Aletho News

ΑΛΗΘΩΣ

Trump’s Picks for Surgeon General and Top Posts at FDA, CDC Earn Mixed Reviews

By Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D. | The Defender | November 25, 2024

President-elect Donald Trump’s nominees to lead three key federal public health agencies “would help the incoming president shift the priorities of agencies that are linchpins in public health” — but they’re also “controversial,” according to NPR.

Trump tapped Dr. Marty Makary to head the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Dr. Dave Weldon to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and physician Dr. Janette Nesheiwat for surgeon general.

“The roles will be key to helping to enact Trump’s second term health agenda, which could include agency reform and changes to public health policies,” Axios reported.

The three agencies report to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Earlier this month, Trump nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr., founder of Children’s Health Defense (CHD), to lead HHS.

Weldon previously criticized COVID-19 vaccines and restrictions. Makary and Nesheiwat first expressed support for vaccines and other pandemic-related policies but have become more critical in recent years.

Kim Witczak, a drug safety advocate who has worked with the FDA as a consumer representative, addressed mainstream criticism of the nominations. She told The Defender that “the pharmaceutical and medical-industrial complex is very worried.”

She added:

“The pharmaceutical and food industries have faced little resistance from regulators and Congress. The strong pushback we’re seeing now suggests they fear what might happen under an administration willing to challenge the status quo.”

Dr. Joseph Varon, president of the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, told The Defender, “Leadership in these agencies is critical for fostering trust in public health and ensuring evidence-based policies. We hope the nominees are committed to transparency, innovation and addressing the ongoing challenges in healthcare, particularly the lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Makary: U.S. government the ‘greatest perpetrator of misinformation’

Makary, a public health researcher and surgeon at Johns Hopkins University, developed the surgical safety checklist, adopted by the World Health Organization and credited with saving many lives. Makary worked with the first Trump administration, including on surprise medical billing, NPR reported.

Earlier this year, Makary published “Blind Spots: When Medicine Gets it Wrong, and What It Means for Our Health.” The book highlighted evidence that many modern-day health crises in the U.S. were caused or hastened by the medical establishment.

According to The Gateway Pundit, “Makary was initially an advocate for the COVID vaccine but changed his perspective as more data became available.” NPR noted that Makary “voiced support for lockdowns early in the pandemic and encouraged universal masking” but later “became increasingly outspoken” against such policies.

In 2021, Makary called the Biden administration’s CDC “the most political CDC in history” for not being forthcoming with the public about COVID-19 and the vaccines. According to the New York Post, he criticized the CDC and Biden administration for their “unsupported claims” about COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness.

Makary has also been vocal about the potency of natural immunity to COVID-19, criticizing the medical establishment’s “complete dismissal of natural immunity.”

In May, he criticized The New York Times for being slow to report on the thousands of people injured by the COVID-19 vaccines.

Last year, Makary said during congressional testimony that “public health officials have made many tragic mistakes during the pandemic.” Those mistakes included ignoring natural immunity, dismissing the possibility of COVID-19 originating from a lab leak, closing schools, masking toddlers and “pushing boosters for young people.”

In September, Makary appeared alongside Kennedy at a congressional roundtable hosted by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) on the chronic disease epidemic. During the roundtable, Makary said, “The greatest perpetrator of misinformation has been the United States government.”

In his announcement, Trump said Makary would work with Kennedy to “properly evaluate harmful chemicals poisoning our Nation’s food supply and drugs and biologics being given to our Nation’s youth, so that we can finally address the Childhood Chronic Disease Epidemic.”

Brian Hooker, Ph.D., CHD’s chief scientific officer, told The Defender Makary has a “steep learning curve regarding vaccines in general” but has taken “encouraging stances late in the pandemic about the COVID vaccine and countermeasures.”

Scott C. Tips, president of the National Health Federation, said Makary represents “a mixed bag of mainstream medicine and outside-the-box thinking.” He credited Makary for opposing “mandatory COVID-19 injection boosters” and criticizing the FDA’s rejection of natural immunity.

