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#NoRFK #StopRFK #RejectRFK #RFKRealityCheck #AntiRFK #NotWithRFK #RFKNotFit #BlockRFK #NoToRFK #RFKExposed #RFKDebunked #RFKUnmasked #RFKMythBusted #TruthOverRFK #RFKOut #RFKNoWay #RFKWrong #RFKFail #SayNoToRFK #RFKNotForUs #RFKFactCheck #RFKDisaster #DumpRFK #RFKClownShow #RFKNotReady #RFKScam

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RFK Jr. & HHS: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
RFK Jr. & HHS: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) YouTube video by LastWeekTonight

#LegalizeComedy #LastWeekTonight #JohnOliver #HHS #RFK #RejectRFK #Anti-RFK #ResistTrump #WTF #TrumpCorruption #FDT #TrumpHatesAmerica #TrumpCrimeSyndicate #StandAgainstTrump #FDJT #DonaldTrump #KingTrump #MAGA #FuckMAGA #FAFO #Felon47 #8647th #25thAmendment #LockHimUp #VaccinesSaveLives

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RFK Jr.’s confirmation hearing is a circus: anti-vax nonsense, financial conflicts, abortion pill dodging, and literal allegations of animal cruelty. This is who Trump wants running Health & Human Services? America, we are not serious. #RejectRFK #ResistFascism

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RFK Junior can’t even admit that there is no science in the anti-VAX claims made by a debunked medical study. Do we really think he’s going to care about our children?
#CorruptRFKJr #RejectRFK

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If he controlled time , he should have saved his brothers! Such a failure as a human being! #RejectRFK

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Elizabeth Warren (@warren.senate.gov) Seems like we all agree RFK Jr. cannot be the next Secretary of Health and Human Services.…

RFK Jr proved himself unfit & unqualified to serve. His testimony was evasive, dishonest & second-rate. He failed to disavow his grotesque lies & distortions about vaccines or clarify his many contradictory statements. He took ZERO.responsibility for the deaths of Samoan kids.

#RejectRFK #FBR #ETTD

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a man stands in front of a white board with the words you 're out written on it ALT: a man stands in front of a white board with the words you 're out written on it

IMO, RFK’s worm makes for the most unqualified head of HHS head! #RFKWorm #RejectRFK #UnqualifiedRFK

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Frogs change sex even in natural settings - The Wildlife Society Frogs can change their sex even in pristine, pollution free settings. Past research suggested that male-to-female sex changes happening in frogs in suburban ponds may be caused by increased levels of ...

Breaking heads-up for #RFK :
Its only been known for a few decades that frog can change gender/sex - #RejectRFK - wildlife.org/frogs-change...

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#RFKJrHearing rfk is absolutely unqualified for hhs. #HHS should have a medical professional appointment. What a god dammed travesty! #rejectrfk
#theworstofevil #trumpsreignofterror #SaveAmerica

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Hearing the committee comments this morning has me feeling proud for the first time in some time. #rejectRFK

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In the words of Caroline Kennedy, her cousin, Robert Kennedy, Jr., is a predator, addicted to attention & power, with no relevant experience, & is totally unqualified for the job. I too urge the senate to #rejectRFK as Secretary of Health & Human Services
static01.nyt.com/newsgraphics...

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I just called both Ohio senators #jonhusted and #berniemoreno to express my disgust and outrage over the illegal #project2025 actions imposed this week on American citizens. No surprise mailboxes are FULL. freezing federal aid; pausing Medicare funding; we didn’t vote for this! #REJECTRFK

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Going to put this here. Will you watch it for me? 😉 BRB

#carolinekennedy #kennedy #rejectrfk #womenleaders

Full 3 min vid 👇
www.instagram.com/share/BAJRNw...

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#RejectRFK #RFK #ScienceMatters

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@whitehouse.senate.gov We need the government to stand up for science or people will die. #RejectRFK #BirdFlu www.tiktok.com/t/ZT2Fw1fue/

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Among President-elect Trump’s unconventional Cabinet choices, the potential appointment of one in particular worries me: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as secretary of Health and Human Services.

RFK Jr. has long espoused anti-vaccine views, and they are promoted by his nonprofit Children’s Health Defense. During his presidential campaign, he repeated thoroughly debunked claims that vaccines cause autism and other neurodevelopmental conditions. He also caricatured persons with autism as “walking around … with helmets on … non-toilet-trained, nonverbal, stimming, toe-walking, hand-flapping.”

