RFK Jr., Dr. Makary, Dr. Bhattacharya, and Dr. Oz just laid out their vision for the future of HHS.
Here’s what they said—and why it matters.
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RFK Jr. opened the interview with Bret Baier by highlighting how uniquely close his relationship is with the heads of his agencies.
“We're friends. We go to lunch together. We stay at each other's homes. We vacation together. We're also aligned in our vision.”
“Friendship is based upon shared values, and that's the strongest bond that holds people together.”
“We all share a vision that's been a lifelong vision for all of us, which is to make our country healthy, to have evidence based science, and to have gold standard replicable science.”
The men then went around the room, each outlining their agency’s goals.
Dr. Makary was first up.
“We wanna focus the FDA on cures and meaningful treatments.”
“Why does it take ten years on average for drugs to come to market”
“Why are we blaming children for being sick and not looking at our food supply?”
“Why are we thinking it's a willpower problem as we watch half of our nation's children with belly pain or attention deficit disorder on medications?”
Dr. Oz was up next to discuss his main priority at CMS.
“Our goal is to put health back in health and human services.”
“There's a quote from Hubert Humphrey… he says, ‘it’s the moral obligation of government to take care of those of us at the very dawn of our lives, children, at the twilight of our life, the elderly, and those living in the shadows.’”
“That's our focus, quality of care at all levels.”
“It's your patriotic duty to be as healthy as you can, and it's our job to help you get there and make it easy to do the right things.”
Dr. Bhattacharya then gave a quick overview of his top priorities at NIH and the recent ban on gain-of-function funding.
“The mission of the NIH is to do research that improves the health and longevity of the American people.”
“The NIH has not done its mission over the last dozen years.”
“We're not going to allow scientists to play god.”
“What the President did by signing this order is he said, ‘No more! We're not going to have another lab generated pandemic on my watch.’”
RFK Jr. closed the interview by expressing his support for President Trump’s recent Surgeon General nomination.
“Casey Means we felt was the best person to really bring the vision of MAHA to the American public.”
“She wrote a book that really mobilized the movement.”
“She was the very top of her medical class at Stanford.”
“She is excellence in everything that she's ever endeavored.”
“She walked away from traditional medicine because she was not curing patients.”
“She couldn't get anybody within her profession to look at the nutrition contributions to illness.”
“She said, ‘If we're really gonna heal people, we can't just be making our life about billing new procedures, we actually have to figure out new approaches to medicine.’”
“And that's the kind of leadership that she's gonna bring to our country.”
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Over the weekend, RFK Jr. gave two EXPLOSIVE interviews covering all things MAHA.
Food, vaccines, prayer, budget cuts—you name it.
MAHA isn’t just shaking things up in the U.S. anymore.
It’s changing the world.
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RFK Jr. sat down with Brazilian reporter André Marinho for a wide-ranging MAHA interview.
Marinho asked if Trump’s order to tie U.S. drug prices to global lows could raise prices abroad.
RFK Jr. said it’s time the rest of the world stops freeloading off American taxpayers.
Marinho: “Many Brazilians, and I would guess citizens of the whole world, are kind of worried that this could push drug companies to raise prices abroad.”
RFK Jr: “The United States basically pays for global pharmaceutical research.”
“We account for about 70% of the profits for the pharmaceutical industry and we’re only 4.2% of the world's population.”
“The reason for that is that other countries simply won't pay for it.”
“What we've now told the drug companies is whatever the lowest price that you're charging in any other nation, that's what you're gonna charge here.”
“The other countries have kind of gotten a free ride on The United States because they're getting the benefit of all of our research in there.”
“They ought to be paying their fair share.”
“We spend about 8% of our GDP on drugs, and in Europe they spend 3%.”
“We'd like to see them bring that up to maybe like 6%.”
Sen. Ron Johnson held one of the most gut-wrenching Senate hearings ever, titled Voices of the Vaccine Injured.
Families who lost loved ones—or suffered devastating injuries—were finally given a voice.
Their stories were raw, painful, and long overdue.
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Senator Ron Johnson opened the hearing by stating its purpose.
To give a platform to the vaccine injured—and to families whose loved ones paid the ultimate price.
“The purpose of today's hearing is to give a platform to those individuals and families who have been abandoned, their injuries and suffering dismissed and forgotten.”
The hearing was filled with countless heartbreaking testimonies.
One came from Children’s Health Defense’s Polly Tommey, who spoke about the devastating stories she’s heard again and again from families of the vaccine injured.
“We took a bus, and we traveled around America listening to parents and what had happened to them when they vaccinated their children.”
“What we saw was utterly horrific.”
“We saw so much death following baby vaccines.”
“These parents would vaccinate their perfectly healthy child, and then their child would die.”
“I've interviewed so many parents, and one comes to mind.”
“At four months old, Ms. Bundy pleaded with the doctor, ‘Should I vaccinate my child, he's premature?’”
“‘Oh, yes’, said the pediatrician, ‘If you don't vaccinate your baby, he could die of whooping cough.’”
“She vaccinated that baby, and he was dead in his crib.”
“That is the same story we hear over and over again.”
“These childhood vaccinations, the people of America are telling us, they are not safe and effective.”