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- We need to stop trusting the experts. - We were told at the beginning of COVID, don't look at any data yourself. Don't do any investigating yourself. Just trust the experts. - And trusting the experts is not a feature of science. It's not a feature of democracy. It's a feature of religion, and it's a feature of totalitarianism. - In democracies, we have the obligation, and it's one of the burdens of citizenship, to do our own research and make our own determination. - And we're gonna give people gold standard science. We're gonna publish our protocols in advance. - We're going to tell people what we're doing, and then we're gonna use data, and we're gonna publish the peer reviews, which is never published by CDC studies. We're going to publish any time that we can the raw data, and then we're going to require replication of every study, which never happens at NIH now. That's something new that we're bringing in, is that every study will be replicated.

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The nomination of RFK Jr. for Health and Human Services aims to tackle the illness industrial complex affecting our health. A key proposal is to allocate half of the NIH research budget to preventive, alternative, and holistic health approaches. The current system fails to adequately investigate the root causes of chronic illnesses. This funding would provide practical answers to common health questions, such as effective diets and exercises. Additionally, federal regulations should be revised to prevent NIH funds from going to researchers with conflicts of interest, as many federally funded health researchers have reported such conflicts. We need unbiased scientific research to improve lifestyle advice, and RFK Jr. could facilitate this change.

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Trump has asked me to reorganize the federal health agencies, the agencies that have a portfolio that affects human health, which is CDC, NIH, c d FDA, as well as some of the agencies within the United States Department of Agriculture. He’s asked me to clean up the corruption, number one. He’s asked me to end the conflicts of interest, return those agencies to their rich tradition of gold standard empirically based evidence based science, evidence based medicine, and to end the chronic disease epidemic in this country. And he’s asked me specifically to measurably reduce chronic disease in our children within two years. Okay.

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The plan to make America healthy again is multifaceted, involving hundreds of actions. NIH needs gold standard science and transparency, including replicating studies and publishing raw data. The plan involves creating new journals independent of pharmaceutical industry control. The FDA needs to regulate food by examining chemicals, not just bacteria, and abolishing the GRAS standard.

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The speaker addresses the Gavi community, stating that we are living in a time of upheaval and popular revolt against established institutions, including medicine, that have lost public trust. The speaker, along with President Trump, is committed to earning that trust back. This will be achieved by preserving what is honest and serves the country and the world, while eliminating what does not.

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The speaker envisions a future where the NIH focuses on understanding the causes of American sickness, with 80% of its budget dedicated to innovations that reverse and prevent disease. A more deregulated FDA encourages innovation from therapeutic and preventative device makers, and has been freed from conflicts of interest. The CMS department is working with Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance to evolve the standard of care towards science, addressing lifestyle conditions that the current medical system doesn't incentivize reversing or preventing. The CDC is improving infectious disease procedures while also focusing on preventing and reversing chronic disease. The speaker claims this paradigm shift, driven by voters, will lead to a healthcare system focused on prevention and reversal, rather than being predicated on more Americans being sick.

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I have served in 5 administrations and want to share my perspective on pandemic preparedness. Based on my experience, I want to emphasize that the coming administration will face challenges in dealing with infectious diseases. This includes both chronic diseases and unexpected outbreaks. The history of the last 32 years as the director of NIAID shows that there is no doubt the next administration will have to confront these challenges.

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The speaker states that Trump has asked him to reorganize the federal health agencies whose portfolios affect human health, specifically the CDC, NIH, FDA, and some USDA agencies. The goals are to clean up corruption, end conflicts of interest, and return these agencies to their “rich tradition of gold standard empirically based evidence based science, evidence based medicine.” He adds a aim to end the chronic disease epidemic in the country, with a specific request to measurably reduce chronic disease in children within two years.

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We aim to reverse the chronic disease epidemic and restore the nation's health. The very people dictating our food production and healthcare are those who instigated the crisis in the first place. Many defending this system and pharmaceutical profits are heavily funded. I was asked to clean up corruption and conflict. If confirmed, I recognize the CDC's critical role for Georgia, our country, and global health. Concerns have been raised regarding my previous promotion of "junk science" and potential conflicts of interest due to book deals and vaccine-related lawsuits. People need assurance that I can be independent and science-based. I will support vaccine development and distribution if the evidence supports it. I am aware of vaccine safety data resources, but question the accessibility and integrity of the data.

