RFK Jr. and the Credentialed Charlatans Who Broke American Public Life
Kristoffer Ealy
The last thing I wanted to see was a news story about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. But because God either has a strange sense of humor or just genuinely does not like me, the first thing on my timeline was exactly that: RFK Jr., again, holding forth about vaccines and public health and whatever other ambulance he had decided to chase that morning. And as I sat there in my sick bed shaking my head at a man whose qualifications to run the Department of Health and Human Services amount to rich, loud, and related to someone famous, it got me thinking not just about Kennedy, but about the entire ecosystem of credentialed charlatans that has taken root in American public life. We are living through a specific and recurring grift, and it is time to name it clearly.
The credentialed charlatan follows a recognizable pattern. First, you acquire a legitimate degree or platform law school, medical school, a doctorate, a television show built on someone elses credibility. You use that credential to open the door. You get the audience, the book deals, the speaking fees, the cultural authority that comes with being the person who did the work. And then, once you are comfortably inside, you spend the rest of your career telling everyone else the door should not exist. The credential becomes purely decorative. It is the key you used to get in, not something you actually believe in. That is the grift. And it runs on any ideology you hand it.
Kennedy is the obvious place to start because he was literally in my newsfeed before I finished my first Red Bull. A lot of people only really learned who RFK Jr. was in 2024, when he grifted his way through a presidential campaign before ultimately crash-landing into Trumps orbit like a confused bird flying into a window. But his anti-vaccine activism goes back decades, long before MAGA gave it a bigger platform and a Cabinet salary. Let me be fair: Kennedy is not a stupid man. He knows how to talk. He knows how to posture as a brave truth-teller pushing back against institutions. But knowing how to sound confident is not the same thing as knowing medicine, and that distinction matters a hell of a lot when you are the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Kennedy has a legal and advocacy background. That does not make him a public health expert, no matter how many podcasts he goes on or how dramatically he stares into the camera.
He was also hardly inventing the wheel. The modern anti-vaccine movement figured out a long time ago that it needed more than bad science bad science alone does not sell. It needed storytellers. Andrew Wakefield supplied fraudulent research dressed up as medicine. Jenny McCarthy supplied a marketable face and an emotional hook a mother with an autistic son, which is a real and valid personal experience, but a personal experience is not clinical expertise, and confusing the two is exactly how these grifts get traction. Having a son who is autistic makes you a parent with a perspective. It does not make you an immunologist. I have MS. That does not make me a neurologist. It makes me a guy who has learned a lot of things he never wanted to know about lesions.
https://www.lincolnsquare.media/p/rfk-jr-and-the-credentialed-charlatans
3catwoman3
(29,400 posts)It is never wise to broadly extrapolate from one's own personal experience, whether that experience dispositive or negative.
Edited to add that the full article at the link is well worth reading.
Edited once again - the comments to the full article are also worthwhile.