak2Y9Se8nEtiyhQ8 ) The 'I hope he goes wild' paraphrasing in the Politico piece is from ff* rep thom tillis r-NC. It will be ironic if rfk jr's going wild results in negative outcomes for ff rep tillis' or his family or friends don't you think? E mail your representative and senators and tell them you expect your senators to vote NO on confirming rfk jr as Secretary of Health and Human Services for the safety and health of all Americans!  These from the Washington Post and Politico.....

(*ff fascist fotze) 

RFK Jr.’s confirmation hearings were even worse than expected 


The HHS nominee’s answers to senators’ questions were absurd — and dangerous.




Leana S. Wen, a Washington Post contributing columnist who writes the newsletter The Checkup with Dr. Wen, is an emergency physician, clinical associate professor at George Washington University and author of “Lifelines: A Doctor’s Journey in the Fight for Public Health.” Previously, she served as Baltimore’s health commissioner.

Two days of contentious Senate confirmation hearings did nothing to assuage doubts about the suitability of prominent vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. If anything, his responses were even worse than expected and illustrate that he is a uniquely dangerous choice for the position.

The bar for Kennedy was set very low. No one expected him to contradict President Donald Trump on harmful policy issues such as restricting abortion care, slashing Medicaid and unraveling the Affordable Care Act. No one thought he was an expert on health policy, though his insistence that he had a good grasp of the agencies he would oversee were undercut by his inability to answer basic questions about how Medicare and Medicaid work.

His biggest hurdle was proving that he was not an anti-vaccine evangelist despite decades of activism litigating against vaccine manufacturers and questioning the safety of childhood immunizations. I expected him to disavow past statements and claim that he would approach his work at HHS differently — from an advocate lobbying to change the system to a regulator overseeing it. This would have required a leap of faith but at least would have provided some reassurance.

But Kennedy went in the opposite direction. When questioned about his role in the 2019 Samoa measles epidemic that killed 83 people, he insinuated that some of these individuals did not die from measles and that measles (a virus that kills nearly 3 in 1,000 infected children) is not dangerous. When asked whether he would recant his past assertion that Black people should have a different vaccination schedule from White people, he doubled down, referring to “data” that Black people need a lower dose of a vaccine component.

Kennedy stood by the egregious claim that the human papillomavirus vaccine that is remarkably effective at preventing cervical cancer is, in fact, “killing girls.” He would not say that the coronavirus vaccine saved millions of lives and asserted that the coronavirus did not pose a threat to kids. (In fact, nearly 1,700 kids ages 17 and younger died from covid-19.) And though he touted his children being vaccinated as evidence that he supports immunizations, he could not respond when Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) quoted him as saying, in 2020, that he “would do anything, pay anything, to go back in time and not vaccinate my kids.”

Perhaps the most damning exchange was with Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), a physician who serves on both committees holding hearings to determine Kennedy’s fate. Cassidy gave him a lifeline: He talked about his concerns over dropping immunization rates because of misinformation, the influence Kennedy would have as HHS secretary, and why it was so important to have Kennedy once and for all clearly state that vaccines do not cause autism.

That was all Kennedy had to say. He didn’t. Instead, he went back to his playbook of asking for more research. He would review the evidence, he said, and apologize if proved wrong. Cassidy and numerous other senators cited the more than one dozen studies from seven countries that have thoroughly debunked the autism connection. Kennedy refused to budge and pulled out his own “research” as evidence to the contrary.

These are not the actions of someone who has left his advocacy hat behind. These are not even the actions of someone who has a healthy skepticism of the establishment. Cherry-picking data to support a predetermined conclusion is the antithesis of science and should be disqualifying for the person overseeing the nation’s top health and science agencies.

Kennedy’s supporters have sought to play down his troubling stances on vaccines by touting his “unique” ability to prevent chronic diseases and “Make America Healthy Again.” But what, exactly, does Kennedy plan to do about obesity, diabetes and heart disease? Despite being asked numerous times by sympathetic senators, he had surprisingly little to say and reverted to talking points railing against pesticides and chemicals. I didn’t hear specific policy proposals, such as restricting SNAP dollars from being used to buy junk food and stopping schools from serving ultra-processed products.

There are surely many health experts trusted by Trump who could better fly the MAHA banner but who don’t come with the baggage of peddling anti-vaccine conspiracy theories. (Trump’s choice to head the Food and Drug Administration, surgeon Marty Makary, comes to mind.)

As senators deliberate, they should remember the core medical principle of “first do no harm.” Whatever gains that could be made from chronic disease prevention would all be undone if previously eliminated infectious diseases such as measles and polio came roaring back, and if the United States faces another pandemic, as we very well could with the H5N1 avian flu.

The question in front of them is whether Kennedy should be trusted with the health and safety of the American people. The answer cannot be clearer.


