
From grinding up baby animals to freezers full of roadkill: What RFK Jr's weirdest habits tell us about him
Marking Holocaust Memorial Day on Monday, the Auschwitz Memorial posted that 'Auschwitz was at the end of a long process. It did not start from gas chambers. This hatred was gradually developed by humans…. Auschwitz took time.'
I am thinking about this even more after reading Kirsten Miller 's satirical novel Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books. People don't just suddenly become 'evil' overnight. It needs to be encouraged, nurtured, allowed – communal.
One character in Miller's book that particularly struck me is a Hollywood actor who has found success playing stereotypical Southern roles (the 'evil' Sheriff, the 'evil' prison guard, etc) and who finds further fame by saying out loud what certain right-wing people find exhilarating on social media. He wants power – and this is how he will get it. But even he eventually baulks after encountering the real-world acolytes of the words he doesn't believe. Such consequences are a fairytale ending. We are seeing in real time the effects of people leaning into stories they don't believe to achieve power and hold on to it and the seeming powerlessness of others to change these stories with the truth.
Caroline Kennedy, daughter of JFK and the former US ambassador to Japan and Australia, has taken the unprecedented upper-class step of airing dirty family laundry in public and sending a letter to the Senate laying out the total unsuitability of her cousin, Robert F Kennedy Jr for office, let alone the health secretary position that he has angled for since dropping out of the presidential race where he ran as an independent, and handing his 6 per cent vote share to Trump.
People have called RFK Jr's habits 'weird' – a little too generously, one feels. Caroline Kennedy recalls that her cousin would show off blending up baby chicks and mice to feed his birds of prey (one assumes that the prey was dead – a pet shop providing live food is a new level of 'weird'). This is both a power play to those forced to watch and the sign of a terrible bird handler: who feeds a hawk puréed food?
Similarly 'weird': his freezer of roadkill (the man lives in LA, for heaven's sake); discussing how a worm ate part of his brain; and his picking up a dead bear cub while hiking in New York state and later dumping it in Central Park – a 10-year mystery until the New Yorker published the story in a profile on Kennedy Jr.
Treating animals as things is one step from treating humans as things. And this is the truly sickening nature of much of modern politics.
In her letter, Caroline Kennedy describes Kennedy Jr as being "addicted to attention and power" and that he 'preys on the desperation of parents of sick children – vaccinating his own children while building a following by hypocritically discouraging other parents from vaccinating theirs."
Indeed, over the course of a decade, Kennedy Jr has gone from publicly declaring that he had vaccinated all six of his children to saying that no vaccine is safe and effective. He has repeatedly shared false information about Covid-19 and shared conspiracy theories with such inspired ardour that their accompanying charts look credible to the casual eye.
This hypocrisy from public figures, let alone politicians, is lethal. It is a slow and malevolent creep on from the days of Hollywood stars crediting a line-free face on drinking lots of water. Unregulated social media, coupled with news reporting, has allowed objectively mad and unacceptable fringe views – and behaviour – to go unchallenged to the point that they become mainstream. Look at the new Defense Secretary.
RFK Jr may no longer be a drug taker, but his behaviour shows that he is far from sober. Caroline Kennedy credits her cousin for 'pulling himself out of illness and disease' but notes that this wasn't the case for 'siblings and cousins who Bobby encouraged down the path of substance abuse suffered addiction, illness, and death while Bobby has gone on to misrepresent, lie, and cheat his way through life.'
This has serious ramifications for the future. The powerful won't suffer for the lies they tell – Trump and Musk were quite casually stretching the truth on X about the mission to bring back the NASA astronauts, which was planned by the Biden administration and well underway when they claimed the team had been abandoned. Whether in sacrificing healthcare or fearing the wider world, it will be the people who suffer; the people who are trampled on in the quest for control.
As the old saying goes, a lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth has had time to get its boots on. Lies are sexy. That doesn't stop the truth from being important – and the need to remember the past, and how we got there, is just as crucial.
Hashtags

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


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
US stock futures little changed ahead of US-China trade talks
Wholesale price data are due the next day and could give investors an idea of whether there is inflation coming down the pipeline to Americans. Wholesale prices are what businesses pay for their goods and services. At the end of the week, a new consumer sentiment reading from the University of Michigan also includes data on inflation expectations. Separately, officials from the U.S. and China are expected to hold trade talks in London, Trump said last week. The talks follow a phone call between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping after Trump accused China of violating terms of a tariff pause agreed on last month in Switzerland. At 5:45 a.m. ET, futures linked to the blue-chip Dow rose 0.12%, while broad S&P 500 futures added 0.12% and tech-heavy Nasdaq futures were flat. All three indexes closed higher last week, and the S&P 500 is now less than 3% from its record high. The S&P 500 topped the 6,000 mark for the first time since Feb. 21. Investors will also continue to watch the path of the One, Big Beautfil bill in the Senate after a public and fierce tit-for-tat exchange between Tesla chief executive Elon Musk and Trump over social media about the tax bill. Musk called the bill a "pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination," and Trump called Musk "crazy." Cryptocurrency Cryptocurrency platform Gemini said it confidentially submitted a draft registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for an initial public offering of class A shares. The IPO is expected after the SEC review process, it said in a release. Medora Lee is a money, markets, and personal finance reporter at USA TODAY. You can reach her at mjlee@ and subscribe to our free Daily Money newsletter for personal finance tips and business news every Monday through Friday.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
RFK Jr. fires all 17 members of CDC vaccine advisory panel
"Today we are prioritizing the restoration of public trust above any specific pro- or anti-vaccine agenda," said Kennedy Jr., who has a history of controversial views on vaccines. "The public must know that unbiased science--evaluated through a transparent process and insulated from conflicts of interest--guides the recommendations of our health agencies." Kennedy Jr.'s decision marks a reversal from what a key Republican senator said the Trump Cabinet member had promised during his confirmation hearings earlier this year. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana, the chair of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, said Kennedy had promised to maintain the committee's current composition. "If confirmed, he will maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices without changes," Cassidy said. The Biden administration appointed all 17 sitting committee members, with 13 of them taking their seats in 2024. According to Trump's HHS, those appointments would have prevented the current administration from choosing a majority of the committee until 2028. "A clean sweep is necessary to reestablish public confidence in vaccine science," said Kennedy, adding that the new members "will prioritize public health and evidence-based medicine". and "no longer function as a rubber stamp for industry profit-taking agendas."


NBC News
9 hours ago
- NBC News
Tennessee Republican Mark Green to resign from Congress for private sector job
WASHINGTON — Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., said Monday that he will resign from Congress after it passes a massive policy bill to advance President Donald Trump's domestic agenda. 'It is with a heavy heart that I announce my retirement from Congress. Recently, I was offered an opportunity in the private sector that was too exciting to pass up,' Green said in a statement, adding that he notified Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., that he would vacate his congressional seat following the House's next vote on the legislative package that's currently in the Senate. Green, the chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, represents a safe Republican district in Tennessee. He had announced his intentions to retire during Congress' previous session, but reversed course weeks later.