With his inaccurate stance that vaccines should be avoided to prevent autism, Kennedy suggests that chancing severe childhood diseases would be preferable to a life like my son’s. Diagnosed at age 1 with a rare seizure disorder that stalled his cognitive development, and later with intellectual disability and autism, my son today is a smart, charming 25-year-old with a great sense of humor. He’s exploding with independence and has cultivated passions of his own: lawn mowing and country music, to start with.

Among President-elect Trump’s unconventional Cabinet choices, the potential appointment of one in particular worries me: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as secretary of Health and Human Services. RFK Jr. has long espoused anti-vaccine views, and they are promoted by his nonprofit Children’s Health Defense. During his presidential campaign, he repeated thoroughly debunked claims that vaccines cause autism and other neurodevelopmental conditions. He also caricatured persons with autism as “walking around … with helmets on … non-toilet-trained, nonverbal, stimming, toe-walking, hand-flapping.” With his inaccurate stance that vaccines should be avoided to prevent autism, Kennedy suggests that chancing severe childhood diseases would be preferable to a life like my son’s. Diagnosed at age 1 with a rare seizure disorder that stalled his cognitive development, and later with intellectual disability and autism, my son today is a smart, charming 25-year-old with a great sense of humor. He’s exploding with independence and has cultivated passions of his own: lawn mowing and country music, to start with.

Years ago, when my son turned 8, his teacher told me there was an active Special Olympics program in our community. He loved basketball and I quickly signed him up. He made allies, including his taller, gray-haired 60-something teammate who would expertly pull down a rebound and hand him the ball to make his shot. By the end of the season the team had a couple of tournaments scheduled. The coach’s wife measured my son and presented him with a shiny purple uniform.

But at the first tournament game, I learned that what to my family looked like a successful team could be distorted into a different message.

We were losing badly; the other team handed the ball back to our 30-year-old point guard who shot, missed; the other team rebounded and handed it back again. This repeated until we scored. Then uncontrolled joy broke out, pumped fists raised heavenward, sweaty high fives swatted.

There’s a lot to take in at an event like that — intellectual and developmental disability in all its expressions, amid the general chaos of amateur sports. There’s limping, shuffling, unruly hairstyles, broken teeth, body odor, poorly fitting glasses, uniforms slipping down or up untended.

Years ago, when my son turned 8, his teacher told me there was an active Special Olympics program in our community. He loved basketball and I quickly signed him up. He made allies, including his taller, gray-haired 60-something teammate who would expertly pull down a rebound and hand him the ball to make his shot. By the end of the season the team had a couple of tournaments scheduled. The coach’s wife measured my son and presented him with a shiny purple uniform. But at the first tournament game, I learned that what to my family looked like a successful team could be distorted into a different message. We were losing badly; the other team handed the ball back to our 30-year-old point guard who shot, missed; the other team rebounded and handed it back again. This repeated until we scored. Then uncontrolled joy broke out, pumped fists raised heavenward, sweaty high fives swatted. There’s a lot to take in at an event like that — intellectual and developmental disability in all its expressions, amid the general chaos of amateur sports. There’s limping, shuffling, unruly hairstyles, broken teeth, body odor, poorly fitting glasses, uniforms slipping down or up untended.

Though these aspects may have been perceived as a cry for care, medical attention or grooming, they really told a universal truth: Things break. People sweat. Clothes can be enemies, depending on the functions of bodies and minds. Some of these things will be tended to in time; others don’t need to be fixed.

The elderly couple I was sitting next to saw it differently. I was close enough to hear when the man bent toward the woman’s ear. “We’ve been so blessed,” he said, shaking his head. “All our children and grandchildren are healthy and normal.”

Many of us with disabled children have heard others count this blessing: Thank you for my health. Translation: Thank you for keeping me normal. Thank you for keeping me and my children and grandchildren off this basketball court today. Thank you for keeping me out of that hospital room, this nursing home. Thank you for anointing me, for choosing me, for blessing me. It’s this normal-at-all-costs viewpoint that Kennedy has reinforced with his language and positions about autism.

What this view misses is that disabled people can and do lead lives of dignity and self-determination. Real health leadership does not, cannot, mean complete avoidance of disability, or treating it as a fate worse than a deadly infectious disease. Instead, it means creating a world that supports and accepts those with disease or disability.

Our family has been unspeakably enriched by our life with my son. We’ve delighted in his accomplishments that have been very different from those of his neurotypical sister. And while it’s not fair to my son to imbue him with mystical abilities — or ignore that he and his peers, and by extension our family, face very real challenges in a world not fully equipped to accommodate them — we’ve experienced him as a bearer of joy.

