RFK Jr. Fires Every Single Member Of CDC’s Immunization Advisory Committee

from the comrade's-massacre dept

As RFK Jr. has presided over the decimation of the Health & Human Services department he runs, along with HHS’ child agencies, his anti-vaxxer stance has shown through. And, really, his appointment, confirmation, and subsequent actions should fully put to bed any question of the utility of congressional approval of cabinet positions. During those hearings, in which Kennedy spent most of the time either refusing to answer perfectly legitimate questions or else demonstrating that he had zero understanding how the programs he would be running actually work and are funded, Kennedy also voiced his support for vaccines generally, particularly for children. This flew in the face of the decades Kennedy has spent blaming vaccines for autism rates increasing, among other things. The consequences for what was a spectacular fail-job of a confirmation hearing was his appointment to Secretary of HHS.

Since his confirmation, Kennedy has helpfully put his incompetence on full display. He has bungled a measles outbreak that is the 2nd largest in three decades and still expanding, prattled on about chemtrails, committed to knowing the cause of autism this year only to walk that back, and at least attempted to pull back CDC guidance on COVID-19 vaccines for children and pregnant women. All of this should have laid to bare for government leaders that Kennedy is anti-science, anti-vaccine, and grossly incompetent to run a small medical clinic, never mind HHS.

But in case you needed an example the contrast turned all the way to 100%, Kennedy this week decided to fire every single member of the CDC’s immunization advisory panel. This decision was announced not in a press conference, nor in a congressional hearing, but by an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal.

In an opinion piece published Monday in The Wall Street Journal, Kennedy announced that he had cleared out the committee, accusing them of being “plagued with persistent conflicts of interest” and a group that has “become little more than a rubber stamp for any vaccine.”

“Without removing the current members, the current Trump administration would not have been able to appoint a majority of new members until 2028,” Kennedy added.

The committee—CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)—meets periodically to publicly review, evaluate, debate, and make recommendations on immunization practices. The CDC typically adopts the committee’s recommendations. The CDC’s vaccination schedules and recommendations set clinical standards for the country and determine insurance coverage.

The group is pretty damned important, in other words, when it comes to how the CDC, clinicians, and insurance companies throughout the country organized their parts of various vaccination programs throughout the country. Programs that Kennedy has historically railed against, regularly engaging in conspiracy theories. And you really do have to couple this news with Kennedy’s rejection of the germ theory of disease, which has been powering modern medicine for the past century or so. Put more simply: a man who has spent decades railing against modern vaccine practices and who rejects the cornerstone of modern medicine conducted his own less directly violent version of the Comrade’s Massacre, with the public ouster of these experts coupled with a public declaration of their being unfit to serve.

If you think that comparison is too harsh, you aren’t paying attention to the authoritarian playbook, which Kennedy has obviously adopted. Worse than accusing ACIP members of being purposefully corrupt, Kennedy outlines why they simply can’t help but be corrupted. There’s no agency in any of this among those he ousted. They are corrupt by a combination of any connection Kennedy could draw to the medical industry and his own declaration that they are so.

In Kennedy’s article, he criticized ACIP and FDA advisors for being in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry. However, he argued that the “problem isn’t necessarily that ACIP members are corrupt.”

“Most likely aim to serve the public interest as they understand it,” he wrote. “The problem is their immersion in a system of industry-aligned incentives and paradigms that enforce a narrow pro-industry orthodoxy.”

In Kennedy’s op-ed, he indicates that new ACIP members will be appointed who “won’t directly work for the vaccine industry. … will exercise independent judgment, refuse to serve as a rubber stamp, and foster a culture of critical inquiry.”

Read all of this any way you like, but it’s fairly straight forward. Kennedy thinks that ACIP was working for the big pharma industry against the interests of the American people and their health, particularly when it comes to all things vaccines. He purged them and will replace them with his own hand-picked advisors that will almost certainly be plagued by similar misguided views. And that group, currently populated by nobody at all, will meet in 2 weeks to talk about immunization programs according to Kennedy.

Critics of this purge abound, as you would expect. And, because they come from the very medical experts and industries that Kennedy claims are conspiring against us all in order to, I guess, sell vaccines, they can be easily dismissed by his cadre of sycophants.

Kennedy’s move was quickly rebuked by a number of doctors groups. A statement released by the American Medical Association said it “upends a transparent process that has saved countless lives.” The American Academy of Pediatrics called it part of an “escalating effort by the Administration to silence independent medical expertise and stoke distrust in lifesaving vaccines.”

“This is horrifying,” a CDC official said of Kennedy’s move.

The American Public Health Association denounced it as an undemocratic “coup” of the process. The Infectious Disease Society of America called it “reckless, shortsighted and severely harmful.” The American College of Physicians accused Kennedy of having “circumvented the standard, transparent vaccine review processes” at the CDC.

