1/
The answer is most decidedly not. They have no need. If they wait long enough, political leaders topple themselves.
2/
That's the furthest thing from the truth.
They are however, often poorly led. 3/
It is often the career pinnacle to be a scientist at the NIH or an epidemiologist who gets hired at CDC.4
Why? Same reason. "I didn't feel the purpose," 5/
The furniture is old. The elevators often get stuck. The cubes are dehumanizing. The offices windowless. ID badges must be warn. And your work is examined by an array of oversight agencies.
But somehow high paying jobs don'e hold a candle. 8/
The best ones let you do your work and protect that work from undue influence. 9/
They will follow. 10/
A "line" isn't a policy disagreement. If the EPA tells the staff to get rid of emissions standards & they do it legally, their orders will be followed even if they don't like it. 11/
Ethics Departments are decapitated. But OIG's eventually investigate. The GAO can be asked to look. 12/
But sometimes it goes further. Take for example, the upcoming decision at the FDA on vaccine approval, 13/
But taking away those protections & injecting young healthy people w a vaccine without enough data, that's different.14/
They need the expertise that political appointees because most (I was one) can't tie our shoes without help. 17/
18/
If that's the case, the fact that they continue to do their job every day is a sign of their professionalism. 21/
the post office
the consumer protection bureau
the FDA
the CDC
the FBI
the State Department
HUD
EPA
His aim is to get them to compromise their credibility. 22/
His minimum requirement will be simple: one vaccine, one arm, one camera by November 1.
Watch for it to be accompanied by 1 resignation. /end