Epidemiologist and public health research scientist M. Nathaniel Mead praised Makary’s nomination. “You’d be hard-pressed to find a physician with a deeper understanding of what ails our healthcare system and what’s needed to restore integrity to the FDA after six decades of regulatory capture.”

“Makary seems uniquely positioned to bring meaningful change,” Witczak said. “He understands the systemic harm caused by overmedicalization and the corporate capture of healthcare. His history of challenging mainstream narratives during COVID shows he isn’t afraid to speak out.”

Weldon sponsored bill to ban mercury from vaccines

Dr. Dave Weldon is an Army veteran who served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives between 1995 and 2009.

In a statement, Kennedy praised Weldon’s experience, saying he “will bring the truth and transparency needed to restore the public’s confidence” in the CDC.

In 2007, Weldon sponsored a bill that would have banned mercury from vaccines, expressing concern about “an enormous inherent conflict of interest within the CDC,” because the agency promotes vaccination while assessing their safety.

According to Politico, Weldon also “raised concerns about the safety of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine and Gardasil, Merck’s papillomavirus virus, or HPV vaccine.

While in Congress, Weldon also introduced legislation outlawing human cloning and helped secure a deal that banned patents on human organisms, including genetically engineered embryos, according to The Associated Press.

According to NPR, Trump said Weldon would “proudly restore the CDC to its true purpose, and will work to end the Chronic Disease Epidemic,” and “prioritize Transparency, Competence, and High Standards.”

John Gilmore, executive director of the Autism Action Network, said Weldon “was sounding the alarm on failures in the vaccine system 20 years ago.” He said Weldon attended conferences like Defeat Autism Now and listened to mothers of vaccine-injured children, which is “not a behavior many doctors are inclined to do.”

Hooker said he was “very encouraged” by Weldon’s nomination, and that he’d like to know more about Weldon’s position on “the bloated vaccine schedule as well as COVID-19 countermeasures.”

He credited Weldon with helping independent thimerosal researchers gain access to the Vaccine Safety Datalink, a collaborative project that monitors vaccine safety and conducts studies on vaccine side effects.

Hooker, who participated in that project, said “Our access to the VSD was rescinded months later because [the CDC] didn’t like our results, which included a definitive link between thimerosal and autism. Weldon indeed will need to implement myriad changes to the flawed and fraudulent process.”

Weldon is the first nominee for CDC director who will face a Senate confirmation process, due to legislation passed in 2022, NPR reported.

Nesheiwat: ‘egregious unethical & harmful’ to add COVID shots to childhood schedule

Nesheiwat, Trump’s nominee for surgeon general, is a medical contributor to Fox News and medical director at CityMD, a network of urgent care centers in New York and New Jersey.

Nesheiwat previously promoted the benefits of getting vaccinated against COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, NPR reported. According to The Gateway Pundit, Nesheiwat has since changed her position and her “recent statements indicate a significant shift in her perspective.”

In October 2022, Nesheiwat tweeted, “If CDC approves a COVID vaccine addition to the routine schedule of vax for kids, it will mark the most egregious unethical & harmful decision to children. No mandates. Especially for a vax that can’t prevent disease.”

Nesheiwat has also questioned the efficacy of the COVID shots, tweeting in February 2023, “Covid vax does not prevent disease like we once thought it did per the cdc /Pfizer etc.,” and has tweeted in support of natural immunity.

In a statement, Trump called Nesheiwat an advocate for preventive medicine and praised her “commitment to saving and treating thousands of American lives.”

Mead said Nesheiwat’s about-face on vaccines “shows she has the ability to think critically,” which could help her “serve as a bridge builder at a time of deep division.”

A ‘historic opportunity to shake up the establishment’

Calling healthcare in the U.S. “horribly broken,” Hooker said the three nominees will face several challenges if confirmed because federal public health agencies require reforms.

Hooker said:

“Corporate influence, including the corporate capture of these agencies, is the biggest problem to be tackled. First and foremost, we need to protect children … from the highly flawed policies of these agencies.

“All influences from Big Pharma, Big Food and Big Ag need to be completely rooted out and the whole edifice should be rebuilt brick-by-brick to include only those policies that help and never harm children.”