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It doesn't matter who comes before us as long as they support this administration and ignore your beliefs. If your views are fundamental, how do you reconcile that? President Trump tasked me with ending the chronic disease epidemic and making America healthy again. This is my primary focus at HHS. If we don't tackle this issue, all other discussions about healthcare funding are irrelevant. The U.S. has the highest chronic disease burden globally, and during COVID, we accounted for 16% of deaths despite having only 4.2% of the world’s population. The average American who died from COVID had multiple chronic diseases. This situation poses an existential threat to our economy, military, and overall well-being, making it a top priority for President Trump. If confirmed, I will address this challenge directly.

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I raised concerns about investing NIH resources to re-examine the link between the measles vaccine and autism, given the extensive existing research and limited resources. It's impossible to prove a negative, and re-plowing already examined ground distracts from addressing unknown causes or solutions to the chronic disease crisis. We risk children dying from preventable diseases if we keep pretending this link is an issue. I agree that we need to address the rise in autism. While I believe the literature shows no connection between the MMR vaccine and autism, distrust in medicine exists post-pandemic. Providing good data is key to addressing concerns, but I'm unsure what constitutes "good data" when it already exists. The focus should be on pressing childhood health problems like diabetes and obesity, which should be the priorities of the NIH director.

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I am honored to be President Trump's nominee for the Department of Health and Human Services. My background as an environmental attorney taught me that human health and environmental issues are connected. Today, many Americans face serious health challenges, with over 70% of adults and a third of children being overweight or obese. Chronic diseases account for 90% of healthcare spending, disproportionately affecting lower-income individuals. President Trump is committed to restoring the American dream by prioritizing health for all. I am dedicated to working with all stakeholders to address these issues, ensuring safety in healthcare and supporting American farmers. If confirmed, I promise to promote healthy foods, scrutinize food additives, and establish unbiased science at HHS. Together, we will tackle the chronic disease epidemic and improve the nation's health. Thank you.

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I want to collaborate with Congress to ensure appropriate regulation of any risky research. The NIH should not engage in research that could potentially cause a pandemic, and I am committed to working with Congress to prevent such occurrences. Transparency is crucial for building trust. If confirmed, I pledge to lead the NIH as a scientific organization committed to openness. As a citizen, I've noticed that Freedom of Information Act requests from the NIH were often heavily redacted during the pandemic. To foster trust, we must be transparent. If confirmed as the NIH leader, I fully commit to ensuring that the American people have access to all NIH activities with limited obfuscation, which has unfortunately characterized the NIH's interactions with the public.

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"we'll we'll find an incredible nominee. I'm not worried about that at all." "the CDC's credibility was shattered during the COVID era." "This is now widely understood and widely acknowledged." "CDC used to be, of course, or seen widely around the world as a premier health agency." "Secretary Kennedy, one of the world's foremost voices, advocates, experts on public health, is working hard to restore the credibility and the integrity of CDC." "It is an honor to be able to work with secretary Kennedy as he tackles these issues on behalf of president Trump." "Secretary Kennedy has been a crown jewel of this administration who's working tirelessly to improve public health for all Americans and, again, to deal with the drivers of the chronic health crisis in this country."

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If I'm confirmed as NIH Director, I pledge to ensure the American people have complete transparency into all NIH activities. I commit to openness and limited obfuscation, which has unfortunately characterized the NIH's past interactions. This begins with being very visible.

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Trump has tasked me with reorganizing federal health agencies like the CDC, NIH, FDA, and some USDA agencies. The goals are to eliminate corruption, resolve conflicts of interest, and restore these agencies to their tradition of evidence-based science and medicine. Additionally, there is a focus on addressing the chronic disease epidemic in the country, with a specific aim to significantly reduce chronic diseases in children within two years.

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Dr. Fauci is thanked for his service and cooperation in investigating the COVID-19 pandemic. Concerns are raised about mandates and policies implemented without clear scientific backing. Questions are posed about oversight of risky research and transparency within NIAID. The importance of accountability, transparency, and public trust in health institutions is emphasized for successful protection of Americans.