If you thought that Kennedy would be allowed to retain his position, one for which he is hopelessly unqualified, and the extent of the fallout from it would be a mere measles outbreak, conspiracy talk, and maybe a handful of dead bodies, it really could get so, so much worse than that. A change in the government’s immunization guidance that deviates from actual medical science can’t help but filter down to some percentage of doctors and the public.

And people will get sick, and indeed some will die, as a result. In fact, that has already started to happen. The only question now is just how large a body count Kennedy will manage to rack up.

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Comments on “RFK Jr. Fires Every Single Member Of CDC’s Immunization Advisory Committee”

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17 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen says:

Not only are americans going to die earlier and suffer from life changing disabilities in far greater numbers, but they’ll also end up needing vaccination passports to be allowed to travel to foreign countries at this rate

That’s IF any other country continues to take America’s healthcare system on any kind of trust

30 days quarantine for USA visitors anyone?

Anonymous Coward says:

The HHS and CDC being untrustworthy, anti-critical-thinking, hurts everyone. And one of the easiest to see example is: Those bodies are trusted, especially by non-professionals, to provide guidance. And when they abandon their responsibilities, and provide erroneous, or worse malicious guidance the public is one quickly hurt.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

And people will get sick, and indeed some will die, as a result. In fact, that has already started to happen.

Per an ABC News article:

The number of measles cases in the U.S. so far this year has quadrupled compared to 2024 and is nearing a 30-year high.

As of Friday, there have been 1,168 confirmed measles cases across 33 states nationwide, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Last year, the U.S. saw just 285 measles cases, CDC data shows.

The U.S. is currently on track to surpass the 1,274 cases seen in 2019, and is expected to see the highest number of cases since 1992.

And to tie this back into another one of the Trump administration’s targets: Right now, in the United States, there are more cases of measles than there are transgender athletes in sports⁠—but guess which one is considered more of an existential threat by the death cult that is the GOP.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Thad (profile) says:

Re:

It did not escape my notice that the people who were crying “tyranny!” at the possibility of having to put a strip of cloth over their mouths were the exact same motherfuckers who’d been lining up to shred the Bill of Rights after a terrorist attack that was a fraction of a percent as deadly as COVID-19.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Even if you don’t actually need it, no harm will be caused by receiving it

The CDC list several possible harms, such as “Soreness, redness, or swelling where the vaccine was given; Fever; Mild rash; Temporary pain and stiffness in the joints”. Very minor and short-term harms (with more serious side effects being rare); still, presumably avoidable with testing.

There’s also a list of “Who shouldn’t get vaccinated”, which is actually a list of “People [who] should check with their healthcare provider”; I imagine some such providers would, in certain circumstances, prefer to see if it’s actually necessary.

If someone can tolerate the fever and soreness common to most vaccinations, and doesn’t know that they’ve had a recent-enough measles vaccine, they should probably just get it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The CDC list several possible harms, such as “Soreness, redness, or swelling where the vaccine was given; Fever; Mild rash; Temporary pain and stiffness in the joints”.

Those are side effects, not possible harms. Are you an employee of an insurance company, spewing propaganda to push an expensive test?

There’s also a list of “Who shouldn’t get vaccinated”…

Who wouldn’t benefit from a titer assay anyway. If you’re allergic to egg, for example, then a titer assay indicating you need to get the bird flu vaccine isn’t going to help you.

If someone can tolerate the fever and soreness common to most vaccinations…

Which the majority of people can.

…and doesn’t know that they’ve had a recent enough measles vaccine, they should probably just get it.

Which is exactly what I said in the first place. Save the expense of a titer assay and just go for the much cheaper option of getting the jab.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
David says:

Frankly:

Everyone who blatantly and purposefully lies about what they are going to do once confirmed should be hit with criminal contempt of Congress charges.

Sure, it would put the bulk of the current senate-approved government officials in jail. It’s not like they don’t deserve it.

bobqoq says:

So when is the legislature going to impeach and remove Kennedy from his position?

Oh wait, that would require them to do something beyond what dear leader has said to do.

I also wonder how much this is meant to be a distraction from the fact that Trump is in the Epstine files and a pedophile. Sure Kennedy is an anti-vaccine fool, but he might have done this now because the president needs more distractions on top of his distractions.

Anonymous Coward says:

a group that has “become little more than a rubber stamp for any vaccine.”

That’s why we have new ads on tv for new vaccines every month, playing endlessly.

“The problem is their immersion in a system of industry-aligned incentives and paradigms that enforce a narrow pro-industry orthodoxy.”

Bloody hell. So many things packed into a sentence here.
Including, but not limited to:

Lol, bro, that’s the Republican or just American way.
Every accusation, a confession.
You said the quiet part out loud.

And many more hits like these.

That One Guy (profile) says:

They committed the cardinal sin of a cult: Never challenge the leaders

Sounds like someone got tired of actual medical experts telling him what an unhinged lunatic he is and how he was going to get even more people maimed and killed with his ‘medical’ recommendations.

At the rate things are going I fully expect that by this time next year(never mind three years and some change) the death toll from the initial covid outbreak the last time the convicted felon was in charge will look downright quaint in comparison.

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