
US vaccine sceptics are now in charge. That's bad news for the world
When US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jnr
removed the vaccine advisory panel of the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), he framed it as a move for the 'restoration of public trust'. But the implications stretch far beyond domestic politics.
In dismantling one of the world's most respected sources of vaccine expertise, the United States is not just undermining its public health, it is ceding global scientific authority to China.
Trump's elevation of figures like
Pete Hegseth
Tulsi Gabbard and
Kash Patel made clear his second term would test the limits of mainstream thought. But Kennedy is the president's magnum opus. This is not some well-meaning reformer with unorthodox ideas, let loose to fix a broken health system. He is the embodiment of conspiracy masquerading as policy – an
ideologue entrusted with the machinery of American public health.
Kennedy has hand-picked eight replacements, including vaccine critics such as Vicky Pebsworth, who has served on the board of America's oldest anti-vaccine group. There is a trend here: Kennedy has promoted ideas so unhinged they barely warrant rebuttal.
He claimed Wi-fi can cause cancer, compared US vaccine mandates to Nazi Germany's authoritarianism, mused that Covid-19 might have been
ethnically targeted and posited that
HIV does not cause Aids . If one tried to distil the collective fever dream ravings of a Reddit thread into human form, you'd get RFK Jnr.
The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunisation Practices has for decades been the gold standard for vaccine guidance – not merely for the US, but for the world. Its members are not political appointees but independent epidemiologists and immunologists with no obvious axe to grind, other than preventing disease and saving lives. To replace them with well-known sceptics is a purge, executed not in the name of transparency or science, but of ideology.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Washington Post's China reporters among journalists targeted in cyberattack
A cyberattack on The Washington Post compromised the email accounts of several journalists and was most likely the work of a foreign government, The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. Matt Murray, The Washington Post's executive editor, said in an internal memo that the breach was discovered on Thursday and an investigation had been initiated, The Wall Street Journal reported. Staff at The Washington Post were told the intrusions compromised journalists' Microsoft accounts and could have granted the intruder access to work emails, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the situation. The reporters whose emails were targeted included members of the national security and economic policy teams, including some who write about China, the report added. The Washington Post did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment. In 2022, News Corp, which publishes The Wall Street Journal, was breached by digital intruders. The email accounts and data of an unspecified number of journalists were compromised in that incident.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Macron, on Greenland visit, berates Trump for threats against the territory
French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday criticised US President Donald Trump's threats to annex Greenland, as he made a visit to the Danish autonomous territory. 'That's not what allies do,' Macron said as he arrived in Nuuk, Greenland's capital. Macron is the first foreign head of state to visit the vast territory – at the crossroads of the Atlantic and the Arctic – since Trump's annexation threats Trump, since returning to the White House in January, has repeatedly said America needs the strategically located, resource-rich island for security reasons and has refused to rule out the use of force to secure it. Denmark has also repeatedly stressed that Greenland 'is not for sale'. Macron said his visit was aimed at conveying 'France's and the European Union's solidarity' for 'the sovereignty and territorial integrity' of Greenland.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump vetoed Israeli plan to kill Iran's supreme leader Khamenei, US officials say
US President Donald Trump vetoed an Israeli plan in recent days to kill Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , two US officials told Reuters on Sunday. Advertisement 'Have the Iranians killed an American yet? No. Until they do we're not even talking about going after the political leadership,' said one of the sources, a senior US administration official. The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said top US officials have been in constant communications with Israeli officials in the days since Israel launched a massive attack on Iran in a bid to halt its nuclear programme. They said the Israelis reported that they had an opportunity to kill the top Iranian leader, but Trump waved them off the plan. The officials would not say whether Trump himself delivered the message. But Trump has been in frequent communications with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Advertisement When asked about Reuters' report, Netanyahu, in an interview on Sunday with Fox News Channel's Special Report With Bret Baier, said: 'There's so many false reports of conversations that never happened, and I'm not going to get into that.