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I want to thank President Trump for his confidence in me to lead the Department of Education. Americans support the president's vision to make American education the best in the world, return education to the states, and free students from bureaucracy through school choice, and I am ready to enact it. We can do better for students by teaching basic reading and mathematics, protecting students from censorship and antisemitism, and ensuring that American values and true history are taught. The remedy is to fund education freedom, listen to parents, build up careers, empower states, and invest in teachers. If confirmed, I will work with congress to reorient the department toward helping educators, not controlling them, putting parents, teachers, and students first. We should emphasize career-focused education, invest in American students who want to become tech pioneers, and protect all students from discrimination and harassment.

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Trump has asked me to reorganize the federal health agencies—the CDC, NIH, FDA, and some USDA agencies—that have a portfolio affecting human health. He wants me to clean up the corruption, end the conflicts of interest, and return these agencies to their tradition of gold standard empirically based, evidence-based science and evidence-based medicine. He also asked me to end the chronic disease epidemic in this country and, specifically, to measurably reduce chronic disease in our children within two years.

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As I start my work here at HHS, I want to address both my supporters and the American public. We all know that America faces unprecedented levels of chronic disease, obesity, and addiction. While we can't be certain of the causes, finding them and acting on them will be my top priority. In our first 100 days, we will examine every possible factor, listen to experts, dissidents, insiders, and the public, leaving no stone unturned. We will investigate our food, medicine, water, lifestyles, and environment with an open mind. We must care more about our children's health than being right or financial profit. We will bring transparency to our health agencies, eliminating conflicts of interest and prioritizing honest science. After identifying the causes of chronic disease, we will reverse it. With your help, and President Trump's support, we can unify to solve this problem.

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The speaker states their purpose is to end the chronic disease epidemic in the US over the next four years. This will be achieved by ensuring food and formula companies provide nutrition instead of "food-like substances loaded with poison." Medicines will be well-tested and available, with AI being used to shorten clinical trials. The speaker expresses hope due to smart people within the agency and individuals from Elon and Doge who are leaving important businesses to improve the government. The speaker acknowledges the difficulty of disruptive processes, including job losses, but emphasizes a responsibility to the American public and public health, with the goal of making America healthy again.

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I will end all gain of function research. I will sign a treaty to end gain of function research and get all nations to agree. It's a disaster that's given us no benefits, only diseases like Lyme, COVID, and RSV, which is now killing children. There's evidence that even Spanish Flu came from vaccine research. Medical and vaccine research has created some of the worst plagues in our history. Anyone who reads "The River" will be convinced that HIV came from a vaccine program. There's very little evidence that gain of function has given us any benefits, and it's given us horrible catastrophes. The risks simply aren't worth it. I will try to end it globally and reinstate the Geneva Convention and the biological weapons charter that we signed in 1973, and make it verifiable.

Huberman Lab

Improving Science & Restoring Trust in Public Health | Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
Guests: Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
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Since 2012, American life expectancy has stagnated, with a significant drop during the pandemic, only recently returning to 2019 levels. In contrast, Sweden saw a quick recovery in life expectancy post-pandemic. Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, a vocal critic of lockdowns, mask mandates, and vaccine mandates, emphasizes the need for the scientific community to acknowledge its mistakes to restore public trust. He argues that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) should focus on advancing health and longevity without being sidetracked by political ideologies. Dr. Bhattacharya discusses the NIH's mission, highlighting its role in funding both basic and applied research, which is crucial for medical advancements. He notes a trend where the NIH has favored safer, less ambitious projects, leading to fewer groundbreaking discoveries. The replication crisis, where many scientific findings cannot be reproduced, is a significant concern, and he outlines initiatives to incentivize replication and verify findings early. During the pandemic, Dr. Bhattacharya co-authored the Great Barrington Declaration, advocating for a balanced approach to public health that prioritizes protecting vulnerable populations while allowing children to attend school. He criticizes the scientific community for its response to COVID-19, arguing that the lockdowns and mandates were not based on solid evidence and caused significant harm, particularly to children and marginalized groups. He emphasizes the importance of basic research and the need for a culture that encourages young scientists to pursue innovative ideas without fear of failure. Dr. Bhattacharya also addresses the issue of vaccine safety, acknowledging that while vaccines can save lives, the COVID vaccine's benefits for certain populations, particularly young men, are questionable. He calls for a more honest evaluation of vaccines and their long-term effects. The conversation shifts to the NIH's approach to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), with Dr. Bhattacharya arguing that while addressing health disparities is essential, the NIH should not prioritize funding based on race. He believes that the focus should be on the quality of scientific ideas rather than the identity of the researchers. He advocates for a system that rewards truth and scientific inquiry, allowing for open discourse and collaboration among scientists. Dr. Bhattacharya expresses his commitment to reforming the NIH to ensure that it meets its mission of improving public health and longevity for all Americans. He aims to foster an environment where diverse voices can contribute to scientific progress without fear of censorship or retribution. The discussion concludes with a call for a more transparent and accountable scientific community that prioritizes the health and well-being of the population.

