Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., does not want you to think of him as an anti-vaxxer. I have yet to meet an anti-vaxxer鈥攕omeone who spreads misinformation about all vaccines being harmful鈥攚ho is comfortable with the label. Kennedy is not just anti-vaccine; by many recent accounts, he is one of the princes of the anti-vaccination movement, if not its king. The website Media Bias/Fact Check calls Kennedy鈥檚 corporation, Children鈥檚 Health Defense, An reported that Children鈥檚 Health Defense was one of two buyers accounting for 54% of anti-vaccine advertising content on Facebook. Kennedy himself is part of the Disinformation Dozen, a gaggle of influencers generating two-thirds of anti-vaccination content on Facebook and Twitter, according to. Instagram banned him from their platform earlier this year, although his corporation鈥檚 account remains active.
As Kennedy releases a new 鈥渄ocumentary鈥 that uses medical failures toward Black people to sow distrust in the COVID-19 vaccines, I asked myself: how did one of John F. Kennedy鈥檚 nephews rise to infamy as one of the loudest voices of the modern anti-vaccination movement?
Like a mind virus
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., grew up to be an environmental lawyer. The people frequently in his sights? Polluters.
When corporations and governments would skirt environmental laws, Kennedy would bring them to justice. Some of these cases involved contamination of waterways with mercury, a theme that would translate to his anti-vaccination crusade. But I think it is also important to highlight that the work we do helps shape our view of the world. My coverage of misinformation biases me to think it is more prevalent than it might be; likewise, it could be argued that a career spent exposing corporations that carelessly dump toxic chemicals into the world might bias you to imagine harmful plots wherever industry is involved.
While Kennedy was bringing corporate corruption to light, the anti-vaccination movement was re-energized thanks to Andrew Wakefield鈥檚 infamous Lancet paper, now retracted. Wakefield was interested in linking inflammatory bowel conditions to the clogging of blood vessels in the wall of the gut. In the early 1990s, after reading through an old virology textbook, he became obsessed with the idea that the measles virus was behind it all, for the simple reason that it had been shown to sometimes cause ulcers, which were seen in the stomach of some people with inflammatory bowel disease. Wakefield then turned his attention to the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine and tried to link it to a 鈥渓eaky gut鈥 hypothesis where molecules escaped digestion and impacted the brain. In 1998, he would publish his notorious paper and hold a press conference in London in which he claimed that the vaccine could very well be responsible for the rise in the rates of autism., but Wakefield had developed an id茅e fixe鈥攁n obsession of the mind鈥攁nd it would go on to infect Kennedy鈥檚 own thoughts a few years later.
In the summer of 2005, a psychologist from Minnesota by the name of Sarah Bridges went over to Kennedy鈥檚 house with a stack of papers. Her son had been diagnosed with autism and she blamed the mercury in the vaccines. Said mercury was part of a molecule called thimerosal, a preservative used since the 1940s in multi-dose vaccines to prevent bacterial growth. By Kennedy鈥檚 own account, Sarah Bridges would not leave Kennedy鈥檚 front porch until he had read these studies alleging a link between thimerosal and autism. Kennedy, who was already familiar with mercury鈥檚 effect on ecosystems, was alarmed and started calling regulators. He became convinced they either did not understand what vaccine science was allegedly saying or they were lying.
His public crusade began that very summer with the publication of a highly disingenuous article, prepared with the help of an anti-vaccination activist, in both the print version of Rolling Stone magazine and the website. Its name was 鈥淒eadly Immunity鈥 and it was riddled with mistakes, distorted quotes, and unsubstantiated fearmongering. Salon soon appended a number of corrections to it and, five and a half years later, finally retracted it.
As, Kennedy read a 260-page transcript from a vaccine safety meeting and quote-mined it to wring fear juice out of it. Whereby one vaccine advisor at the meeting had expressed warranted concerns that lawyers might use preliminary study results on vaccine safety for their own ends, Kennedy, himself a lawyer, trimmed the quote to make the advisor sound conspiratorial. Reading 鈥淒eadly Immunity,鈥 you were led to believe that the doctors and scientists sitting on vaccine safety committees secretly argue that vaccines should not be tested for safety and that if studies are conducted, their results need to be 鈥渉andled鈥 to prevent the truth from leaking out to the public.
Over the years, Kennedy鈥檚 misguided id茅e fixe has snowballed and gained impressive momentum. He has propagated numerous falsehoods about the COVID-19 pandemic. He has been a mainstay at the AutismOne conference, which attracts fake experts convinced that vaccines cause autism. In his last appearance as keynote speaker, he incited attendees to evangelize for the anti-vaccination movement, concluding that he would see them 鈥渙n the barricades.鈥 Kennedy was asked to chair a 鈥渧accine safety task force鈥 for the Trump administration in 2017. (The task force would end up never materializing.) He also served as executive producer for the anti-vaccination 鈥渄ocumentary鈥 Vaxxed II: The People鈥檚 Truth. Now, his own corporation has released, one which is directed toward people of colour.