Though these aspects may have been perceived as a cry for care, medical attention or grooming, they really told a universal truth: Things break. People sweat. Clothes can be enemies, depending on the functions of bodies and minds. Some of these things will be tended to in time; others don’t need to be fixed. The elderly couple I was sitting next to saw it differently. I was close enough to hear when the man bent toward the woman’s ear. “We’ve been so blessed,” he said, shaking his head. “All our children and grandchildren are healthy and normal.” Many of us with disabled children have heard others count this blessing: Thank you for my health. Translation: Thank you for keeping me normal. Thank you for keeping me and my children and grandchildren off this basketball court today. Thank you for keeping me out of that hospital room, this nursing home. Thank you for anointing me, for choosing me, for blessing me. It’s this normal-at-all-costs viewpoint that Kennedy has reinforced with his language and positions about autism. What this view misses is that disabled people can and do lead lives of dignity and self-determination. Real health leadership does not, cannot, mean complete avoidance of disability, or treating it as a fate worse than a deadly infectious disease. Instead, it means creating a world that supports and accepts those with disease or disability. Our family has been unspeakably enriched by our life with my son. We’ve delighted in his accomplishments that have been very different from those of his neurotypical sister. And while it’s not fair to my son to imbue him with mystical abilities — or ignore that he and his peers, and by extension our family, face very real challenges in a world not fully equipped to accommodate them — we’ve experienced him as a bearer of joy.

In his wonderful book “Far From the Tree,” Andrew Solomon explores parents who have had children very different from themselves and, by and large, have found beauty and meaning in parenting their exceptional child. “Difference unites us,” writes Solomon. “To be entirely typical is the rare and lonely state.”

Americans deserve a Health secretary who would embrace these realities and work to improve the lives of all children and citizens. This would not mean blindly accepting all proposed vaccines without question, but rather strengthening the scientifically rigorous clinical testing process that has already worked to vaccinate millions of Americans and end numerous childhood diseases of the past. A strong leader would help return a conspiracy-vulnerable populace to faith in the scientific system. This person would dissuade President-elect Donald Trump from mocking people with disabilities and instead help people like my son find meaningful employment and safe and affordable housing.

Pursuing disability inclusion is, in fact, one of the Kennedy family’s most important legacies, seen in their work with Special Olympics and other initiatives. Ignoring this legacy to enact a narrow and dangerous Make America Healthy Again agenda would be a shameful move at the expense of a valuable group of Americans: people like my son and his peers.

Susan Hall is a writer in Michigan. (links to https://x.com/SusanCoolHall)

In his wonderful book “Far From the Tree,” Andrew Solomon explores parents who have had children very different from themselves and, by and large, have found beauty and meaning in parenting their exceptional child. “Difference unites us,” writes Solomon. “To be entirely typical is the rare and lonely state.” Americans deserve a Health secretary who would embrace these realities and work to improve the lives of all children and citizens. This would not mean blindly accepting all proposed vaccines without question, but rather strengthening the scientifically rigorous clinical testing process that has already worked to vaccinate millions of Americans and end numerous childhood diseases of the past. A strong leader would help return a conspiracy-vulnerable populace to faith in the scientific system. This person would dissuade President-elect Donald Trump from mocking people with disabilities and instead help people like my son find meaningful employment and safe and affordable housing. Pursuing disability inclusion is, in fact, one of the Kennedy family’s most important legacies, seen in their work with Special Olympics and other initiatives. Ignoring this legacy to enact a narrow and dangerous Make America Healthy Again agenda would be a shameful move at the expense of a valuable group of Americans: people like my son and his peers. Susan Hall is a writer in Michigan. (links to https://x.com/SusanCoolHall)

Powerful perspective by Susan Hall (@susancoolhall at X), re Robert Kennedy Jr. for "suggest[ing] chancing severe childhood diseases would be preferable to a life like my son’s."

Opinion: My son has autism. His life tells a story RFK Jr. ignores www.latimes.com/opinion/stor...

#RejectRFK

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The RFK pick horrifies other countries and it scares me. Senators do your constitutional job and reject this nomination. RFK is not fit for this important job. #RejectRFK

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Yes to taking a deep dive into our toxic feed system but uh NO to RFK.

resist.bot/petitions/PT...

#resistbot #letsresist #rejectRFK

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The American people deserve a leader who:
✅ Believes in science
✅ Supports vaccines
✅ Builds on progress like the Affordable Care Act

RFK Jr. is none of these things. Every Senator must oppose this dangerous nomination. Lives are at stake. #RejectRFK

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