a16z Podcast

America's Autism Crisis and How AI Can Fix Science with NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya
Guests: Jay Bhattacharya, Erik Torenberg, Vineeta Agarwala, Jorge Conde
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A bold mission to fix science from the inside out unfolds as NIH director Bhattacharya lays out a Silicon Valley–inspired portfolio. Six months in, he launches a $50 million autism data-science initiative, with 250 teams applying and 13 receiving grants to pursue data-driven answers for families. He cites the CDC’s estimate of autism at 1 in 31 and argues for therapies that actually work and clearer causes to guide prevention. One funded effort centers on folinic acid treatment delivering brain folate, improving outcomes for some children with deficient folate processing, including speech in a subset. Not all benefit, but wider access could help. A second thread urges caution with prenatal acetaminophen use, noting evidence of autism risk and signaling guideline changes. He also highlights a cross-agency push on pre-term birth to narrow the US–Europe gap in prenatal care. The dialogue then shifts to the replication crisis in science, born from volume and conservative peer review. Bhattacharya, a longtime grant-panelist, argues that ideas stall because reviewers cling to familiar methods and fear novelty. He describes NIH reforms modeled on venture capital: centralized grant reviews, empowering institute directors to curate portfolios, and rewarding success at the portfolio level rather than individual wins. He emphasizes funding early-career investigators to bring fresh ideas while evaluating mentorship of the next generation. The aim is a sustainable pipeline that balances risk and reward, mirrors scientific opportunity, and aligns with the institutes’ strategic plans. He calls for a broader, transparent conversation with Congress and the public about funding and progress toward healthier lives. He ties trust to gold-standard science—replication and open communication—and notes how HIV/AIDS-era public pressure redirected NIH priorities. The Silicon Valley analogy endures: a portfolio of bets, most fail, a few breakthroughs transform health. AI can accelerate discovery, streamline radiology, and optimize care, but should augment rather than replace scientists; safeguards must protect privacy while expanding open access and academic freedom. The long-term aim is to reduce chronic disease and improve life expectancy. He closes with Max Perutz’s persistence as a blueprint for patient science. He envisions an NIH that protects academic freedom, expands open publishing, and uses AI to augment, curating a diverse portfolio balanced by evidence and bold bets to lift health outcomes for all Americans.

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

A ‘Fringe Epidemiologist’s’ Plan to Restore Trust in Science | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Guests: Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
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The episode centers on a critical examination of how the public health establishment responded to the COVID-19 pandemic and the broader implications for trust in science. Guest Dr. Jay Bhattacharya discusses his early pandemic analyses, which showed the virus circulated far more widely than initially thought, suggesting a lower infection fatality rate for the general population than feared. He argues that uncertainty should have led to transparent, adaptive guidance rather than definitive lockdowns, and that the emphasis on suppressing spread—especially through school closures—caused moral and practical harms, including disruptions to health services and long-term consequences for children. Bhattacharya contends that the response was shaped by a culture of consensus and reputational risk rather than constructive debate, leading to the sidelining of dissenting voices. He also speculates that part of the culpability lies in a broader project: gain-of-function research and a public health apparatus that, in his view, aligned too closely with certain scientific programs and narratives, sometimes at the expense of clear, evidence-based policy. The conversation then broadens to explore how the NIH could reform itself to restore legitimacy, emphasizing cost-effective innovation, drug repurposing, replication, and a shift away from identity‑driven metrics toward outcomes that improve population health and reduce costs. The dialogue also probes the precarious balance between free speech and public health messaging, arguing for epistemic humility, transparent communication, and a governance approach that invites debate while still guiding evidence-based vaccination and preventive care. The episode ends with concrete reform proposals and a challenge: if life expectancy and chronic disease management improve under Bhattacharya’s approach, it would signal a successful reimagination of scientific leadership and policy.
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