Weaponizing racism
The movie鈥檚 title is sensational click-bait. Medical Racism: The New Apartheid. It is a project of CHD Films, a division of Kennedy鈥檚 Children鈥檚 Health Defense (formerly known as the World Mercury Project). As when the movie was released a month ago, its producers include the founder of a private school that boasts of not enforcing vaccination mandates; a who falsely claimed that childhood vaccines are genetically modified to harm children of colour; and a nonprofit CEO who promoted the misinformation campaign of America鈥檚 Frontline Doctors.
Kennedy himself bookends the narrative by asking the viewers to do their own research and come to their own conclusion, affording him plausible deniability. Black people are interviewed on the street and not one of them says they want the COVID-19 vaccine. They don鈥檛 believe in it, they don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 necessary, they don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 safe. One man tells the camera he has heard of Tuskegee. The government wants to study you, he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 not gonna be their guinea pig.鈥
These off-the-cuff remarks are bolstered by the usual sprinkling of family testimonials. The recipe is simple: a mother says her child was fine until they got the vaccine, and then 鈥渢hey shut down.鈥 Photos of a smiling baby and a happy family are followed by B-roll of the child with autism and the mother fighting back tears. These emotional appeals were the meat of the anti-vaccine movie Vaxxed II: The People鈥檚 Truth and they return here with Black families.
To provide more legitimacy, Medical Racism turns to experts and pundits: medical doctors, historians, and professors, but also activists, integrative health practitioners and even a minister, to recount real violations committed against Black people, questionable allegations, and debunked falsehoods until the facts end up coating the lies with legitimacy.
One of the falsehoods is the CDC whistleblower story. In this 2021 movie, two talking heads repeat a story that was known to be false in 2014. The claim is that William Thompson of the Centers for Disease Control confessed that he and others had hidden data that the MMR vaccine put Black children at a much-increased risk to develop autism. This is not true. The full story (covered by and by). can be summarized thusly. It was a reanalysis of a 2004 study. The reanalysis was removed from the public domain because of a) undisclosed competing interests compromising its peer review and b) questionable statistical analyses. The original study can be tortured to yield a slight increase in autism rates among Black vaccinated boys, but it ignores a) the fact that the more categories of people you look at, the more likely you are to get a positive result by chance alone, b) the slight increase is probably tied to the immunization requirements for preschool special education for children with autism in the sample, and c) many more studies, some much larger, failed to find a link. Yet this story, with its conspiracy theme and its turncoat hero, is still flogged by anti-vaxxers because they need it to be true.
Not content with fearmongering about vaccines and medicine as a whole, Medical Racism also subtly implies that Black people simply do not need vaccines. We are told that Black people have a very powerful immune system and that vaccines overstimulate it. Besides, vitamin D, the movie claims, is a potent solution for COVID-19, one that is being suppressed. And the kicker is when an African gynecologist tells us that, with regards to viral infections, 鈥淎frica has been protected by our interactions with environment [sic]. And we are, actually, quite immune to some of these things, and I say this as a doctor! COVID does not belong to Africa.鈥 The through line is clear: the coronavirus, the movie harmfully argues, is no threat to Black people. The real menace are the vaccines.
The website that hosts the movie offers viewers, shareable images with pithy statements from the film. Just like astroturf organizations can furnish protesters with professional placards, Children鈥檚 Health Defense has manufactured vivid memes for its followers to spread on social media. mentions one featuring a smiling group of Black people next to the movie鈥檚 logo and URL. 鈥淔ind out how you can combat government coercion,鈥 reads, 鈥渁nd medical abuse of people of color.鈥 The website also offers, pre-packaged, that anti-vaccine slacktivists can copy and paste onto Facebook.
It is clear to me, from watching Medical Racism and being familiar with Kennedy鈥檚 campaign against vaccines, that this is not about medical atrocities committed against Black people. This is propaganda. This is the stomach-churning exploitation of historical abuse and contemporary failings, peppered with falsehoods, to convince a marginalized audience already at increased risk for COVID-19 that safe and effective vaccines are poisonous. A real empathic appeal for dialogue on this issue would look like what Drs. Sandra Quinn and Michele Andrasik. Kennedy鈥檚 Medical Racism by comparison is crass, manipulative miseducation.
As the end credits roll, we hear a song called 鈥淪ave the Children鈥 by Gil Scott-Heron. I couldn鈥檛 help but think of QAnon鈥檚 call-to-arms, which was trumpeted by wellness influencers on Instagram. Children were being sacrificed on the altar of Satanic Deep State pedophiles, they said. In Kennedy鈥檚 world, these same children need to be defended from the ritualistic abuses of pharmaceutical companies. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to do something, yeah, to save the children,鈥 the man sings over the scrolling text. But who will save the children鈥檚 parents from this harmful propaganda?
Take-home message:
-Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is one of the main activists of the modern anti-vaccination movement.
-The movie his corporation recently produced, Medical Racism: The New Apartheid, mixes real examples of racism in healthcare and vaccine misinformation to push an anti-vaccine agenda on marginalized communities of colour