Category Archives: Healthcare

One Year Later, RFK Jr Has Dismantled America’s Health Care Infrastructure

One Year Later, RFK Jr Has Dismantled America’s Health Care Infrastructure

Why take vaccines when you can eat meat, do push-ups, and increase your chances of cancer with tanning beds? Inside the deranged, pro-death agenda of RFK Jr. and his cabal of conspiracy theorists.

THE LEFT HOOK with Wajahat Ali and Paging America (Substack)
Mar 20

One year.

That’s it. That’s how long it took for an unqualified, dangerous crank to damage America’s once lauded health care infrastructure.

Out of all Trump’s horsemen of the apocalypse, I have long warned that RFK Jr., a man with zero medical qualifications who spouts eugenics, is the most dangerous. The man who is now the director of our Health and Human Services has single-handedly replaced medical experts and scientists with fellow conspiracy theorists who don’t believe in life-saving vaccines, use Nazi rhetoric to describe autistic people, and promote bunk science and snake oil to line their own pockets.

Thanks to RFK Jr., vaccination rates in the United States are now hovering around 70% as preventable diseases, such as measles, are becoming great again. The man with brain worms has also decided to literally invert the food pyramid, prioritizing meat and dairy instead of fruits and grains. Why take medication when you can eat “magical” foods and do push-ups instead? No need for vaccines and veggies, kids, but be sure to use tanning beds! Earlier this week, the FDA abandoned its proposal to ban people under 18 from using beds that could increase the risks of skin cancer.

Meanwhile, our best and brightest are now fleeing to Europe and China, with critical research funding being cut, and we haven’t even addressed the cataclysmic damage that will result after the GOP’s “billionaire bill” that will gut $1 trillion from Medicaid.

Thankfully, medical experts and a few judges are fighting back from this pro-death march. On Monday, a federal judge blocked the Trump administration’s dangerous changes to the childhood immunization schedule. On Thursday, another judge provided temporary relief to 21 states to protect federal funding to hospitals that provide gender-transition care.

Unfortunately, generational damage has already been done, but that doesn’t mean we give up the fight to educate and inform the public about the intentional attacks on their health.

Somebody Finally Stood Up to RFK Jr. A federal judge’s ruling highlights the ways Kennedy’s anti-vax agenda is putting public health at risk.

Somebody Finally Stood Up to RFK Jr.
A federal judge’s ruling highlights the ways Kennedy’s anti-vax agenda is putting public health at risk.

Jonathan Cohn (The Bulwark)
Mar 18

WELL, WELL, WELL. The brainworm may finally have turned.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has spent the past year systematically dismantling federal support for vaccines. From his perch atop the Department of Health and Human Services, he has canceled funding for vaccine research, published misinformation about supposed vaccine dangers, forced out or fired respected scientists who might resist his agenda, and withdrawn federal recommendations for a half dozen childhood vaccines.

Until recently, Kennedy had run into little resistance. Donald Trump, who gave Kennedy all this power, has lauded Kennedy and amplified his attacks on vaccines. Bill Cassidy, the high-profile Senate Republican and Louisiana physician, has—despite some angry statements—refused to use his chairmanship of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee to demand changes or even explanations for Kennedy’s actions.

But this week Kennedy suffered a major setback. And it came at the hands of the judiciary.

On Monday, a federal judge in Boston blocked several of Kennedy’s most consequential policy changes, arguing that he had violated legal rules for how the HHS secretary is supposed to make key decisions. The 45-page ruling was a big win for the plaintiffs—a group of medical organizations and affected individuals led by the American Academy of Pediatrics—who have been protesting Kennedy’s actions from the get-go.

“There is a method to how these decisions historically have been made—a method scientific in nature and codified into law through procedural requirements,” Judge Brian Murphy wrote in his opinion. “Unfortunately, the government has disregarded those methods and thereby undermined the integrity of its actions.”

Murphy’s order “stays” several key actions taken by Kennedy’s department—meaning that they are not fully prohibited, but rather they are put on hold as the legal proceedings fully play out. Judges in higher courts may not see things the same way; they could reverse some or all of Murphy’s ruling if the Trump administration appeals, as officials are already promising to do.

“HHS looks forward to this judge’s decision being overturned just like his other attempts to keep the Trump administration from governing,” HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon told reporters after the ruling. ¹

The underlying legal issues here include genuinely complex questions about which powers the HHS secretary really has and the extent to which judges can or should determine what qualifies as an expert. It also involves questions over who has legal “standing” to bring a lawsuit like this. Murphy is a Joe Biden appointee with a reputation as a liberal. It’s not at all hard to imagine conservative judges—including Trump’s appointees on the Supreme Court, if the case gets that far—ruling differently.

But Murphy’s order will help keep vaccines in the news. And that alone has important consequences, given how the politics around the issue seem to be shifting.

In just the last few weeks, the White House has taken a series of steps to get a tighter grip on operations at HHS and to tamp down on some of the anti-vaccine rhetoric coming from Kennedy and his camp. It’s not clear whether Trump is having second thoughts about his full-throated endorsements of Kennedy. What is clear is that people around the president have gotten nervous that the anti-vaccine agenda is alienating the majority of voters who support vaccination strongly.

In short, Team Trump would prefer to change the subject. Murphy’s ruling makes that harder.

Which, perhaps, is appropriate. The debate here isn’t simply about whether Kennedy is making decisions in ways that comply with the law. It’s also about whether he is making decisions in ways that are good for public health. And this case highlights multiple ways in which he is not.

Trump supporters in the heartland fear being left behind by GOP health plan

Republican proposal would upend a healthcare system in Indiana that covers many low-income people – in a program that Mike Pence put in place

Pam Martin flips through a binder of healthcare papers for the disabled brother she takes care of.

Pam Martin flips through a binder of healthcare papers for the disabled brother she takes care of. Photograph: Justin Gilliland for the Guardian

Janice Phelps, a 60-year-old disabled factory worker in Evansville,Indiana, knows how expensive healthcare is.

Each month, shots for her severe asthma cost $3,000. Quarterly injections for knee pain cost $3,200. Medication for depression costs $900. She has had seven back surgeries, two shoulder surgeries, and two knee surgeries since 1985. The largest public health programs in America – Medicaid and Medicare, which aid the poor and the elderly – paid for nearly all of it.

Yet, those programs are now threatened by the men she voted for: Donald Trump and former Indiana governor Mike Pence.

Complete Story

Now or never on ObamaCare repeal? Despite pressure, GOP divided on bill

Chad Pergram

By

Congressional Republicans may find inspiration from the King of Rock and Roll when comes to passing their replacement bill for ObamaCare.

Imagine Elvis Presley crooning his 1960 number one single, “It’s Now or Never.”

“We have a choice,” proffered House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas, one of the authors of the health care blueprint. “We can act now or we can keep fiddling around and squander this opportunity to repeal ObamaCare.”

In 2009 and 2010, Republicans railed against Democrats as they relied almost exclusively on their own members to approve ObamaCare. Now Republicans are going it alone to repeal ObamaCare and adopt their own health care package. But some conservative lawmakers and interest groups alike are upbraiding the GOP legislation. It only takes a few renegades in both the House and Senate to incinerate the plan.

“It’s ObamaCare-lite,” argued Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. “We have to admit we are divided on replacement.”

Complete Story