Current:Home > MyTakeaways from AP’s reporting on who gets hurt by RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine work -Financium
Takeaways from AP’s reporting on who gets hurt by RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine work
View
Date:2025-04-19 08:58:29
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has spent years using his famous name to disseminate false information about vaccines and other topics in a time when spreading conspiracy theories has become a powerful way to grow a constituency.
An Associated Press examination of his work and its impact found Kennedy has earned money, fame and political clout while leaving some people suffering from the fallout.
Kennedy’s campaign did not return emails seeking comment from the candidate, who is the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy.
Here are the key takeaways from the AP’s reporting:
CAUSE UNKNOWN
Twelve-year-old Braden Fahey didn’t die from getting a vaccine, yet a few months after his death in August 2022, his photo appeared on the cover of a book that was co-published by Kennedy’s anti-vaccine group. The book falsely argues COVID-19 vaccines caused a spike of sudden deaths among healthy young people.
Kennedy wrote the foreword and tweeted that it details data showing “ COVID shots are a crime against humanity.”
Braden’s parents have read comments from people who falsely blame vaccines for their son’s death. Seeing Braden’s memory being misrepresented by Kennedy and others has been deeply painful, they said. When they repeatedly tried reaching the author and publisher to get Braden’s name and photo removed, no one responded.
After AP contacted Kennedy and others involved in the book last week, the president of Skyhorse Publishing, which co-published the book, texted the Faheys. But Gina Fahey told AP she felt he did so only after it became clear it could harm his reputation.
The president of Skyhorse, Tony Lyons, did not address why Braden specifically was chosen for the cover but defended his inclusion by saying that news stories and his obituary did not mention his cause of death.
Lyons said he was unaware of the Faheys’ efforts to contact his company. He told AP this week they were studying whether to remove Braden from the book or the cover.
DELAYED CARE
Lydia Greene, a mother who lives in the Canadian province of Alberta, previously identified herself as anti-vaccine and was a devoted Kennedy follower. She said she thought he was heroic because he was saying things that other people were too afraid to say.
She declined all vaccines for her son after buying into the insistence by Kennedy and other anti-vaccine “gurus” that vaccines cause autism. When her son started to show signs of autism, Greene discounted it because in the anti-vaccine movement, autism is painted as severe damage, and the worst outcome that can happen to a child. She didn’t see that in her son.
She said she did not recognize his condition until she “came out of the rabbit hole of anti-vax.”
“I realized I had wasted so much valuable time where he should have been in occupational therapy, speech therapy, evidence-based therapy for autism,” Greene said.
___
SAMOA
Perhaps the most well-known example of Kennedy’s anti-vaccine activism outside the U.S. was in 2019 on the Pacific island nation of Samoa.
That year, dozens of children died of measles. Many factors led to the wave of deaths, including medical mistakes and poor decisions by government authorities. But people involved in the response said Kennedy and the anti-vaccine activists he supported made things worse.
In June 2019, Kennedy and his wife, the actress Cheryl Hines, visited Samoa, a trip Kennedy later wrote was arranged by a local anti-vaccine influencer.
Vaccine rates had plummeted after two children died in 2018 from a measles vaccine that a nurse had incorrectly mixed with a muscle relaxant. The government suspended the vaccine program for months. By the time Kennedy arrived, health authorities were trying to get back on track.
Kennedy was treated as a distinguished guest and met with the prime minister and other officials. He also met with anti-vaccine activists, one of whom wrote on Instagram that the meeting was “profoundly monumental ... for this movement.”
A few months later, a measles epidemic broke out in Samoa, killing 83 people, mostly infants and children.
Helen Petousis-Harris, a vaccinologist from New Zealand who worked on the response, told AP that local and regional anti-vaccine activists took their cues from Kennedy.
“They amplified the fear and mistrust, which resulted in the amplification of the epidemic and an increased number of children dying. Children were being brought for care too late,” she said.
In an interview for a forthcoming documentary, “Shot in the Arm,” Kennedy said he bears no responsibility for the outcome.
THE IMPACT ON OFFICIALS AND HEALTH ADVOCATES
Former California state Sen. Richard Pan is a pediatrician who recalled what happened when lawmakers were debating a bill he sponsored to make it more difficult to get a vaccine exemption.
Kennedy opposed the bill and came to Sacramento to advocate against it. As a crowd gathered outside the capitol, Kennedy stood to speak. Two large posters behind him featured Pan’s image, with the word “LIAR” stamped across his face in blood-red paint. Pan told AP he felt the staging was intended to incite the crowd against him.
Within months, one anti-vaccine extremist assaulted Pan, streaming it live on Facebook. Another threw blood at Pan and other lawmakers.
Kennedy has repeatedly brought up the Holocaust when discussing vaccines and public health mandates, comparisons that Pan said amount to an “indirect call to violence” against health advocates.
Pan said it’s one of many instances when Kennedy has whipped people up against public health advocates. Kennedy also wrote a bestselling book attacking infectious disease expert and former top government scientist Dr. Anthony Fauci, who has received death threats.
Pan said people trying their best to protect children are “being threatened and even assaulted because of his rhetoric and his lies. That harms America.”
____
The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (74)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Conservative megadonors Koch not funding Haley anymore as she continues longshot bid
- Railroad Commission Approves Toxic Waste Ponds Next to Baptist Camp
- Travis Kelce Dances to Taylor Swift's Love Story at Chiefs Party in Las Vegas After Australia Visit
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- John Wooden stamp unveiled at UCLA honoring the coach who led Bruins to a record 10 national titles
- Who can vote in the South Carolina Republican primary election for 2024?
- Eva Mendes Showcases Purrfect Style During Rare Appearance at Dolce & Gabbana Fashion Show
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- ‘The Bear,’ ‘Spider-Verse’ among the early winners at Producers Guild awards
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- MLB jersey controversy is strangely similar to hilarious 'Seinfeld' plotline
- In search of Mega Millions 2/23/24 winning numbers? Past winners offer clues to jackpot
- Kings beat Clippers 123-107 behind Fox and hand LA back-to-back losses for 1st time since December
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- The 11 most fascinating 2024 NFL draft prospects: Drake Maye, J.J. McCarthy drive intrigue
- Trump's civil fraud judgment is officially over $450 million, and climbing over $100,000 per day
- Everything you need to know about solar eclipse glasses, including where to get them
Recommendation
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Flaco, owl that escaped from the Central Park Zoo, dies after colliding with building
AP VoteCast: Takeaways from the early Republican primary elections
A Utah mom is charged in her husband's death. Did she poison him with a cocktail?
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Amazon joins 29 other ‘blue chip’ companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average
Federal judge grants injunction suspending NCAA's NIL rules
Light rail train hits a car in Phoenix, killing a woman and critically injuring another