Gilmore said public health agencies should publicize “all the data they have available.” He also called for a ban on vaccine mandates. “We have to be able to sue in a real court for vaccine injuries,” he added.

Varon called for independent clinical trials and for “independent scientific inquiry and reducing undue influence from corporate or political pressures.” He also called for promoting early treatment protocols for emerging diseases and giving physicians “the flexibility to treat patients with evidence-based approaches.”

“This moment represents a historic opportunity to shake up the establishment,” Witczak said. “After years of feeling like leaders were paying lip service — or working against the public — I finally see hope for meaningful reform. It’s time to restore these agencies’ missions to serve the public, prioritize safety, and act with integrity.”

This article was originally published by The Defender — Children’s Health Defense’s News & Views Website under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Please consider subscribing to The Defender or donating to Children’s Health Defense.

November 30, 2024 - Posted by | Aletho News | , , , , ,

18 Comments »

  1. Noted. “According to Politico, Weldon also “raised concerns about the safety of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine….” — okay, I’ve read enough of this sh*t. Did Weldon raise concerns about not having any measles et al vaccines?

    Like

    roberthstiver's avatar Comment by roberthstiver | November 30, 2024 | Reply

    • It appears that you have stopped short of reading quite a few articles posted at Aletho News. Your concerns have been addressed in many of them.

      Liked by 1 person

      aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 1, 2024 | Reply

      • No “appearance”: you’re right. At 81 yo, my horizons are narrowing by the day…cannot keep up, even re my first-and-only true obsession Palestine — accompanied of course by my bitter hatred of Colonial Zionism. Can I somehow search for “Weldon” in your “Categories” or “Tags” or … and fill in some blanks?

        I do appreciate your being my go-to source of news that resonates….

        Like

        roberthstiver's avatar Comment by roberthstiver | December 1, 2024 | Reply

        • How about searching “measles”?

          I found this recent post:

          Did the U.S. Death Rate from Measles Decline by over 98% Before Introduction of a Measles Vaccine?

          Liked by 1 person

          aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 1, 2024 | Reply

          • Thanks. I read the linked article.

            I haven’t done due diligence, but: isn’t measles making a “comeback”? — at least in certain regions or population groups?

            As I’ve written before…I believe in this AN space: I’m damned glad my parents unquestioningly acquiesced in my receiving (orally) the polio vaccine when I was about 6 years old and the smallpox vaccine (on my upper/front area of my left leg…the imprint is still there) when I was a mere babe…not sure how old.

            Like

            roberthstiver's avatar Comment by roberthstiver | December 2, 2024 | Reply

            • The oral polio vaccine was less dangerous but it still spread polio and also cancer since the polio injection contained the SV 40 monkey kidney virus which causes cancer.

              The smallpox virus caused more smallpox . It was cured by sewage sanitation – the U bend and nutrition and living standards. It mainly came from sewage fumes .

              Like

              porch20892e3f47's avatar Comment by porch20892e3f47 | December 3, 2024 | Reply

            • Measles is not making a comeback – eg the disney outbreak scare story the parents said the their kids had already had the measles jags . It was never serious after living standards and in one year 8 people died of the jag with none dying of measles . I caught measles naturally and hardly noticed – lifetime immunity now.

              Like

              porch20892e3f47's avatar Comment by porch20892e3f47 | December 3, 2024 | Reply

            • It’s all nonsense.

              Climate Change is not causing measles outbreaks. Nor is vaccine refusal.

              The fact that the vaccinated get measles can’t be the fault of the non.

              Keep going through AN posts where you will find each point alleged at VWH refuted deciseively.

              https://alethonews.com/?s=measles

              Like

              aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 3, 2024 | Reply

        • Vaccines have always been a fraud – dr vernon coleman goes right back to smallpox and jenner in his latest blog

          All the childhood diseases deaths had flatlined before pharma crooks took the credit in the 50’s

          jenner was perplexed when live smallpox was introduced to the bloodstream the patients got smallpox – scratching head ?