‘I hope he goes wild’: RFK Jr.’s nomination is headed to the Senate floor

Republican senators on the Finance Committee united to move Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s bid to lead government health agencies forward.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., despite his long history of opposing widely accepted vaccines, is a step closer to leading the nation’s health agencies.

The Senate Finance Committee voted on party lines 14-13 to recommend his confirmation on Tuesday.

“It is time to put someone in there who’s going to go wild,” Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said after voting to advance Kennedy’s confirmation, referencing President Donald Trump’s promise to Kennedy after Kennedy dropped his presidential bid last summer and endorsed Trump.

Tillis said he meant that he hoped bringing in “a disruptor” like Kennedy, a lawyer and not a health professional, to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, would bring new ideas to reduce the cost of health care and drug prices, bolster food safety and improve the government’s health insurance program for low-income people, Medicaid.

The full Senate will now vote, where Kennedy’s chances look good after Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), who sharply questioned Kennedy at a health committee hearing last week about Kennedy’s assertion that some vaccines are unsafe, backed him.

The Finance panel’s vote marks another win for Trump in getting his Cabinet in place and another display of his power over Republicans in Congress who under other circumstances would likely have rejected Kennedy, a lifelong Democrat who’s supported abortion rights and environmental regulation.

Tillis suggested it wasn’t that Republicans didn’t take seriously Kennedy’s past work as an anti-vaccine activist, but that they were reassured by his statements that he would not take away vaccines and only wanted more transparency about their safety and efficacy.

“The only way that Bobby Kennedy and I will get crosswise is if he does actually take a position against the safety of proven vaccines,” Tillis said. “That will be a problem for me.”

Cassidy, who’d questioned Kennedy’s transparency argument, considering the overwhelming evidence that exists about vaccine safety, said on X that he had decided to vote "yes" after receiving "serious commitments" from Vice President JD Vance and because of the opportunity presented "to make progress on the issues we agree on like healthy foods and a pro-American agenda."

It was part of a much broader pressure campaign from the White House and grassroots groups that aimed to sway Cassidy, a doctor before entering politics who repeatedly pressed Kennedy last week to back vaccine use.

Cassidy acknowledged that his phone was ringing off the hook with calls from supporters of Kennedy and his “Make America Healthy Again” movement.

Cassidy already will face a challenge if he decides to seek a third Senate term next year from former Republican Rep. John Fleming, who’s called Cassidy out for voting in 2021 to convict Trump of instigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol. Voting against Kennedy would have further jeopardized a reelection bid.

Under questioning from Cassidy last week, Kennedy declined, at least publicly, to renounce his past claims about vaccines, including connecting them to rising cases of autism.

Minutes before the vote, Trump posted on Truth Social: “20 years ago, Autism in children was 1 in 10,000. NOW IT’S 1 in 34. WOW! Something’s really wrong. We need BOBBY!!! Thank You! DJT.”

In a Senate floor speech after the Finance Committee vote, Cassidy said the administration had promised him that Kennedy would regularly meet with him and retain existing government vaccine safety systems, among other pledges.

Kennedy during his confirmation hearings said he’d prioritize combating chronic diseases that he believes are the result of additives in the food Americans eat and pollution in the environment. He said health agencies have spent too much time and money on infectious diseases, allowing chronic disease to grow.

In winning the Finance Committee’s approval, Kennedy overcame opposition from both Democrats and Republicans concerned, variously, about his views on vaccines, abortion, environmental regulation, food production and drug legalization, as well as his personal behavior.

Democrats, including friends and former allies of Kennedy, voted “no,” arguing that Kennedy’s assertions about vaccines defied scientific consensus and that he could use his bully pulpit at HHS to discourage vaccination. That would cost lives, they said.

Ranking member Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and other Democrats tried to make the case to Cassidy.

“Last week, Mr. Kennedy was given ample opportunity on a bipartisan basis to recant his decades-long career peddling anti-vaccine conspiracies,” Wyden said, referencing Kennedy’s appearance at Finance and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearings last week. “Instead, he dodged and weaved, and gave no indication that if confirmed as HHS secretary, he would stand by the long-settled science surrounding routine vaccinations.”

Other Democrats opposing Kennedy pointed to his connections to lawsuits against vaccine makers or accusations around his personal conduct — including an accusation of sexual assault that Kennedy has denied, his admission that he once cut off a whale’s head and took it home and that he dumped a dead bear cub in New York’s Central Park — as reasons for concern.

After the hearing, Wyden said he thought Kennedy could still lose a vote on the Senate floor.

"We’re going to pull out all the stops,” he said. “There are senators who I believe are going to vote no on the floor."

Republicans were unmoved, arguing that Kennedy would bring needed change.

“We'll have the opportunity to deliver much needed change to our patients’ health care system,” Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) said.

Robert King contributed to this story.

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