Dude, you should ask this to RFK Jr. How could I know? From what I understand, he has to outline firstly the goals of his term. Once he's designated as health secretary, he should present a thorough plan to achieve his proposals. Though I don't know how that works, I can be wrong.
He has been asked. He has refused to give specific answers. That’s my point: for all that his ideas may sound good in the abstract, they have little clarity with regard to implementation. This isn’t the kind of thing we should be waiting until after he’s confirmed to see, since by then, the only person he’s accountable to is the President.
I found an interview with him in 2017 and in the last question he says he's totally for the vaccine. Link to interview
So he used to be for it, changed his mind over the next three years, and has held to that view ever since. I appreciate the timeline, but it doesn’t change what his current views are.
I understand his concern, there is a lot of corruption in the health industry so he's very careful of what scientists say about the medication they produce. We shouldn't trust them because scientists are at the end humans as all of us, they can make mistakes or even worse get corrupted. So we should question them at every moment we find something obscure on their work.
I get that scientists shouldn’t just be inherently trusted, but again, the issue here is the how. People can all be corrupt, so you need to put in effective checks to prevent that and fully evaluate vaccines, which is going to require more scientists doing more work. That’s positive so long as there is a clear set of standards and they’re not ridiculously overbearing (i.e. expensive or time consuming) to the point that it prevents good research. The problem is that I don’t think he has a standard. He has a feeling that the existing standard isn’t good enough, but no clear idea of what standard would be.
Besides, the reason why he opposes to children vaccines is because he found some cases of serious side effects. Eventhough they were few cases, almost nothing compared to all the vaccinated population, he is very concerned about this minority.
This is a vague argument. All vaccines have some amount of side effects, some of them serious. If instances of serious side effects make a given drug or vaccine dangerous enough that it should be pulled from the market or dramatically reevaluated, then there are scant few that will meet this standard. As always, those side effects also have to be weighed against the benefits of keeping these on the market. So his opposition presents as a threat to the health and well-being of future generations as epidemics that have largely been under control in the population will likely surge. I don’t see that as an even trade with a very low incidence of serious side effects.
I think there is no reason to deny him the job. There are lots of critics on him but at the end it's just part of the political game. There is nothing to be afraid of.
I very much disagree for the reasons I’ve already mentioned. It’s not hyperbolic to point out that his perspective, if implemented meaningfully, would cause a great deal of harm. It’s not a political game to mention that his lack of specifics on his plans means we cannot even evaluate any likelihood of success for his policy goals before he gets confirmed. Criticism is warranted. Denying him the job for all this is warranted. Sadly, I know he’ll get it anyway on a party line vote because supporting Trump’s pick comes before any meaningful consideration of his candidates.