          The plumbers cured smallpox and nutrition

          Like

          porch20892e3f47's avatar Comment by porch20892e3f47 | December 2, 2024 | Reply

          • I find the arguments that there is no such thing as a virus much more convincing than the argument that viruses exist. And I’ve spent a lot of time looking for the best arguments from both sides. I also see that the most visible champions of the “no virus” side are fringers in other ways. For two examples, Vernon Coleman is a cross dresser, and Samantha Bailey promotes flat-earthers and makes the stupidest arguments against Darwinian evolution. I believe that these people are propped up and made visible by the powers that be so to infect their true message about viruses with an air of ridiculousness. (I’ve heard that they propped up Wakefield for the same purpose, and after a cursory look I think they were right, but I haven’t looked into him enough to be certain.)

            Like

            Matt's avatar Comment by Matt | December 2, 2024 | Reply

            • I believe in viruses and bacteria – 100 %

              I have never heard anything like that on vernon but still believe all vaccines are harmful to the point of death or life shortening

              Anyone that believes in darwinian evolution without it having a shred of evidence in 200 years should buy a bridge in brooklyn . You believe that after coming out of the oceans that mammals like sheep went back in and chased squid – why not read fairy stories instead

              Wakefields research was bang on and his partner got an out of court settlement but they had to believe the vaccine myth

              Did you get your 5 covid shots

              Like

              porch20892e3f47's avatar Comment by porch20892e3f47 | December 2, 2024 | Reply

              • Plus all planets are spheres

                this can be seen on a plane or hill or from a boat

                it was a cia psyop to label anyone eg like anti vaxxers

                flat earther

                Like

                porch20892e3f47's avatar Comment by porch20892e3f47 | December 2, 2024 | Reply

              • People with good reading comprehension will have noticed that I only criticized the quality of Bailey’s argument. I said nothing about whether her conclusion was right or wrong.

                Like

                Matt's avatar Comment by Matt | December 2, 2024 | Reply

            • Correction: I should have said “…so to infect their true message about viruses *or vaccines* with an air of ridiculousness.”

              Like

              Matt's avatar Comment by Matt | December 2, 2024 | Reply

        • Scroll to the top of this page and you’ll see a blue bar going across the top of the page. (I see it using my phone; my desktop computer isn’t connected to the Internet.) That bar has a magnifying-glass icon in its right side. Tap on that icon and you can type in any word or words to search. Hit “return” and the search results will show.

          Like

          Matt's avatar Comment by Matt | December 2, 2024 | Reply

  2. Simply consider that there are entire communities and ‘peoples’ that aren’t vaccinated and have absolutely no problems with measles, polio etc. A couple that come immediately to mind are the Amish and certain Orthodox or other Jewish sects.

    We will hear from time to time about ‘outbreaks’ in these communiities but then nothing ever comes of it. The communities aren’t decimated the way we are led to believe they would be sans vaccination, and there is in fact no evidence of any problems whatsoever with these alleged viruses.

    HIV-AIDS is an obvious fraud in that it would have wiped out most ‘adolescents’ and teens and the somewhat promiscuous people everywhere – not to mention the entirety of the porn industry – if it was even remotely as virulently ‘pathogenic’ as they made – and continue to make – it out to be.

    It’s certainly not because all of a sudden guys started wearing rubbers all the time and everyone began practicing ‘safe sex.’

    ‘AIDS’ is simply a descriptor for a weakened immune system to one degree or another that leads to all manner of health issues – all of which are alr

    ‘HIV’ has never been properly isolated according to standard chemistry techniques.

    This seems to be true for all ‘viruses’ – which is still difficult for me to entirely come to terms with.

    Liked by 1 person

    Dan Kelly's avatar Comment by Dan Kelly | December 3, 2024 | Reply

    • ‘all of which are alr’ was supposed to read ‘all ofwhich (the health issues / diseases) are already known, i.e. there were no new diseases from ‘HIV-AIDS’ rather a number of existing diseases – some of which were prominent among primarily gay ‘AIDS’ patients such as Kaposi sarcoma – these were all subsequently encompassed under the ‘HIV-AIDS’ umbrella.

      Liked by 1 person

      Dan Kelly's avatar Comment by Dan Kelly | December 3, 2024 | Reply


Leave a reply to Matt Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.