I went to Seminole, Texas, after a measles outbreak tore through. Came back with a story about anti-vaccine activists at RFK Jr.-founded @ChildrensHD who exploited the crisis, doctors and public health officials working to contain it — and a community left to bear the cost. 🧵
The county had some of the lowest vaccination rates in the US, and rumors were spreading — some private schools had closed. When measles took hold, it spread fast, especially among Mennonite families who recently avoided vaccines.
For most Mennonite families who avoided vaccines, it wasn’t about religion. Their hesitancy came from experience — a disabled child, a search for answers, encounters with anti-vaccine doctors. These were called “mighty, mighty testimonies.”
Public health workers scrambled to test, treat, and inform. Then anti-vaccine activists moved in. As they had with so many autism parents, they brought cameras and conspiracy theories. Some framed the outbreak as a failure of vaccines, others claimed measles was a bioweapon.
CHD raised money. Alternative doctors handed out cod liver oil and steroid inhalers. One was trespassed after entering the ICU to push unproven treatments. Then RFK Jr., now the nation’s health secretary, showed up — and praised them as “extraordinary healers.”
Dr. Ben Edwards once practiced small-town family medicine. Then he found a guru who denied germ theory and lost his license for risky treatments. Today, Edwards runs a wellness empire in Lubbock—and hosts a podcast interviewing anti-vaxxers like Andrew Wakefield.
Meanwhile, a CDC epidemiologist named Jonathan Yoder quietly moved into a borrowed office. He called pastors, radio hosts, editors — anyone who might help him reach the community. He worked alongside Zach Holbrooks, the local health director trying to hold the response together.
Two girls died. One was 8-year-old Daisy Hildebrand. After her death, CHD posted a video of her father blaming the hospital. Then RFK Jr. named her publicly. Her dad told me he started getting calls: “People were calling to say we’re going to hell for killing our daughter.”
The local public health director told me the lesson he’ll carry forward is simple: build the relationships before an outbreak.
You can read the whole thing here: nbcnews.com/news/us-news/m…
Oh and. The official U.S. measles count is 1,088. But on Fri, Dr. Ben Edwards gave his data to the health dept. He treated 261 people, mostly kids. If those were all measles cases that would push 2025 as worst outbreak since the 1990s. nbcnews.com/news/us-news/m…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Exclusive: I obtained testimony from the Dec. trial where Jonathan Ross, the ICE officer who killed Renee Good in Minneapolis, describes an incident in June where he smashed a car window, is dragged 100 yards, and tased a Guatemalan man 10 times.
His testimony also gives new biographical details: Indiana National Guard, served in Iraq from 2004 to 2005 as a machine gunner, then a Border Patrol agent in Texas. In 2015 he joined ICE targeting “higher value targets,” and is a member of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.
This specific phrasing is very very common in these cases: officers say the escalation in violence is self-defense, that they “feared for their life” when a car was “weaponized" against them. From Cato's @foxmike90 today: ms.now/opinion/ice-mi…
Got a new story about a little-known HHS agency with a massive job: the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR).
ASPR gave us Operation Warp Speed.
Now it's being run by a conspiracy theorist who calls those vaccines “genocide.” msnbc.com/msnbc/meet-ant…
ASPR preps for & responds to national emergencies: pandemics, terror attacks, natural disasters. But it has no Senate-confirmed leader (or nominee). Under RFK Jr., this is common. More than a third of top roles at HHS are vacant, critics say, by design—to consolidate power.
RFK Jr. put Knox in charge of ASPR, an agency he doesn’t think much of. In his widely panned, paranoid, (best-selling) book, The Real Anthony Fauci, Kennedy suggested ASPR was a Big Pharma tool that planned the pandemic. Here’s how he describes the ASPR in Trump’s first admin:
I spent the week tracing how @SecKennedy canceled $500 million in mRNA research and reporting on a(nother) very chaotic week inside HHS.
Let me introduce you to the fringe doctors, anti-vaccine activists, and MAHA operatives behind the mRNA “debacle.”
First up: Secretary Kennedy, who once again rolled out a major anti-vaccine policy change via X post. He offered no evidence for his claims that mRNA vaccines were ineffective. No coordination with the White House. And all while on a MAHA tour of Alaska.
Enter Gray Delany. A MAHA true believer with MAGA credentials and RFK Jr. campaign ties.
He’d just been hired as director of MAHA implementation and external affairs—essentially a bridge in the HHS comms shop for a fractured base.
Samoa was on the brink of crisis. Vaccine rates had plummeted measles was spreading globally. Kennedy and CHD chief informatics officer (the doc behind a notoriously bad study in the U.S.) went with an offer: a data system that would track the outcome of unvaxxed vs vaxxed kids.
As measles spread, RFK Jr. coordinated with a local anti-vaccine activist—connecting him with a group of anti-vaxx doctors in the U.S. to treat Samoa’s sick children with unproven cures. As hospitals filled with dying children, Kennedy's group promoted vitamins over vaccines.
For the last many months, I've been watching a Russian propaganda operation that researchers call Storm 1516, poring over the work of what is in effect, a disinformation production company. nbcnews.com/specials/russi…
It’s basically the notorious Internet Research Agency troll farm’s pivot to video. They rely on faked videos laundered through international news sources and influencers to reach a U.S. audience.
These videos, many featuring fake confessions and whistleblowers, are absurd, like the recent one from a park ranger claiming to have witnessed Kamala Harris kill a baby rhino on safari. They usually flop. nbcnews.com/specials/russi…
I think a lot about the '80s and the moral panics that characterized the time. It's no surprise that we've so recently fallen for this immigrants-are-eating-the-pets rumor, a lie often rooted in racism and fear. And one that only aids hate groups. nbcnews.com/tech/internet/…